There never was going to be a 4th high school. If you bought in Wakefield zone, you knew what it would do for your home value. Don't act surprised now. We had the same bleeding heart neighbors in DC---so hipster and proud of buying in an area with bad schools--until High School came around. Then, they wanted to blame everyone else for their bad purchase. |
And now S Arlington is the whiny little bitch crying unfair? |
Yep. |
No one will ever receive sympathy for their cause by behaving like this. I am not pp but your attitude is reprehensible. There is no reason that this discussion cannot remain civil. |
+1 |
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Was anyone able to attend last night's session at Yorktown? I don't see any notes up yet on the website. I don't think they live-streamed it, like they did for the W-L meeting, so probably no video either.
I'm also curious how the Spanish meeting went on Saturday. |
I don't have kids anywhere near HS, but we plan to stay here through HS because we like our house, our neighbors, and we like our zoned schools, including Wakefield. I'm not sure why you feel the need to crap on others in Arlington, especially the neighbors in your own civic association. You were never promised a thing about schools when you bought your house. Neither was I. This process has to address the needs of all Arlington students and does not owe any undue consideration to any one neighborhood (cough:: Arlington Forest North :: cough) among the 62 civic associations that will all be affected by these changes. |
No. It is because you couldn't afford it. |
I don't think they live streamed the meeting from last Saturday either, so no video. For what it's worth, I attended the first meeting at W-L. After the meeting I spoke to someone (not sure of name, but he had a name tag on that identified him as an "APS Ambassador" or something like that), and he said that he'd been hearing from members of the Latino community at W-L that they don't want to be moved. They like W-L. (I think he said something like they, too, believe it is a better, more "academic" school). |
Nope, my PU isn't under consideration for a move. I just don't think anyone is any more or less entitled to a public school based on the price paid for a home. I can get on board with proximity being a factor, one of many, but not housing prices. |
The proximity to a good HS is always part of the price. |
Please stop posting. You are making north Arlington look petty and stupid. I have friends that live near Arlington Ridge, and they will have no trouble buying a home north. They'll give up metro or whatever. I have friends all over Arlington, and while they may have to give up some positive aspects of their current house, they can all afford North Arlington. If people happily living in the Wakefield zone move north, we are all f#€ked. This county can't afford a failing Wakefield. There are enough people willing to give it a shot now. That will change if the demographics slide toward majority Farm's students. How are you people not understanding this? |
AND IT'S NOT A GUARANTEE. |
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This thread has got me looking at north Arlington real estate. I'm surprised at the number of homes my family could afford, zoned Yorktown.
So I've learned from this thread that WL is the truly sought after school in Arlington. Everyone is losing their minds at the prospect of being zoned to Yorktown or Wakefield. I assume for different reasons. I'm not crazy about Yorktown and our commute would suck, but we will have to consider moving into 22207 if Wakefield gets worse. We are ... cautiously ok with it now. I don't think I'd tolerate even a small shift in the wrong direction. |
| What planning unit contains the affordable housing at Buckingham? Is that in play? |