DP. It always is amusing when people on DCUM think there is only one other poster. Maybe, maybe not. |
That actually makes sense. And move all the southern academies to Lewis |
The money came from a bond that was passed by the voters to build a new high school to relieve overcrowding. Never in the bond process did FCPS present to voters of Fairfax County that the bond money would be repurposed from a necessary high school to relieve overcrowding to a frivolous vanity project magnet that is only available to a handful of students and does not do anything to relieve overcrowding. |
Can you link to the bond material because a quick search of the 2023 referendum material doesn’t support your claim. What am I missing? |
If they want a magnet, FCPS needs to put it up to a taxpayer vote, just like any other bond There is no money available for or allocated to a fancy new magnet school that will cost millions more taxpayer dollars to launch. You know, our schools are all understaffed due to overcrowding. This magnet school vanity project does not address this issue. It makes it worse because we can almost guarantee that the magnet classes will have a much lower teacher to student ratio than the 35:1 all the regular classes have this year (or roughly 170:1 that the high school teachers have this year) kids in FCPS who do not qualify for free lunch have to pay around $50.00-$100.00 fee to take art or music classes in the FCPS middle in high schools. Our district has a 4 BILLION dollar budget, yet non rich and non farms kids cannot afford to take music or art classes because FCPS won't pay for their art supplies or music licensing. Yet they want to create an expensive magnet school out of thin air for a handful of students (400 magnet students is roughly 100 out of 14,000 students per each grade, serving less than 1% of high school students, 0.7% of high school students to be exact), when the rest of the students cannot get the basics like a freshman choir or band class without their parents putting up an $100.00 extra dollars?? A magnet school that will cost tens of millions of dollars to create, serving only 400 of the roughly 60,000 high school students, less than 1% of FCPS high school students, is an obscene waste of taxpayer funds, especially when in spite of a 4 BILLION dollar budget we are cutting everywhere, asking teachers to teach the max number of students allowed by the state formula, cutting special ed programs for older students, cutting crossing guards, not paying teachers what was agreed upon, cutting middle school programs, and more. Yet FCPS wants to blow millions of dollars on 400 high school students, without a taxpayer vote and with no transparency? No. This is not right. This is not what the money was allocated for. |
Not either PP here, but it really does not matter. If you make it a magnet it does not resolve the overcrowding problem in the area. They honestly do need the school to relieve the overcrowding. If it has to be a smaller school, so be it. There is room for expansion if budgets change. And, certainly, those two additional buildings could support classrooms easily and cheaply. I did a google search, they should be able to get a minimum of twenty classrooms in each of those buildings. Likely more. Anyone who says this would not work has not driven over there. It is basically a private drive. |
Only $25 million for land acquisition had been funded through the 2023 bond referendum, so you're talking out of both sides of your mouth. You're claiming it was fine for them to lay claim to other money that had been earmarked for other projects to pay for a $150 million acquisition that's now closed, but then you're saying the school has to be a neighborhood school. A speclalized program isn't a "frivolous vanity project" if it's what the KAA property best supports. As for overcrowding, FCPS projected that by 2029, Herndon will be at 69%, Chantilly at 98%, Westfield at 94%, Oakton at 94%, and Centreville at 69% (although the Centreville percentage is based on an expansion that's been held up). South Lakes would be at 100%, but that's full capacity, not overcrowded. The only school that FCPS projected would be acutely overcrowded by 2029 was West Springfield, which is nowhere near KAA, at 120%. Further, these projections were developed before the current Administration cracked down on undocumented immigrants, which is leading by both forced and unforced departures from NoVa. |
And, FCPS had done a dismal job at projections. I hope they are correct, but anything above 90% is a risky guess that we will be having another study in a couple of years. Are they counting all the new construction? You can mock it, but itis going on. I doubt it is included. |
Earlier bond documents and CIPs referred to a new elementary school in Fairfax or Oakton, and then the two-term School Board Chair, Karl Frisch, got that money reallocated to a school in Dunn Loring instead. If you think their CIP plans are set in stone (which, of course, is not the case since the plans in place prior to the KAA purchase didn't even call for construction to begin until 2034), then you haven't been paying attention. |
New construction can add students, and FCPS includes it in their forecasts once a developer has broken ground, but a school can still lose kids if other neighborhoods are yielding fewer kids. We know that Coates saw a lot of enrollment growth, but FCPS was projecting enrollment losses at many other schools in the area over the coming years. |
I’m sorry, but you’re trying to move the goalposts. The point made regarding bonds by the original poster, and made multiple times before that, is that the bond disallows the school to be used as a magnet. That doesn’t comport with my reading of the bond referendum materials, but I’m offering that poster a chance to point out the materials and explain why I’m wrong. Otherwise, your side loses a lot of credibility here, trying to argue the law/rules don’t allow for the magnet school. It’s never a good look to lie. |
Also, never a good look to call others liars just because their interpretation is different from yours. Again, you can disagree about bonds, but this area needs a traditional high school. The schools are overcrowded and/or too crowded. Magnet will not help our students. |
The argument isn't that the law/rules don't allow a magnet. The argument is that nowhere in any bond or plan was a magnet ever mentioned. No one ever voted on adding a magnet school. It is as much a misappropriation of funds as the diversion of funds to Dunn Loring that should have been used to build the Blake Lane school. |
I'm not interested in TJ due to the bus ride. You know what else I'm not interested in? Oakton due to the bus ride. I didn't like it to the point that I purchased elsewhere. You chose to continue with the purchase anyway so that's on you. It gets old to keep hearing you complain about it. |
Don’t be ridiculous. Prior poster’s verbatim statement from up thread: “They didn't follow the proper processes to do this. The money they spent was money allocated for a new general high school to ease overcrowding through the normal bond process. It was NOT allocated for a magnet school available to only a few students.” You’re caught trying to mislead us yet again. It hurts your credibility, and we still haven’t seen that link to the bond materials. |