If you're so alarmed try emailing kaya.henderson@dcps.gov. |
I am not a troll and I am almost 60 for the record. There are plenty of areas in DC with concentrated public housing and we happen to live near such an area as I am sure plenty of other DC people do. Why not google it? |
If school is for learning.... And the teachers not there to teach ..... How is this not???? Very inconsiderate to the teachers and their families. Many great teachers leave the district because they feel as though they are not valued. This statement reflects that notion |
You must be one of those people who think that school is daycare. So as lame as you may feel it is to close school today, it's more lame to have students come to school and not have teachers there to teach them. Warehousing kids is really lame. |
When the teachers took the job, they were aware of where it was, so unless metro shuts down etc, they should be expected in. If the commute is so awful, they could aim to teach in the same school district their kids attend. I think it is a shame when teachers, police officers, and firefighters can't afford to live in their own district, btw |
Do they have a high truancy rate? |
Yuck. You are a peach.
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So you're an old troll at that. And yes, I purposely used the term "old," which shouldn't bother you one bit since it appears your sensitivity chip is missing. Oh, and by the way, drawing conclusions from what you have witnessed inside your 10 block radius is ignorant. You have no clue as to what any child in this city-- outside of your household-- is going through--black/white, rich or poor. To suggest that you do, makes you sound ...well, like a troll. |
| Everyone can't afford to live near Metro and teachers are not emergency personnel, they are not expected to risk their safety to come to work. I do know of several new teachers who share housing in tbe city, but they do this for a short time and most eventually move...out of tbe city. If you want qualified teachers accept the fact that DCPS has to get teachers from all over and that means on occasion,decisions are made to accommodate them. |
| Main roads are just fine. Mostly just wet. DCPS should have opened on time because if anything starting earlier would have meant less snow. |
+1 Terrible reason to close schools. Frankly, the roads were better during my normal commute time than they were 2 hours later. But either way-- the roads were simply wet. There was barely an inch of snow. Absolutely no need to close school. Come on, folks. This shouldn't even be a conversation. |
Risk their safety? So any time a flake falls from the sky it is a safety risk? Should we close schools for rain, too? |
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The eastern half of DC is usually plowed treated before they start in the west, especially upper NW.
For most DC mayors, "it's all about that 'base.'"
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I'm glad DCPS didn't close. One, I had to work and it's impossible to get anything done with them hanging around. And two, they eat through EVERYTHING in the refrigerator on snow days. I can't afford for them to stay home .
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Good point. |