Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:School boundaries can be redrawn.
What percent of the playground would be removed?
If school boundaries could be easily redrawn, the crazed push to build more ”affordable housing” in Ward 3 would not exist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who thinks it’s a nifty idea to sacrifice 40 to 50 feet of the Janney school playground so that a private developer can build 7 or 8 more floors on top of the Tenley library for upmarket flats and a handful of “inclusive zoning” units? There are few clearer examples of privatizing public assets for private profit.
Since it is all city owned land, the affordability mix could be far greater and deeper than you posit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why should they have say to stop it?
Giving away a chunk of the Janney school playground to enable a private development on top of the library seems messed up, no?
No, it is a great idea to increase apartment housing near the school and encourage more diversity.
Children (700 of them) need space to run and play, it will displace an educational and award winning garden. If they add more kids they will need to eventually add demountable to house them and there will be no space.
My kids have graduated, but it is a shame to do this and I do not think the few units of affordable housing are worth it. There are other places to build.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why should they have say to stop it?
Giving away a chunk of the Janney school playground to enable a private development on top of the library seems messed up, no?
Anonymous wrote:Can't the Janney Community do something to stop this?
Anonymous wrote:Who thinks it’s a nifty idea to sacrifice 40 to 50 feet of the Janney school playground so that a private developer can build 7 or 8 more floors on top of the Tenley library for upmarket flats and a handful of “inclusive zoning” units? There are few clearer examples of privatizing public assets for private profit.
Anonymous wrote:School boundaries can be redrawn.
What percent of the playground would be removed?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:School boundaries can be redrawn.
What percent of the playground would be removed?
If school boundaries could be easily redrawn, the crazed push to build more ”affordable housing” in Ward 3 would not exist.
Anonymous wrote:School boundaries can be redrawn.
What percent of the playground would be removed?
Anonymous wrote:I think you need to consider benefits to housing availability. The NIMBY crowd is strong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why should they have say to stop it?
Giving away a chunk of the Janney school playground to enable a private development on top of the library seems messed up, no?
No, it is a great idea to increase apartment housing near the school and encourage more diversity.
Children (700 of them) need space to run and play, it will displace an educational and award winning garden. If they add more kids they will need to eventually add demountable to house them and there will be no space.
My kids have graduated, but it is a shame to do this and I do not think the few units of affordable housing are worth it. There are other places to build.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why should they have say to stop it?
Giving away a chunk of the Janney school playground to enable a private development on top of the library seems messed up, no?
No, it is a great idea to increase apartment housing near the school and encourage more diversity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why should they have say to stop it?
Giving away a chunk of the Janney school playground to enable a private development on top of the library seems messed up, no?