Tell that to the kids in the area being split in different directions out of their area. Please remember, THRU plans to split additional neighborhoods and send kids on a 40 minute plus bus ride. This eliminates that plan. And, which "expanded" schools are supposed to absorb these kids instead of putting them on long bus rides? |
We'd already heard the sloppy Thru proposals are going to be substantially revised. You don't get to leverage that to justify a new school when the CIP shows substantial excess capacity in the aggregate by 2029 in the schools serving western Fairfax. At a minimum, they should be committing now to scaling back the Centreville expansion substantially and canceling the Dunn Loring project entirely if they are spending over $150 M on this property. Otherwise other renovations just get delayed and other areas in need just continue to get screwed. |
The area around KAA has been in need for a very long time. Centreville expansion may be scaled back. Changes and adjustments have been made many times through the years. Get over it. |
It's telling that they haven't identified the schools whose boundaries stand to be adjusted if this school becomes a typical HS rather than a specialized program, or it could delay the ongoing boundary review, yet they say it could open in the fall of 2026. Aim, ready, fire! |
If the sale closed, where did the money come from? They never included the full purchase price in prior school bonds. |
1. They just closed on the property. 2. There is a formal policy/process for the boundaries of a new school. 3. Hopefully, they will scale way back on this county wide boundary study--especially since overcrowding at Chantilly was one of the reasons thrown out as a need for relief. They now have the excuse to pull back on the county wide thing. They will do something to save face. From what I see, there are some elementary schools that could use some adjustment--especially Coates, which should have had relief this year. |
That new site better not become a magnet program. It needs to be a real high school, attended by students within a maximum 15-20 minutes drive from the school. It also needs to contribute towards making as many middle schools as possible in that area into single feeder middle schools. |
It doesn't take a rocket scientist to know that it will relieve Chantilly and Westfield. And, which school neighborhoods are closest to KAA? Chantilly and Westfield. It is not that hard. |
I get that some people want a magnet school. What I don’t understand is how they expect it to be ready for the 2026–2027 school year. When would prospective students apply, and when would admission decisions be made? I just don’t see how it’s possible. Yes, “flexibility” is there but Ryan’s email is clear about timeline. |
Well, when they voted at the School Board meeting, they talked about relief for the area--especially Chantilly. |
I get you have a vested interest, but dude, unless you inherited the house, you knew full and well the boundaries when you purchased it. Stop acting entitled. |
I'm curious about this as well. I assume it's legal, but is it really kosher? |
Ironic, since neighborhoods near KAA have been shifted several times since many purchased their houses. So, your premise is incorrect. The area would like some stability. |
DP, but the high school boundaries near KAA were last changed over 15 years ago. You don't want stability, you want a different school. |
This area is split into four different high schools. Hopefully, that will end. And, don't forget, both Chantilly and Westfield need relief. You seem to forget that. In fact, Chantilly kids are being proposed for a 40 minute plus bus ride. In addition, there is lots of new construction. |