Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always wondered why there were no neighborhood meetings abiut how the school intends to do drop-off and pick up of kids in a K-12 school with no dedicated school lane. It’s not like people can drop on Connecticut Avenue and I can’t imagine Secret Service is going to be pleased if Van Ness is backed up in front of the embassies. It’s well known that these negotiations take a long time to work out— look at GDS, Lowell and Cathedral Schools, where there are have been countless parent committees and meetings dedicated to addressing this.
Any car pool drop off would likely be off of Tilden, not Van Ness.
That said, I feel bad for the teachers who have said they were leaving for this school. It likely won't be open at this site by the fall. If DCRA past performance is any indication, it will take at least 4-5 months to get through permits.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh wow. They really, really messed up. You do not want to mess with the city on building permits.
I can see how someone from out of town and unfamiliar with DC would think that authorization from the State Dept would exempt them from needing DC permits. But wow. I'm assuming that they don't have a locally based lawyer or expert who could have advised them. There are a number of companies in DC that only work on navigating the permit process, it's its own industry here.
As someone who works in a fairly new federal building managed by a third party, I would much rather have DC do the final inspection. Seriously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always wondered why there were no neighborhood meetings abiut how the school intends to do drop-off and pick up of kids in a K-12 school with no dedicated school lane. It’s not like people can drop on Connecticut Avenue and I can’t imagine Secret Service is going to be pleased if Van Ness is backed up in front of the embassies. It’s well known that these negotiations take a long time to work out— look at GDS, Lowell and Cathedral Schools, where there are have been countless parent committees and meetings dedicated to addressing this.
Any car pool drop off would likely be off of Tilden, not Van Ness.
That said, I feel bad for the teachers who have said they were leaving for this school. It likely won't be open at this site by the fall. If DCRA past performance is any indication, it will take at least 4-5 months to get through permits.
I'm assuming they will be paid no matter what, so it's an unexpected paid sabbatical.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry but LOL. Any day laborer hanging out at home depot with a 3rd grade education in Honduras knows you need DC construction permits. And they want people to pay them 50k to educate their kids...
He knew, and decided to just do whatever he wanted because he has money. I think this is a pretty good indication of what kind of neighbor the school will be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always wondered why there were no neighborhood meetings abiut how the school intends to do drop-off and pick up of kids in a K-12 school with no dedicated school lane. It’s not like people can drop on Connecticut Avenue and I can’t imagine Secret Service is going to be pleased if Van Ness is backed up in front of the embassies. It’s well known that these negotiations take a long time to work out— look at GDS, Lowell and Cathedral Schools, where there are have been countless parent committees and meetings dedicated to addressing this.
Any car pool drop off would likely be off of Tilden, not Van Ness.
That said, I feel bad for the teachers who have said they were leaving for this school. It likely won't be open at this site by the fall. If DCRA past performance is any indication, it will take at least 4-5 months to get through permits.
Anonymous wrote:I always wondered why there were no neighborhood meetings abiut how the school intends to do drop-off and pick up of kids in a K-12 school with no dedicated school lane. It’s not like people can drop on Connecticut Avenue and I can’t imagine Secret Service is going to be pleased if Van Ness is backed up in front of the embassies. It’s well known that these negotiations take a long time to work out— look at GDS, Lowell and Cathedral Schools, where there are have been countless parent committees and meetings dedicated to addressing this.
Anonymous wrote:Nice timing for this Washington Post story, right before private school acceptances are announced...really a coincidence, or someone behind this to freeze people from choosing Whittle over other private school options, as how could you possibly turn down an offer to an existing school with this uncertainty now?
If they did need DC permits and ignored DCRA then they could be in limbo for months, which means they will miss the 2019-20 school year start and have to be paying teachers for not working? And how many teachers who they are trying to poach will now sign on?
Anonymous wrote:Sorry but LOL. Any day laborer hanging out at home depot with a 3rd grade education in Honduras knows you need DC construction permits. And they want people to pay them 50k to educate their kids...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh wow. They really, really messed up. You do not want to mess with the city on building permits.
I can see how someone from out of town and unfamiliar with DC would think that authorization from the State Dept would exempt them from needing DC permits. But wow. I'm assuming that they don't have a locally based lawyer or expert who could have advised them. There are a number of companies in DC that only work on navigating the permit process, it's its own industry here.
They have the money to grease the right palms (that's how it works here) and should be back in business in no time. Their lawyers just need to figure out who to pay to get this fast tracked.
Anonymous wrote:Oh wow. They really, really messed up. You do not want to mess with the city on building permits.
I can see how someone from out of town and unfamiliar with DC would think that authorization from the State Dept would exempt them from needing DC permits. But wow. I'm assuming that they don't have a locally based lawyer or expert who could have advised them. There are a number of companies in DC that only work on navigating the permit process, it's its own industry here.
Anonymous wrote:Oh wow. They really, really messed up. You do not want to mess with the city on building permits.
I can see how someone from out of town and unfamiliar with DC would think that authorization from the State Dept would exempt them from needing DC permits. But wow. I'm assuming that they don't have a locally based lawyer or expert who could have advised them. There are a number of companies in DC that only work on navigating the permit process, it's its own industry here.