I said 149 current FAMILIES not 149 STUDENTS (current students are in the mid-200s). Expanding to 6th (from the current cap of 3rd grade) doesn't add that many students since the River School's elementary program is only roughly 12-14 kids per grade, though I suppose with more space it's possible that they'd have two classes per elementary grade rather than just 1. Since ending on a snarky, rude note is apparently de rigeur on this forum, I say: Reading comprehension. Word choice is sometimes significant. |
The point is, your numbers are irrelevant. The number of families at the current location is irrelevant. The number of elementary classes at the current location is also irrelevant. This is because they want to have 350 students at the new location. It is a core part of their application that they have submitted to the BZA. Reading. It's fundamental. |
| I think it would be great if the neighborhood bought it and made a pocket park. How much are we talking here? |
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Here’s an excerpt from an email that went out to the community list serv earlier:
Until last week, only the closest neighbors to the estate had been asked to meet with River School (once) in the past three months. The broader community has not been engaged. We were just informed that the River School is planning a neighbor meeting/”listening session” on April 22, 2021 at 4pm. Save The Date - 4/22/21, 4 p.m. River School Town Hall https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87837273148?pwd=eTJDOGl5TEh1Yzc3TXM3V29oUFZ3Zz09 I live in the hood and will probably listen to at least some. |
So is correct spelling, fancy pants. Guess you missed that lesson at your private school. |
Wow. Someone is bitter. Annoying? Millennials? (learn how to spell it, negative one, if you are going to insult someone) News flash - housing is a MAJOR factor in determining a city's livability index. Why don't you go post on another list serv all your assumptions with your rubber stamp. |
Well, and honestly... I would think that the millennials would rather have the park! |
I drive on Nebraska regularly during the day, and have for years, and rarely are any spots taken except for a few close to Wisconsin Ave. |
Other independent schools in the area are limited on the amount of school wide events they can hold per year. You would be surprised how easy it is to reach that number. Back to school night, musical, play, Holiday/winter concert, parent education event at night which could be PA sponsored, graduation, fall fair, spring fair, etc. What bothers me is that the independent schools I am aware of in the area have agreements and try very hard to be a good neighbor. The River School reached out to a few families and then decided to have a town hall at 4 pm on a weekday after people in the neighborhood raised questions. I'm not impressed with the River School's community outreach and the way they've handled things seems like they were trying to slip something by. I am now wary of the school's administration and I used to have a more favorable opinion. |
DC has plenty of housing. And DC has a current high "livability' index. |
| DC does not have plenty of housing. There is currently a 20,000 unit shortfall and a need for at least 2,000 units, just in Ward 3. |
| No seriously, there is a private community center in Cleveleand Park I believe, as well as the Rosedale Conservatory. Why is AU Park bickering about the River Sschool + traffic instead of galvanizing to buy and conserve that piece of property in its natural "green lung" state? Between AU construction and the Fannie Mae development, a LOT of concrete has been laid in that corridor in a few short years. Why not an awesome community park/playgroung/dog run concervatory? Obviously open to the public. |
What does that even mean? Meaningless. |
| People opposed to this re-zoning bid by River would do well to get a copy of the city comprehensive development plan (find the link in the story in today’s Post), wave it at the DC Council and the zoning commission and ask why they would approve this request by a private school that serves a small sliver of wealthy DC residents rather than using the parcel for higher density housing including an affordable housing set aside. |
I'd go for River School. At least they will presumably maintain some green space. So over the hard on of the density folks for Ward 3. |