The anti-charter vibe is very toxic. you should see the PTO/PTA leadership group WhatsApp on this topic today. |
That was always intended to be a temporary space! Cooper was not trapped there for long. They chose it on purpose. Charters that have recently renovated include Sojourner Truth, Mundo Calle Ocho, Eagle Academy, DC Prep, Paul, and DCI. Charters are perhaps less likely to move into swing spaces, preferring to renovate piecemeal. ITDS did a major renovation of its basement recently, for example. |
This is all hilariously tendentious. We can all see with our own eyes how the city treats charter school kids like red-headed stepchildren. I'm surprised you (and others on this thread) are cool with that. |
I think the current facilities funding is fine. |
I think you've inadvertently proved the point. These projects are all quite modest. We're comparing DC Bilingual spending $15 million on a project to DCPS spending almost ten times as much on a school? |
Not really. These projects vary in size and DCPS does projects too. Each is unique and it's hard to total them up in a meaningful way. Also, if DCPS is stupidly doing wasteful, excessive renovations and the point of the charter sector is to make better decisions, then wouldn't we expect charters to spend less? "DCPS is making bad renovation choices so we should too" isn't much of an argument. |
Bump. Seriously, how much is this worth? Dollar amounts please. |
Right. So you want to solve the data problem by comparing the renovation of a 600 student elementary school to an 1900 student high school? And don't bother considering the state of the respective buildings pre-renovation. |
There's 600 kids at DCB, and they spent $15M. At Dorothy Height, there's 400 kids and they spend $80M. At JO Wilson, there's 450 kids and they spend $90M. At Burrville, there's 250 kids and they spend $85M. |
It's a rounding error. |
To be fair, the anti-DCPS vibe can also very toxic. The way our system is set up pits a bunch of type A DC parents against each other. Just read through the comments on half of these threads. Parents are constantly tearing DCPS apart and listing all of the reasons and generalizations and assumptions that make people have their feelings about DCPS. Not saying two wrongs make a right, but let’s not pretend charter parents are a uniform example of positivity either. |
| I don’t understand the argument about kids joining a school mid year. Funding is per pupil and follows the student. Each pupil brings a base rate of about $15,000. |
| I am not arguing for charters to get more money. I am arguing for DCPS to keep facilities funding within their budget so they are also more frugal about it, and the city can spend those SIXTY MILLION DOLLARS on something else. It is INSANE that we are going to spend that much on top of the per pupil funding every year. To be clear, we are not magically getting $60 million dollars of additional programs and services at DCPS. DCPS cannot afford its current programming and promised teacher salaries without this $60 million dollar break. Yearly. Meanwhile the facilities allotment for charters is frozen for next year and they will still have to use a greater portion of their per pupil funds to pay the electric bill. |
Yes, it's clear that you don't understand the argument. New kids don't bring funding if they join after count day. It's not just that they have to take some kids, it's that DCPS has to stand ready to absorb an unknown number of kids. DCPS can't say they only take new kids in certain grades or at certain times. No matter how disruptive to the school model, no matter how far behind, no matter of special needs, DCPS has to take them. If a charter suddenly closes, DCPS must stand ready to take kids at their IB schools on zero notice. Would charters agree to take a portion of that load? How much funding would charters want in exchange for agreeing to that obligation? I don't mean taking a few kids at their discretion, I mean an advance agreement to take unknown numbers in unknown grades. |