Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s crazy is that this amendment wouldn’t even apply to this round of boundary changes because of KAA.
From the proposed amendment: These allowances shall not be applicable in the opening of a new school, or in the closing of an existing school.
If that new school gets opened fall of 2026, then the grandfathering wouldn’t apply.
To students zoned to KAA. There are many recommended adjustments to high school boundaries that are not related to KAA.
That’s open to interpretation - the amendment is not drafted well.
Anonymous wrote:What’s crazy is that this amendment wouldn’t even apply to this round of boundary changes because of KAA.
From the proposed amendment: These allowances shall not be applicable in the opening of a new school, or in the closing of an existing school.
If that new school gets opened fall of 2026, then the grandfathering wouldn’t apply.
Anonymous wrote:Agree that they are hoping this buys some parents off. And for many of us that HS grandfathering will address the biggest worry. I posted earlier that my kid will be a rising sophomore when it implements (or junior if this gets delayed which would be even worse) and by far my biggest worry in the process had been them moving during those key HS years. But a move for us would be to a comparable school so it’s not that groaning is awful in my neighborhood’s case. It’s just that a change at a particularly fragile time would be awful. I would still support others who oppose changes but it would dial the temperature on this way down for me.
There are still many ES and MS families though in the county to be engaged in any inherently bad changes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Fairfax connector? Not relevant to most of the neighborhoods. Hardly anyone lives walking distance to a connector station or has a connector station walking distance to their high school.
Just looked at the maps/routes.
I guess if your high school is next to a Metro station or a Park n Ride, it's possible.
Unfortunately, that would not work for us.
Sounds like someone who never rides a bus or has a kid in school wrote the comment about the buses being free.
https://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/connector/student-pass
Click on high school bus routes and find out!
Great idea! Everyone who is being moved, look up directions in Google maps and select the public transit tab. Post your estimated travel time and number of transfers required! I bet they’ll all be super reasonable.
Oops! I thought you were worried about the low income kids who couldn’t carpool to school. Most Fairfax low income neighborhoods are located near public transit. Laughably, you are concerned about you own kids and trying to stop grandfathering for all kids until you get what you want.
Got it.
This is sadly what I see in my neighborhood group. Folks opposing grandfathering seem worried that if it goes through, others will stop fighting the boundary change in general. I find the all or nothing attitude very sad. This needs to be treated as a separate issue --- a policy change that impacts all boundary changes current and future, some of which may end up being truly necessary. It doesn't have to mean that we stop pushing back against current unnecessary boundary changes. It is just another layer of protection against moving kids at particularly harmful time --- the middle of high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Fairfax connector? Not relevant to most of the neighborhoods. Hardly anyone lives walking distance to a connector station or has a connector station walking distance to their high school.
Just looked at the maps/routes.
I guess if your high school is next to a Metro station or a Park n Ride, it's possible.
Unfortunately, that would not work for us.
Sounds like someone who never rides a bus or has a kid in school wrote the comment about the buses being free.
https://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/connector/student-pass
Click on high school bus routes and find out!
Great idea! Everyone who is being moved, look up directions in Google maps and select the public transit tab. Post your estimated travel time and number of transfers required! I bet they’ll all be super reasonable.
Oops! I thought you were worried about the low income kids who couldn’t carpool to school. Most Fairfax low income neighborhoods are located near public transit. Laughably, you are concerned about you own kids and trying to stop grandfathering for all kids until you get what you want.
Got it.
Oops, you’re conflating many posters again. You lose a ton of credibility when you do that.
Ha! I saw someone posting like this before in this thread and it makes me laugh. If you want people to keep posters straight, create a user name, until then we are all anonymous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Fairfax connector? Not relevant to most of the neighborhoods. Hardly anyone lives walking distance to a connector station or has a connector station walking distance to their high school.
Just looked at the maps/routes.
I guess if your high school is next to a Metro station or a Park n Ride, it's possible.
Unfortunately, that would not work for us.
Sounds like someone who never rides a bus or has a kid in school wrote the comment about the buses being free.
https://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/connector/student-pass
Click on high school bus routes and find out!
Great idea! Everyone who is being moved, look up directions in Google maps and select the public transit tab. Post your estimated travel time and number of transfers required! I bet they’ll all be super reasonable.
Oops! I thought you were worried about the low income kids who couldn’t carpool to school. Most Fairfax low income neighborhoods are located near public transit. Laughably, you are concerned about you own kids and trying to stop grandfathering for all kids until you get what you want.
Got it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Fairfax connector? Not relevant to most of the neighborhoods. Hardly anyone lives walking distance to a connector station or has a connector station walking distance to their high school.
Just looked at the maps/routes.
I guess if your high school is next to a Metro station or a Park n Ride, it's possible.
Unfortunately, that would not work for us.
Sounds like someone who never rides a bus or has a kid in school wrote the comment about the buses being free.
https://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/connector/student-pass
Click on high school bus routes and find out!
Great idea! Everyone who is being moved, look up directions in Google maps and select the public transit tab. Post your estimated travel time and number of transfers required! I bet they’ll all be super reasonable.
Oops! I thought you were worried about the low income kids who couldn’t carpool to school. Most Fairfax low income neighborhoods are located near public transit. Laughably, you are concerned about you own kids and trying to stop grandfathering for all kids until you get what you want.
Got it.
Oops, you’re conflating many posters again. You lose a ton of credibility when you do that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Fairfax connector? Not relevant to most of the neighborhoods. Hardly anyone lives walking distance to a connector station or has a connector station walking distance to their high school.
Just looked at the maps/routes.
I guess if your high school is next to a Metro station or a Park n Ride, it's possible.
Unfortunately, that would not work for us.
Sounds like someone who never rides a bus or has a kid in school wrote the comment about the buses being free.
https://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/connector/student-pass
Click on high school bus routes and find out!
Great idea! Everyone who is being moved, look up directions in Google maps and select the public transit tab. Post your estimated travel time and number of transfers required! I bet they’ll all be super reasonable.
Oops! I thought you were worried about the low income kids who couldn’t carpool to school. Most Fairfax low income neighborhoods are located near public transit. Laughably, you are concerned about you own kids and trying to stop grandfathering for all kids until you get what you want.
Got it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Fairfax connector? Not relevant to most of the neighborhoods. Hardly anyone lives walking distance to a connector station or has a connector station walking distance to their high school.
Just looked at the maps/routes.
I guess if your high school is next to a Metro station or a Park n Ride, it's possible.
Unfortunately, that would not work for us.
Sounds like someone who never rides a bus or has a kid in school wrote the comment about the buses being free.
https://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/connector/student-pass
Click on high school bus routes and find out!
Great idea! Everyone who is being moved, look up directions in Google maps and select the public transit tab. Post your estimated travel time and number of transfers required! I bet they’ll all be super reasonable.
Oops! I thought you were worried about the low income kids who couldn’t carpool to school. Most Fairfax low income neighborhoods are located near public transit. Laughably, you are concerned about you own kids and trying to stop grandfathering for all kids until you get what you want.
Got it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Fairfax connector? Not relevant to most of the neighborhoods. Hardly anyone lives walking distance to a connector station or has a connector station walking distance to their high school.
Just looked at the maps/routes.
I guess if your high school is next to a Metro station or a Park n Ride, it's possible.
Unfortunately, that would not work for us.
Sounds like someone who never rides a bus or has a kid in school wrote the comment about the buses being free.
https://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/connector/student-pass
Click on high school bus routes and find out!
Great idea! Everyone who is being moved, look up directions in Google maps and select the public transit tab. Post your estimated travel time and number of transfers required! I bet they’ll all be super reasonable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Fairfax connector? Not relevant to most of the neighborhoods. Hardly anyone lives walking distance to a connector station or has a connector station walking distance to their high school.
Just looked at the maps/routes.
I guess if your high school is next to a Metro station or a Park n Ride, it's possible.
Unfortunately, that would not work for us.
Sounds like someone who never rides a bus or has a kid in school wrote the comment about the buses being free.
https://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/connector/student-pass
Click on high school bus routes and find out!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Fairfax connector? Not relevant to most of the neighborhoods. Hardly anyone lives walking distance to a connector station or has a connector station walking distance to their high school.
Just looked at the maps/routes.
I guess if your high school is next to a Metro station or a Park n Ride, it's possible.
Unfortunately, that would not work for us.
Sounds like someone who never rides a bus or has a kid in school wrote the comment about the buses being free.
https://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/connector/student-pass
Click on high school bus routes and find out!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Fairfax connector? Not relevant to most of the neighborhoods. Hardly anyone lives walking distance to a connector station or has a connector station walking distance to their high school.
Just looked at the maps/routes.
I guess if your high school is next to a Metro station or a Park n Ride, it's possible.
Unfortunately, that would not work for us.
Sounds like someone who never rides a bus or has a kid in school wrote the comment about the buses being free.
Anonymous wrote:The Fairfax connector? Not relevant to most of the neighborhoods. Hardly anyone lives walking distance to a connector station or has a connector station walking distance to their high school.