What are you saying, what’s your point? You heard what the administrators said, even becoming a Title 1 school does not adversely affect the level of education. Title 1 status provides additional resources to help students achieve success. Hagel circle were being taught at Halley Elementary and they were not a Title 1 school. You make no sense |
That's a ridiculous frequency for rezoning. They are going to spend all their time rezoning and never executing. |
They won't rezone ever 5 years. They'll just update numbers and make marginal changes. This process isn't happening every 5 years. |
Sangster parents act like they’re the only ones to request residency checks and real CIP numbers. Other parents in neighborhoods across the county have asked for the same thing. For more than a year. Reid and her staff have made it clear that won’t happen. They are moving kids in January. The only question is which ones. |
Program capacity changes when Title I is implemented. They’re proposing scenarios that could change Title I status without tracking how that impacts capacity utilization. I’m not saying one way or the other where students should be moved, but when they shuffle planning areas to utilize Gunston ES to 98%, that capacity could instantly disappear if they need to make program changes to accommodate an influx of Title I students. I don’t think these factors are being considered when they make their recommendations. Halley, even with Hagel Circle does not qualify for Title I, so the same concerns do not apply. |
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Everything currently is based on September 2024 enrollments and program capacities.
So I guess your point is if they use stale data and program capacities quickly decline or expand due to a change in Title I status some schools could already be targets for future redistricting shortly after new boundaries are adopted in 2026. I don’t think that’s the case with Graham Road/Shrevewood/Timber Lane given the current status and proposed boundary changes affecting those schools, but perhaps it’s more of a possibility with other schools like Gunston depending on where they land. |
Ahhh, my apologies. I agree with scenario 3 for Rolling Valley, which moves the split feeder kids already zoned for Key/Lewis to Saratoga. Which creates space at RVES in the future if there are overcrowded elementaries. I thought you meant to move the entire school! |
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Why not the residency checks?
Makes sense to me.. |
+1. This was also brought up at the meeting last week. The PP who keeps posting about the bigoted and evil Gunston parents is clearly a Lorton Station parent continuing to try to keep Hagel Circle from attending their neighborhood school. Also, Gunston is located on Mason Neck and the Mason Neck Citizens Association has a lot of sway at the local political level. I believe when South County opened, it was Dan Storke who stepped in and ensured Mason Neck was zoned for South County. In return, Hunt Valley was moved from Lee to West Springfield. The land swap that even allowed South County to be built involved land owned by a Mason Neck resident. |
I think they don’t believe that address fraud is a real problem. Remember, the SB, Gatehouse execs, and Reid have all bought the “all schools are great, FCPS is world class, etc. etc.” hook line and sinker. They are true believers. They don’t see why someone would lie about their address to attend a different school because all the schools are equally great and amazing. |
Yes, they might push brand new Title I schools well over capacity for 5 years only to immediately reshuffle the next cycle. The community deserves more consideration and stability. The Graham Road/Shrevewood/Timber Lane situation is slightly different. Graham Road and Timber Lane are both Title I schools. The scenarios remove all disadvantaged students from Graham Road. It will lose Title I status, its program capacity could expand, and it’ll be under enrolled. Meanwhile, Timber Lane will have a 70-90% FARM rate with majority of their students coming from an attendance island on the other side of Rt-29. Shrevewood will be about 50% FARMs, so not Title I, and the 119 students who previously received services will lose them. |
Because Reid says there is only one person in the entire county who looks at residency. Residdncy checks are so simple. Just bring a utility bill and lease to the school when you pick up schedules. No check, no classes. They can put up a table at open house manned by the school ofgice staff. Just add it to the 10 other lunes parents wait in that day. |
Right! Let me tell you, we held onto our small little condo that we outgrew and was in a good school district, and it would have been SO easy to use that address for school if we wanted to. |
I think it’s a lot more widespread than Gatehouse wants to believe. I knew someone who was letting their niece from Prince William County use their address to attend South County. They didn’t see anything wrong with it. |
There are 110% people at West Potomac and Edison who really live in Maryland. |