Almost 60 percent of kids in Ward 5 go to charters. They wouldn't be there if their parents didn't think it was the better option. |
Yep |
Why would SSMA be anyone's best option? |
The only Wards where a majority of public school kids go to DCPS are 3 (about 70 percent) and 2 (just over 50 percent). All the other wards, more kids go to charters. |
+1 |
And again, charters don't serve all kids with disabilities. So you can stop. |
What are you talking about? I would never trust my kids (with significant disabilities) to the trash at OSSE and dcps. No thank you. |
You know OSSE oversees charter schools too? |
I'm talking about charters not having all the programs that DCPS has to have. You wouldn't trust your kids to DCPS but many people HAVE NO CHOICE. |
DCI, which they built out of a very old dormitory for nurses, cost less than all of these, and serves more students than almost all of the schools here. |
Great facilities at a fraction of the cost. Who here is really surprised about the waste of hundreds of millions of taxpayers money overpaying for DCPS renovations? https://www.perkinseastman-dc.com/projects/dc-international-school/ |
Which DCPS school has 66 acres like DCI? |
DCI itself doesn’t have 66 acres but the school sits on and is part of the 66 acre redevelopment which is pretty fantastic and location is great. Kids can walk to the Whole Foods and all the retail there. Kids can walk to the large park area. Rock Creek Park is right there and where the track teams run. Fort Stevens is right there and where the tennis team practices. DCI has a ton of sports and it is not just because they have fields but also because of where they are located and what is around them. https://www.hines.com/properties/the-parks-at-walter-reed-washington |
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There is another program getting cut that I don’t hear anyone talking about. The mayor has proposed cutting off Community Based Organizations like the Latin American Youth Center and Hillcrest from providing school-based mental health professionals. Under a recent law, every school now gets a mental health provider, and 130 schools are getting them for free through this program. Getting cut off will affect school budgets and also decimate these non-profits. The new plan is for DBH to hire their own practitioners (they haven’t) and provide support in a cluster model, which means schools will lose their mental health staff.
I read the total cost savings is only $3 million. There is a $555 million capital budget for DCPS plus $59 million new extra funding to pay for utilities and facilities operations. The pay equity fund for daycares, mental health providers in every school, and charter equity (if you care about that) could all be restored by putting the facilities funding back in the per pupil formula and reducing the capital budget by a little over 20%. https://wamu.org/story/26/05/13/mayor-bowser-budget-changes-mental-health-services-in-dc-schools/ |