Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Possibly closing an off ramp because it makes it difficult for kids to get to extracurricular? Really? There are a number of inside the beltway schools that have traffic issues - should we just start closing roads to benefit school traffic? What am I missing?
I live on the McLean High School side of McLean. We are seeing enormous traffic on Westmoreland and Great Falls streets between the hours of 5 and 6. Backups are roughly one mile. Commuters trying to avoid the 66 tolls are using our surface streets and Waze is routing people through neighborhoods. It's become very frustrating, not to mention dangerous when people are driving WELL above posted speed limits to try and cut a minute off their commute.
So, to answer your question, yes, I would imagine that these backups are causing people to miss extracurricular activities. Maybe even adding 20+ minutes to getting kids there.
The larger issue is that we need to slow down the volume of traffic using neighborhood streets and smaller surface roads. How we do that, I'm not sure. But the volume of traffic using McLean as an alternative to the Beltway and 66 has clearly become an issue.
Woukdn't a more sensible solution to be either stagger the times of the activities and sports so they are not ending between 5:00 & 6:00?
Or renovating the parking lots so the students exit from a different way?
Or rezoning Langley students to a different high school so students no longer need to travel that way?
Anonymous wrote:Another data point exemplifying why I am so grateful we spent extra money to live in a walkable neighborhood.
I can't even imagine the daily hell of having to involve the beltway in our child getting to school - what an awful way to live.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Possibly closing an off ramp because it makes it difficult for kids to get to extracurricular? Really? There are a number of inside the beltway schools that have traffic issues - should we just start closing roads to benefit school traffic? What am I missing?
Why does Langley high school convenience get to dictate access and ramp closures on a major highway?
This is completely unreasonable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Possibly closing an off ramp because it makes it difficult for kids to get to extracurricular? Really? There are a number of inside the beltway schools that have traffic issues - should we just start closing roads to benefit school traffic? What am I missing?
I live on the McLean High School side of McLean. We are seeing enormous traffic on Westmoreland and Great Falls streets between the hours of 5 and 6. Backups are roughly one mile. Commuters trying to avoid the 66 tolls are using our surface streets and Waze is routing people through neighborhoods. It's become very frustrating, not to mention dangerous when people are driving WELL above posted speed limits to try and cut a minute off their commute.
So, to answer your question, yes, I would imagine that these backups are causing people to miss extracurricular activities. Maybe even adding 20+ minutes to getting kids there.
The larger issue is that we need to slow down the volume of traffic using neighborhood streets and smaller surface roads. How we do that, I'm not sure. But the volume of traffic using McLean as an alternative to the Beltway and 66 has clearly become an issue.
Woukdn't a more sensible solution to be either stagger the times of the activities and sports so they are not ending between 5:00 & 6:00?
Or renovating the parking lots so the students exit from a different way?
Or rezoning Langley students to a different high school so students no longer need to travel that way?
Anonymous wrote:Possibly closing an off ramp because it makes it difficult for kids to get to extracurricular? Really? There are a number of inside the beltway schools that have traffic issues - should we just start closing roads to benefit school traffic? What am I missing?
I live on the McLean High School side of McLean. We are seeing enormous traffic on Westmoreland and Great Falls streets between the hours of 5 and 6. Backups are roughly one mile. Commuters trying to avoid the 66 tolls are using our surface streets and Waze is routing people through neighborhoods. It's become very frustrating, not to mention dangerous when people are driving WELL above posted speed limits to try and cut a minute off their commute.
So, to answer your question, yes, I would imagine that these backups are causing people to miss extracurricular activities. Maybe even adding 20+ minutes to getting kids there.
The larger issue is that we need to slow down the volume of traffic using neighborhood streets and smaller surface roads. How we do that, I'm not sure. But the volume of traffic using McLean as an alternative to the Beltway and 66 has clearly become an issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well for a start the McLean Citizen's Board could stop green lighting every Tysons development that comes online while spending a ridiculous amount of time fighting a senior living facility.
The MCA is a small group with no authority to "green light" or halt development in Tysons or anywhere else. At best they can bend the ear of a few indulgent county officials.
Anonymous wrote:Possibly closing an off ramp because it makes it difficult for kids to get to extracurricular? Really? There are a number of inside the beltway schools that have traffic issues - should we just start closing roads to benefit school traffic? What am I missing?
Anonymous wrote:Well for a start the McLean Citizen's Board could stop green lighting every Tysons development that comes online while spending a ridiculous amount of time fighting a senior living facility.
Possibly closing an off ramp because it makes it difficult for kids to get to extracurricular? Really? There are a number of inside the beltway schools that have traffic issues - should we just start closing roads to benefit school traffic? What am I missing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks for sharing. Just once, it would be nice to see Langley families speak up for something that wasn't in their own interests or for someone other than themselves.
We're very glad we decided to buy in a different school district.
Oh, do tell us what school district you're in and just how you speak up for other districts and their interests. I'm so intrigued.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks for sharing. Just once, it would be nice to see Langley families speak up for something that wasn't in their own interests or for someone other than themselves.
We're very glad we decided to buy in a different school district.