I know families opting in from Fox Mill and it is more than a handful. I know families planning on SLHS. No one who is opting in is worried about the boundaries, there are enough opting in that carpooling will be easy if needed but the Japanese immersion comments made on Friday sure make it seem like Fox Mill will be in boundary. |
| If there is the final vote in a month time, I hope we see the next map asap. |
The initial statements all suggested they were getting a four-year, ready-to-go high school for $150 million, and all the statements about the savings to FCPS were based on that assumption as well. Obviously that isn’t turning out to be the case, and there’s no point in pretending otherwise. |
So you keep saying, but that just isn't true. It was plainly obvious to everyone the existing school was K-12, didn't have some facilities required for sports, and had unfinished space in the two on campus buildings. You are pushing a narrative that just isn't true. If you are going to latch onto that savings number, lets make sure to go back and add how much money is saved by not having to expand Centreville so much. Lets also add in not having to replace dozens and dozens of aging trailers at Chantilly and Westfield. Lets add in transportation savings over time from shorter bus routes to the new school. |
The initial posts I remember all mentioned that there was going to need to be renovations at the new school because it was built to be a private school with a very different lay out. Also, there were the very specific Muslim additions, like foot baths and split gender common spaces that would have to be addressed. There were comments about how to use the two buildings on the property that were detached from the school. The discussion was that the building plus renovations would be less expensive then buying property and building a new building. And yes, the School Board has handled all of this awfully. I don't know anyone who thinks that it has been well managed or well handled. I will say that the message from the first open house was garbled and confusing and pretty bad. The message this last Friday was far clearer and you could see that the planning principal and his team have been working hard to pull together what the plan was and how it was going to evolve. The boundary deadline moved from the summer to the spring, which is still too long but better. They know 4 of the languages that they are offering. They know that they are going to AP/DE route. While the Board up Superintendent have handled this badly, I have been impressed with the progress made by the planning team for the school. At the end of the day, that is the team running the school and addressing issues that arise. |
I wouldn't count on it. SLHS has made a dramatic turnaround in performance and reputation since adding those Fox Mill homes. It would be political suicide for Meren to allow the school to drop back to how it used to be. I think Western will get that bit of Floris that is currently SL, but doubt they'll move all of Fox Mill in the end. |
Annandale has a 14 room modular installed in 2011. Don't know if it was new or relocated. 8 trailers with the same square footage as used for it's neighborhood center. 5 others HS's have modulars and 3 are from 2005 [Chantilly, Robinson, Centreville]. Mclean's was a relocated modular-not new so you can't estimate perhaps a 25 year useful life off the year installed. Bren Mar to Lewis is logical instead of Annandale based on the modular and it's condition. Then there is the 109% projected utilization for Poe becoming an AAP center. Maybe they'll do K-6 at Bren Mar Park with tweaks to pre K sites and feed it to Lewis pyramid OR change it's boundary. That 10.4m annual cost for years on transportation plus the 918k on one school, Kent Gardens, make us wonder why FCPS doesn't provide numbers on the cost for MS AAP buses. That Franklin to Carson shuffle plus stuff to Rocky Run have huge numbers and cover wide territory in FCPS. I think the SB had excessive grandfathering on Kent Gardens. That SB voted for the scheme and at large should have pushed the envelope and moved Spring Hill Island. Grandfathering with transportation should be: Elementary final year only, none on MS and move all AAP to base, grades 11 and 12 high school because of the hideous IB. South County opened with grade 11 |
And the families that don't want IB will happily pupil place to Western for the special programs and AP. The same way that a good number of families leave every year for AP at Herndon, Langly, and Oakton. Except now it will be closer, and they are offering Japanese. There is an active push by some Fox Mill families to move to the new school. And as the school moves past the lack of sports, there will be a stronger push. Somewhere between 130-200 student's pupil place out each year for AP, depending on the year. Parents have been asking for AP at SLHS for the last 25 years. Some parents want AP enough that they send their kids to Herndon, a school that most people on this board think is awful. What do you think is going to happen once the Western School is up and running and has sports and AP? There are Fox Mill families that are actively working to move to Western. Meren is trying to delay opening Western because she is stuck between people who want to keep Fox Mill at SLHS and a large group that want to move. |
You’re grasping at straws here. It’s very clear the false statements made by FCPS about “savings” were based on the latest CIP estimate of the purported cost of a new HS minus $150 million. Do the math, if you can. |
You keep attacking Meren, but maybe she just thinks they should really make sure they know what they are doing before they open a new high school. Keep in mind you’re entrusting the opening of this opt-in, two-grade, no-sports, no-staff (yet), no-boundaries (yet), soon-to-be-construction-zone school to the same people who hired the lamentable, unqualified Thru Consulting and conducted a debacle of a boundary review. Nothing could possibly go wrong, right? |
I think that the final vote on boundaries is the beginning of next year. It is not really a Scenario 5. The scenario 4 is mostly locked in, accept for some glaring mistakes (putting students in schools that are overcrowded and underutilizations, etc). So this is 4a scenario... Which the board will do minor tweaks. The Lewis issue and Parklawn/Glasgow are huge glaring issues that need to be addressed and were made worse with the scenario 4. Then there is 4b scenario after that which will be straight up politics. It is what Reid decides to tweak and I assume those are the promises that she has made in the meetings. |
Reid needs to go. The school was a great purchase and needed. But, her desire for something new and glamorous has been troubling. The school was needed for overcrowding and to eliminate long bus rides. If they had incorporated the boundaries into the present study (which has also been a mess), it would make a lot more sense. It would seem that she is doing everything she can to sabotage having a traditional boundary high school. They easily could have opened with ninth and tenth grade if they would have figured out the sports issue. |
Meren is not listening to the people who have been talking to her. She would probably see a significant change in attitudes if she were to promote adding AP to SLHS but she has yet to do that. The parents at SLHS who want AP have been voting with their feet for years. The only reason has been "noticed" is that 200 HHS kids pupil place to SLHS, essentially replacing the kids who leave SLHS every year. To be fair, none of the reps have listened to the parents who are unhappy with programming at SLHS. If Meren wants to show she is listening to her constituents, then she should be pushing for AP and IB at SLHS, just like Robinson has. This is less of my issue now because we are opting in to the new school and are fine with carpooling if we need to. There are more families like mine then I think people realize. |
Well, that’s all clear as mud. |
Especially, as she has made lots of statements that may be contradictory. |