Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And if the school jumped to 20% eligible for FARM, that would cause the school to have higher crime and bad behavior? I ask because our school has 70% FARMS and we didn't have those problems.
Good for you! My kid is a FARM kid and in trouble(few bad words, hope he learned his lesson). I need him to be around non-Farms.
Anonymous wrote:And if the school jumped to 20% eligible for FARM, that would cause the school to have higher crime and bad behavior? I ask because our school has 70% FARMS and we didn't have those problems.
Anonymous wrote:Right, you aren't stopping people from living in their own neighborhood and attending their schools-- but you aren't interested in integrating a few poor families into your neighborhood. And why is society pampering your phobia of poor people?
Anonymous wrote:Nobody's stopping you six-figure crybabies from home-schooling your children.
Anonymous wrote:A PP was right that some jobs are always going to be low paying..barista, waiting tables, retail etc...but those jobs are not meant to support a family of four. People have to make more strategic choices. I worked retail while putting myself through college. I also DID NOT HAVE a baby until I was married and finacially able. Nothing is more infuriating than all the WaPo articles on gentrification, poverty etc where the main person is pregnant with her fourth kid and is 23 years old and working at Walmart. And wondering what DC is going to do for her. Stop having babies, that is the surest way to lift yourself out of poverty.
Anonymous wrote:And if the school jumped to 20% eligible for FARM, that would cause the school to have higher crime and bad behavior? I ask because our school has 70% FARMS and we didn't have those problems.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:why should you get to live in a neighborhood with no low income housing available? Why should only other neighborhoods have to have low-income housing?
And yes, I would expect that Oahu and Aspen have low-income housing available for those people that work in their community.
Because I studied hard as a child, landed a well-paying job, scrimped and saved, and was finally able to afford a house in a high-rent district?
right, and how will you be harmed if FARMS eligibile kids (and their families) move into your neighborhood?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:why should you get to live in a neighborhood with no low income housing available? Why should only other neighborhoods have to have low-income housing?
And yes, I would expect that Oahu and Aspen have low-income housing available for those people that work in their community.
Because I studied hard as a child, landed a well-paying job, scrimped and saved, and was finally able to afford a house in a high-rent district?
Anonymous wrote:why should you get to live in a neighborhood with no low income housing available? Why should only other neighborhoods have to have low-income housing?
And yes, I would expect that Oahu and Aspen have low-income housing available for those people that work in their community.