But if Parks put an irrevocable open space condition on a site that was subject to a reclaim for school. then didn't Parks also have a hand in creating the problem? I guess I don't understand posters who insist on the one hand that a school can never be built at RCH because of what Parks did with certain funding, and on the other hand insist that Parks land can never be used for schools.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t know if anyone is suggesting that MCPS be punished (the posters will have to speak for themselves). What seems to be said, if I read the other poster correctly, is that MCPS had a hand in creating some of the problem, and so, if a park should have to be used, then MCPS should share in the burden. Is that unfair? I guess the answer is a decision for the communities involved.
Sorry PPs from RCH, the sanctity of the parks (or your park, as the case may be) does not trump the need for schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the MCPS is allowed to take an existing park, where no concrete or buildings now exist, is to reward their poor stewardship of their own real estate inventory.
Sorry PPs from RCH, the sanctity of the parks (or your park, as the case may be) does not trump the need for schools. To suggest that sites with parks shouldn't be considered in order to punish MCPS for its decision decades ago to close schools and/or sell properties that it did not need is just silly. Restricting the possible sites doesn't punish MCPS, it punishes our kids (or at least my kids, since I'd guess that the RCH opponents don't have young kids who would benefit from the middle school after its 2017 opening.) None of us can make a fair assessment of MCPS' planning decisions made in the 1980s - I don't know what factors went into those decisions, and neither do you. What I do know is that a new school is needed and there are a finite number of possible locations. One of them happens to sit in your neighborhood. Get over it, please.
The value of 'Education' or schools is not questioned. But county residents also value 'Parks' as places that everyone uses- those with older kids, those with no kids - throughout life. As a parent, one's connection with a middle school passes in the blink of an eye. When a Park goes away, it may never return. School organizations often assume 'it's for the children' is an argument that trumps all others. Many of us resent that line of thinking when it replaces real long-term planning, fiscal responsibility and respect for all county residents.
MCPS should be using its own resources if it has the option. That kind of inter-agency cooperation shouldd be respected by everyone- those with and without kids. We all count. And we're all funding these important decisions. For the record, I am not an RCH poster.
Anonymous wrote:If the MCPS is allowed to take an existing park, where no concrete or buildings now exist, is to reward their poor stewardship of their own real estate inventory.
Sorry PPs from RCH, the sanctity of the parks (or your park, as the case may be) does not trump the need for schools. To suggest that sites with parks shouldn't be considered in order to punish MCPS for its decision decades ago to close schools and/or sell properties that it did not need is just silly. Restricting the possible sites doesn't punish MCPS, it punishes our kids (or at least my kids, since I'd guess that the RCH opponents don't have young kids who would benefit from the middle school after its 2017 opening.) None of us can make a fair assessment of MCPS' planning decisions made in the 1980s - I don't know what factors went into those decisions, and neither do you. What I do know is that a new school is needed and there are a finite number of possible locations. One of them happens to sit in your neighborhood. Get over it, please.
Anonymous wrote:If the MCPS is allowed to take an existing park, where no concrete or buildings now exist, is to reward their poor stewardship of their own real estate inventory.
Sorry PPs from RCH, the sanctity of the parks (or your park, as the case may be) does not trump the need for schools. To suggest that sites with parks shouldn't be considered in order to punish MCPS for its decision decades ago to close schools and/or sell properties that it did not need is just silly. Restricting the possible sites doesn't punish MCPS, it punishes our kids (or at least my kids, since I'd guess that the RCH opponents don't have young kids who would benefit from the middle school after its 2017 opening.) None of us can make a fair assessment of MCPS' planning decisions made in the 1980s - I don't know what factors went into those decisions, and neither do you. What I do know is that a new school is needed and there are a finite number of possible locations. One of them happens to sit in your neighborhood. Get over it, please.
Anonymous wrote:If the MCPS is allowed to take an existing park, where no concrete or buildings now exist, is to reward their poor stewardship of their own real estate inventory.
Sorry PPs from RCH, the sanctity of the parks (or your park, as the case may be) does not trump the need for schools. To suggest that sites with parks shouldn't be considered in order to punish MCPS for its decision decades ago to close schools and/or sell properties that it did not need is just silly. Restricting the possible sites doesn't punish MCPS, it punishes our kids (or at least my kids, since I'd guess that the RCH opponents don't have young kids who would benefit from the middle school after its 2017 opening.) None of us can make a fair assessment of MCPS' planning decisions made in the 1980s - I don't know what factors went into those decisions, and neither do you. What I do know is that a new school is needed and there are a finite number of possible locations. One of them happens to sit in your neighborhood. Get over it, please.
If the MCPS is allowed to take an existing park, where no concrete or buildings now exist, is to reward their poor stewardship of their own real estate inventory.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The site is very level so minimal grading would be needed.
Either we have different understandings as to what constitutes "minimal" or we are talking about different Lynnbrook parks, because the Lynnbrook that I've visited has several different hills used for sledding.
I don't want to defend MCPS or represent that they do a good job of long range planning, but I do think it's unfair to suggest that that they represent an ongoing threat to parkland, without also acknowledging that they have created parks as well. I think a PP suggested that what MCPS should have done a while back is trade the RCH site to the Parks dept. for another park, but really what is the difference between doing that then and doing it now?
Anonymous wrote:The site is very level so minimal grading would be needed.
Further, I think you're spot-on about not rewarding MCPS for its poor stewardship. It creates the exigency by its abysmal performance, and then it argues that exigency to justify taking what it calls "vacant land" (parks). It's like the kid who kills his parents pleading for mercy because he's an orphan.
Anonymous wrote:There is no easy answer, and I am not from the neighborhood around Lynnbrook, so cannot speak for this community. But half the site (total 10.04 acres) is owned by MCPS. The old school buildings already sit on the property, so they would not be changing the nature of usage for those parcels. In fact, you could say those 3 parcels would be improved. The rest of the 3 parcels consist of MNCPPC parkland and one parcel houses the defunct activity building. This school and park have already co-located and co-existed since the 1940's. This would not be taking green open spaces from anyone. It would not be taking significant if any trees from the site. The site is very level so minimal grading would be needed. MCPS has to think urban school, thus multi level structure. That is the reality of down county building in the 21st century.
To think of targeting existing, open, tree laden parkland is to take away precious disappearing natural resources that are badly needed especially in the fast growing urbanized down county area.
If the MCPS is allowed to take an existing park, where no concrete or buildings now exist, is to reward their poor stewardship of their own real estate inventory. And it will not stop at the middle school, or the RCH site (or NCC site for that matter) because before long they will need to build...another school, and they will once again look at "vacant free land" called parks, that belong to all of us and are a precious and disappearing commodity.
I have visited all the original sites. All the parks are precious and important to the surrounding communities. People need parks. In this case I would advocate for doing the least harm.