Anonymous wrote:
So here we are 10 years later and now the prices in Silver Spring, Takoma Park, and Olney are quite overheated in my opinion. It's frustrating to see home prices still so out of reach for a normal middle-class family. The DC metro basically shuts out people like us.
I know many DC professional journalists who have been holding out for 10 years for home prices to be rational here. We're still waiting.
Anonymous wrote:Okay, thanks. I think the problem for us would be the stress of trying to get into a magnet program and then if she doesn't get in feeling kind of like a loser. Then if some of her friends get in and she doesn't, I'd think they start hanging out in different groups. I would like a setup where there's a middle school and then they all go to the same high school.
My daughter is bright, but she gets anxious pretty easily and I just hate to see her stressing over getting into a magnet program when she's only in 8th grade. I'm sure it does work well for certain students, though.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks. Yes, I've been researching Sherwood H.S. a bit, and checking out the home prices. I do hope the prices come down. It seems no matter where you look you're expected to pay $600,000 to $500,000 for a not-so-special house. Fifteen years ago homes in some areas of Bethesda were selling for under $300,000!
I wish the real estate nightmare would end. How can so many people afford this?? My husband and I have a substantial nest egg, but we don't want to use it for a house. Though if the market ever tumbles we'd love to swoop in.
For now, we may have to rent first. I don't see how these real estate prices can be sustained with the federal budget crisis. And the U.S. economy is really stalling right now.
Anonymous wrote:The Blair process sounds pretty stressful. I don't like the idea that your high school isn't a given. Plus, what if my daughter makes a few good friends in middle school and then loses them when they go off to different high schools? She really needs to have some friends going in to h.s.
We want to move because Kansas City is deathly dull and the opportunities for writers and editors are very low compared to the DC metro. Finding editing work here is like looking for a needle in a haystack. I'm from NYC and I really crave a big city I can at least visit a few times a month for cultural activities. Plus, the Tea Party is probably about to overtake the state legislature--it's very upsetting stuff down here.
Anonymous wrote:The Blair process sounds pretty stressful. I don't like the idea that your high school isn't a given. Plus, what if my daughter makes a few good friends in middle school and then loses them when they go off to different high schools? She really needs to have some friends going in to h.s.
We want to move because Kansas City is deathly dull and the opportunities for writers and editors are very low compared to the DC metro. Finding editing work here is like looking for a needle in a haystack. I'm from NYC and I really crave a big city I can at least visit a few times a month for cultural activities. Plus, the Tea Party is probably about to overtake the state legislature--it's very upsetting stuff down here.