Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m glad to see this happening, and my kids attend Janney (and one of them will be there for a while). We can’t claim to care about equity broadly and then oppose new housing because it might add one or two kids to our children’s classrooms.
The Janney district likely will be cut back anyway with some in-Janney areas shifted to other schools. The enrollment issue will be taken care of that way.
Anonymous wrote:I’m glad to see this happening, and my kids attend Janney (and one of them will be there for a while). We can’t claim to care about equity broadly and then oppose new housing because it might add one or two kids to our children’s classrooms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good to build housing there. Then we will need some new schools (Lord & Taylor and Wardman Park sites seem promising) as well as some boundary, feeder pattern, and lottery changes. But DC shouldn't wait on those to start planning for more affordable housing on city-owned land.
The inability of this city to both plan for more housing and plan to handle the effects of more housing on already-overcrowded schools at the same time is astounding. It's like no one can walk and chew gum at the same time. Why can't we plan for both simultaneously? Instead, the school-crowding question gets hand-waved away by the (mainly childless) GGW types and their for-profit developer benefactors who are spearheading all this.
Anonymous wrote:Good to build housing there. Then we will need some new schools (Lord & Taylor and Wardman Park sites seem promising) as well as some boundary, feeder pattern, and lottery changes. But DC shouldn't wait on those to start planning for more affordable housing on city-owned land.
Anonymous wrote:I think this is great. As OP said this was always a part of the library building plan. It would be great to see some 2 or 3 bedroom apartments added vs 1br and studios.
Anonymous wrote:Too bad it can’t be Section 8.