Anonymous wrote:I have a strange feeling that the CC families are ticked because they probably would have preferred to stay at Westland and would have been fine splitting off, but it wasn't PC to say that to the rest of the school. Now they are stuck with what they see as a "worse" school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If all Chevy Chase, including RCF, are forced into middle school #2 with a high FARMS rate the property value of the housing will drop.
Many people who live in the more affluent sections of Chevy Chase send their kids to private schools. The housing price in these areas will stay constant because of the neighborhood.
The RCF, NCC and Rosemary Hills neighborhoods will see large housing declines. Many of these neighborhoods are perceived as not being as "nice" and can't withstand an over crowded high FARMS rate middle school, and some (mine included) have the split articulation already against us.
My source: two different realtors, we are thankfully moving out of this area, hopefully before the impact of the middle school is realized.
Plus 2, two realtors I know said the same exact thing. However, I don't think the BOE should make boundaries based on housing values, that would be horrible, but this is not the first time I have heard this. Property values are not a concern for me, not even close, overcrowding and lack of resources are.
And to the poster who said both middle schools will be "excellent". Are you serious? Outside of this issue, have you been reading up on MCPS lately? Either you are uninformed or your bar for excellence must be really low.
Sounds like you should move or go private. But don't pretend that all of us living in the RH/CC/NCC boundary agree with you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These posters have moved past overwrought and into absurd self-satire.
I've actually been wondering if an RCF parent is not pretending to be a CC/NCC parent and posting this stuff to undermine them. Some of the claims are so bizarre I just don't know what to think. The Westland will be 99% white and 99% top 1% was so crazy that I refuse to believe that an actual real person that is a responsible adult could write it.
The fact that 2 CC/NCC parents flipped out on board members in public around the same issues makes it highly likely these are bonafide looneys in your zone.
First of all, obviously you are directing your comment to a RCF poster who is slamming their CC/NCC "opposition". Nice tag teaming! Secondly, your name calling is pathetic, unintelligent and shows even you know the RCF arguement is self serving and wrong for the community at large. Argue on merits, not on name calling.
Keep in mind, you are going to face an entire school (NCC and CCES, there will be more of them than you in the overcrowded school) that will despise you and people like you for years with your nasty rhetoric. You refelect on your community.
The BOE has created a nasty situation in the new middle with Option 7. The hatred is running deep and will for a long time. Unfortunate. Many in NCC CCES and RCF hate each other. I have friends on each side who are not even speaking to each other anymore it has gotten so bad. Bad blood. Way to go Super Smith! Failure right out of the gate!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From the testimony on the 10th, the NAACPs credibility to weigh in on this was shot down by black parents themselves that live in the community.
I am beginning to sense also that most of the acrimony here is from NCC parents. I'm not sure why they are so upset though as many basically live in Kensington and are lucky not to be in the DCC. If they hate the "high" FARMS at MS#2, their alternative is DCC.
There were black parents who testified for RHPS CCES and NCC too in support of Option 1. Also, the NAACP was not "shot down". They never took a public position on anything but two way bussing, as is their policy. Unless, those CCES RHPS and NCC African American voices don't count for you because they are not in the RCF community.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If all Chevy Chase, including RCF, are forced into middle school #2 with a high FARMS rate the property value of the housing will drop.
Many people who live in the more affluent sections of Chevy Chase send their kids to private schools. The housing price in these areas will stay constant because of the neighborhood.
The RCF, NCC and Rosemary Hills neighborhoods will see large housing declines. Many of these neighborhoods are perceived as not being as "nice" and can't withstand an over crowded high FARMS rate middle school, and some (mine included) have the split articulation already against us.
My source: two different realtors, we are thankfully moving out of this area, hopefully before the impact of the middle school is realized.
Plus 2, two realtors I know said the same exact thing. However, I don't think the BOE should make boundaries based on housing values, that would be horrible, but this is not the first time I have heard this. Property values are not a concern for me, not even close, overcrowding and lack of resources are.
And to the poster who said both middle schools will be "excellent". Are you serious? Outside of this issue, have you been reading up on MCPS lately? Either you are uninformed or your bar for excellence must be really low.
Anonymous wrote:Coming late to this, but how do you access the BOE hearing recording and/or read the testimony?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From the testimony on the 10th, the NAACPs credibility to weigh in on this was shot down by black parents themselves that live in the community.
I am beginning to sense also that most of the acrimony here is from NCC parents. I'm not sure why they are so upset though as many basically live in Kensington and are lucky not to be in the DCC. If they hate the "high" FARMS at MS#2, their alternative is DCC.
There were black parents who testified for RHPS CCES and NCC too in support of Option 1. Also, the NAACP was not "shot down". They never took a public position on anything but two way bussing, as is their policy. Unless, those CCES RHPS and NCC African American voices don't count for you because they are not in the RCF community.
Anonymous wrote:From the testimony on the 10th, the NAACPs credibility to weigh in on this was shot down by black parents themselves that live in the community.
I am beginning to sense also that most of the acrimony here is from NCC parents. I'm not sure why they are so upset though as many basically live in Kensington and are lucky not to be in the DCC. If they hate the "high" FARMS at MS#2, their alternative is DCC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I read the NAACP testimony from Monday night's hearing. They are not in favor of Options 1 or 7. They are in favor of Option 11, because it has two-way bussing, despite its awful utilization numbers (if you think 7 is bad, look at 11!). I'm confused why they didn't support Option 9, one of the original options, which has two-way bussing, and a great balance of FARMS, demographics, and utilization. I'm guessing it wasn't popular with Somerset and CCES, but it's curious to me. Anyone have any insight?
Actually, I have some insight on this. The NAACP has a policy where they will only publicly endorse two way bussing options. It is their policy. Privately, I had a NAACP member tell me they are deeply concerned about the inequity in the diversity numbers in Option 7, they find it problematic but can not take a public stand for Option 1 because it goes against NAACP policy of only supporting two way bussing.
Thanks, that's helpful to know. Do you know why they didn't support Option 9 from the beginning though? Why they would ask for a new two-way bussing option (11) rather than support the one that was already on the table and has really good balance?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I read the NAACP testimony from Monday night's hearing. They are not in favor of Options 1 or 7. They are in favor of Option 11, because it has two-way bussing, despite its awful utilization numbers (if you think 7 is bad, look at 11!). I'm confused why they didn't support Option 9, one of the original options, which has two-way bussing, and a great balance of FARMS, demographics, and utilization. I'm guessing it wasn't popular with Somerset and CCES, but it's curious to me. Anyone have any insight?
Actually, I have some insight on this. The NAACP has a policy where they will only publicly endorse two way bussing options. It is their policy. Privately, I had a NAACP member tell me they are deeply concerned about the inequity in the diversity numbers in Option 7, they find it problematic but can not take a public stand for Option 1 because it goes against NAACP policy of only supporting two way bussing.
Anonymous wrote:I read the NAACP testimony from Monday night's hearing. They are not in favor of Options 1 or 7. They are in favor of Option 11, because it has two-way bussing, despite its awful utilization numbers (if you think 7 is bad, look at 11!). I'm confused why they didn't support Option 9, one of the original options, which has two-way bussing, and a great balance of FARMS, demographics, and utilization. I'm guessing it wasn't popular with Somerset and CCES, but it's curious to me. Anyone have any insight?