Anonymous wrote:Surely some parent is a lawyer and could get it started. There have been lawsuits elsewhere. I believe that in san francisco there was a lawsuit citing the mental public health crisis among students. It doesn't need to go on for years only until schools open. Personally the school based system has served me well, because we have half days four days per week and my child is finally learning, whereas the district standard is two days per week with much of the in-person time spent watching specials on the computer. The problem I see is that the city has almost completely ignored parents who want schools opened and let union dictate nearly the entire process. Taking Wednesdays away from students is a perfect example of this. I don't like lawsuits, but it seems as though only something drastic can make the city listen. The city has to commit to five days per week in the fall and adjust the OSSE guidelines.
Anonymous wrote:Are you an actual DCPS parent or a charter parent who wants DCPS to fully open so your charter will?
DCPS doesn’t set the number of students in a classroom. So you would actually have to sue OSSE and the Department of Health.
Anonymous wrote:You realize 'public' charters have had this power all along right? It's not illegal by any means.
Anonymous wrote:I’m not sure what you would be looking for. Lots of schools have met the demand for in person learning (including schools in upper nw). Maybe you could force Dcps to open up the open slots to anyone from any school. More than likely you would be stuck in a lawsuit that goes on for years and by the time it settled the pandemic would be old news
Anonymous wrote:This may have been asked in a different three so feel free to redirect but is DCPS opening itself up to a lawsuit by allowing each school to develop their own reopening plan? It seems very inequitable to have some schools offer IPL and others only virtual using the school as a learning hub. Additionally, what about the fact that not everyone who wants an IP slot can get it? The entire set up seems very unfair and widening the education gap. Is it what DCPS doing legal?