Anonymous wrote:Call me naive but it does make some sense that it is more expensive to do all/most of the renovation in the summer. I find some merit to trying to keep rush fees/overtime down by moving students off site. It would also reduce the cost of erecting so many trailer campuses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone care to share in distilled form for those of use whose computers don't seem to be able to handle the size of those files?
I'm the OP and don't find it user friendly. You have to search for each school you are interested in and then look to see where the dollars are allocated and what years they are allocated to, then look to see the planning year vs. construction years, etc. There doesn't appear to be an overall list, in order, of when the renovations will begin and when they will be completed.
The Google Docs ranking just seems to rank 18 schools (perhaps the ones that hadn't been included or decided on to be renovated?) in order of need based on various factors.
From that it appears Adams, Logan/Capitol Hill Montessori, Washington Metro, Malcolm X, and Browne are not in the improvement plan at all (so the 5 schools they have no plans to renovate by 2022) and then there are at least 3 (SWS, SWW and Eaton) where they won't even start the planning phase until FY 22, but seem to still be calling that "renovated by FY 22" in the articles that have come out, which is total crap. Planning phase does not equal renovated by FY 22.
Anonymous wrote:My computer isn't liking those files. What's the word on Eaton?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you.
I guess I didn't look hard enough.
As I suspected, it appears our school is one of the ones that got shafted. And although we will have been parents at the school for 12 years by the time my youngest finishes, the school will not be done by then, but my youngest will get to spend 5 years in a school under construction. What a joke. But what else is new, we're just collateral damage anyway.
Us too.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone care to share in distilled form for those of use whose computers don't seem to be able to handle the size of those files?
Anonymous wrote:Thank you.
I guess I didn't look hard enough.
As I suspected, it appears our school is one of the ones that got shafted. And although we will have been parents at the school for 12 years by the time my youngest finishes, the school will not be done by then, but my youngest will get to spend 5 years in a school under construction. What a joke. But what else is new, we're just collateral damage anyway.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/dc-politics/2016/03/24/5a775a54-f1dd-11e5-89c3-a647fcce95e0_story.html
"Work on some schools would be accelerated under this plan, and work on others could be delayed. Officials declined to provide a list of affected schools."
I want to see the list of planned renovations and the order. And the poor 5 schools that are not included to be renovated.
And don't tell me to write to the Mayor's office. I've written several times about other things in the city and have never once received a response.