Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its a private school type of area, private schools need support. I could ask why you are scared of handicap kids from the Lab school.
Private school type of area? The Lab School's students are sourced overwhelmingly from MD and VA. In contrast, the local public schools have some of the highest utilization rates in the entire city. A school that charges $50k in tuition and predominantly educates children from families who do not live in the District has no business in commanding implicit subsidies from DC taxpayers.
Anonymous wrote:Its a private school type of area, private schools need support. I could ask why you are scared of handicap kids from the Lab school.
Anonymous wrote:Its a private school type of area, private schools need support. I could ask why you are scared of handicap kids from the Lab school.
Anonymous wrote:Its a private school type of area, private schools need support. I could ask why you are scared of handicap kids from the Lab school.
Anonymous wrote:What the hell is going on in the third slide in this deck?: https://docs.google.com/file/d/1CXfjtqR4vfTVRhW2iZBpLjP6q7seYXB8/edit?usp=docslist_api&filetype=mspresentation
Someone has cut out a Google Maps image of Stoddert onto Hardy Park, probably at a higher level to make it look bigger than it actually is. If you actually look at the real Stoddert in Google Maps, you notice that the school co-exists quite well next to a very large public park.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This group was perfectly happy to give away a public building to an elite private school serving non-DC students for pennies on the dollar in order to prevent it from being put into public use. A proposal for a public school nearby is made and all of a sudden all these concerns about parking and traffic become all important. Basic logic dictates that if you really care about parking and traffic, the last thing you want in your neighborhood is an elite private school serving non-DC students. But of course this has nothing to do with that but rather horrible prejudices apparently harbored by this group.
I don't think vilifying the Lab school is appropriate. Lots of DC kids go to Lab and DC pays for poor kids to go private day schools like this. The student population there is a mix of self pay and kids paid for by school districts (DC, VA and MD). No one wants to send their kid to a special education private school-its a school of last resort. Its not "elite".
Anonymous wrote:This group was perfectly happy to give away a public building to an elite private school serving non-DC students for pennies on the dollar in order to prevent it from being put into public use. A proposal for a public school nearby is made and all of a sudden all these concerns about parking and traffic become all important. Basic logic dictates that if you really care about parking and traffic, the last thing you want in your neighborhood is an elite private school serving non-DC students. But of course this has nothing to do with that but rather horrible prejudices apparently harbored by this group.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And net there will be no increase in traffic in the area as Georgetown Day Lower School is moving out of the neighborhood. It is currently literally a block away from the tennis courts at Hardy.
That building has been sold to DCPS which is planning to open it as a school. But neighborhood schools create a lot less traffic than private schools which draw from the entire region.
Does this mean DCPS is opening 2 schools (newly constructed on park and at Georgetown day)?
Apparently yes. To relieve overcrowding at all levels in Ward 3.
But the plan will not alleviate overcrowding at Wilson.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And net there will be no increase in traffic in the area as Georgetown Day Lower School is moving out of the neighborhood. It is currently literally a block away from the tennis courts at Hardy.
That building has been sold to DCPS which is planning to open it as a school. But neighborhood schools create a lot less traffic than private schools which draw from the entire region.
Does this mean DCPS is opening 2 schools (newly constructed on park and at Georgetown day)?
Apparently yes. To relieve overcrowding at all levels in Ward 3.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And net there will be no increase in traffic in the area as Georgetown Day Lower School is moving out of the neighborhood. It is currently literally a block away from the tennis courts at Hardy.
That building has been sold to DCPS which is planning to open it as a school. But neighborhood schools create a lot less traffic than private schools which draw from the entire region.
Does this mean DCPS is opening 2 schools (newly constructed on park and at Georgetown day)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And net there will be no increase in traffic in the area as Georgetown Day Lower School is moving out of the neighborhood. It is currently literally a block away from the tennis courts at Hardy.
That building has been sold to DCPS which is planning to open it as a school. But neighborhood schools create a lot less traffic than private schools which draw from the entire region.
Does this mean DCPS is opening 2 schools (newly constructed on park and at Georgetown day)?