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DC Public and Public Charter Schools
Reply to "New DCPS school on former Georgetown Day site will be a high school"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Ward 3 candidates are starting to come out with positions on this. What are people's takes?[/quote] Here's Frumin on Foxhall and MacArthur: https://fruminforward3.com/food-for-thought-new-schools/ He thinks we should pause planning for the Foxhall ES to see if that money might be better spent elsewhere in Ward 3 DCPS and says the idea of a 50/50 boundary/lottery HS for 1,000 kids on MacArthur is idealistically sound but logistically unsound because a.) the school is not in a central location, making it difficult to reach for many; and b.) building a new half-lottery school in Ward 3 will only draw kids away from already-underutilized high schools elsewhere in the city. He envisions a high school on the MacArthur site for 700, but doesn't say where those 700 should come from (Hardy plus kids moved from Wilson? Redrawn W3 boundaries? Hardy plus fewer lottery seats?) He also says "the way to increase access to Ward 3 schools is to build more affordable housing in the area, a project to which I am deeply committed." Well, good luck with that. Ward 3 is definitely getting more housing, but almost none of it will be affordable because developers can't make money off such housing. [/quote] Having read his page and being very familiar with this issue, the alternative options, and the arguments for and against the new schools, his position seems more nuanced than you are giving him credit for. But it is also a classic example of a candidate carefully crafting a position to be all things to all people (with special attention to the vocal NIMBYs in Foxhall) while putting forth ideas that are superficially appealing but completely unrealistic (buying back LAB's lease; asking them to move to the River School campus). It's taken so long to get movement on the school overcrowding problem in Ward 3 and finally we have traction. Any candidate who can say with a straight-face that they support public education and yet want to put a "pause" on that movement should be viewed with some suspicion. [/quote] On the plus side, he's also talking himself out of the Mary Cheh endorsement that will probably be decisive. [/quote] Mary Cher’s endorsement won’t make a difference. The Washington Post endorsement is the only one that matters. [/quote] Mary Cheh wouldn’t endorse Matt. He ran against her for her seat several years ago. I’m betting she is still pissed about that.[/quote] He ran against Anita Bonds. Matt was Mary's campaign treasurer until she dropped out a few weeks ago. [/quote] What about Beau Finley?[/quote] He apparently really lives in Maryland, if posters in another thread are to be believed.[/quote]
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