Anonymous wrote:Anyone know if the Maret-Jelleff deal is part of the federal investigations on Jack Evans corruption?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can’t Hardy step up to the plate and reconfigure the school property to provide for a playing field on site?! They may not have if by September, but if they start working it (including downtown) then they could have a nice field by 2021-22.
Once again, public schools aren't independent entities like private schools. "Hardy" can't step up and do anything, they are reliant on DCPS and the entire DC government. The same DC government that just decided it would rather give away a $20 million+ public asset than let Hardy use it.
+1. The more relevant question is why Maret can’t step up to the plate and get its own field with the 50k/year they charge in tuition, like other self-respecting private schools.
Because they don't need to. They already have a field to use.
A public field gifted to them at a below market rate to them by a soon to be indicted politician whose soon attended Maret is not a option most legitimate private schools would choose.
Not gifted. Maret is paying. And other private schools, such as GDS, would eagerly consider a similar transaction if they had the need.
Maret is paying $95k/year. For a facility that DC taxpayers paid $15 million to buy 15 years ago, and are paying $7 million to renovate, that’s a gift.
Maret is so eager to say that everyone would behave as unethically as they did if given the chance. What a message for a school to be imparting to youth!
I believe that Grifter, uh excuse me, Gifted Day School would love to have an arrangement like this. Don’t forget GDS’ insider real estate deal with its “Roster of Aces” in which the school acted as the front for certain board members and other insiders in the development business.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can’t Hardy step up to the plate and reconfigure the school property to provide for a playing field on site?! They may not have if by September, but if they start working it (including downtown) then they could have a nice field by 2021-22.
Once again, public schools aren't independent entities like private schools. "Hardy" can't step up and do anything, they are reliant on DCPS and the entire DC government. The same DC government that just decided it would rather give away a $20 million+ public asset than let Hardy use it.
+1. The more relevant question is why Maret can’t step up to the plate and get its own field with the 50k/year they charge in tuition, like other self-respecting private schools.
Because they don't need to. They already have a field to use.
A public field gifted to them at a below market rate to them by a soon to be indicted politician whose soon attended Maret is not a option most legitimate private schools would choose.
Not gifted. Maret is paying. And other private schools, such as GDS, would eagerly consider a similar transaction if they had the need.
Maret is paying $95k/year. For a facility that DC taxpayers paid $15 million to buy 15 years ago, and are paying $7 million to renovate, that’s a gift.
Maret is so eager to say that everyone would behave as unethically as they did if given the chance. What a message for a school to be imparting to youth!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can’t Hardy step up to the plate and reconfigure the school property to provide for a playing field on site?! They may not have if by September, but if they start working it (including downtown) then they could have a nice field by 2021-22.
Once again, public schools aren't independent entities like private schools. "Hardy" can't step up and do anything, they are reliant on DCPS and the entire DC government. The same DC government that just decided it would rather give away a $20 million+ public asset than let Hardy use it.
+1. The more relevant question is why Maret can’t step up to the plate and get its own field with the 50k/year they charge in tuition, like other self-respecting private schools.
Because they don't need to. They already have a field to use.
A public field gifted to them at a below market rate to them by a soon to be indicted politician whose soon attended Maret is not a option most legitimate private schools would choose.
Not gifted. Maret is paying. And other private schools, such as GDS, would eagerly consider a similar transaction if they had the need.
Maret is paying $95k/year. For a facility that DC taxpayers paid $15 million to buy 15 years ago, and are paying $7 million to renovate, that’s a gift.
Maret is so eager to say that everyone would behave as unethically as they did if given the chance. What a message for a school to be imparting to youth!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can’t Hardy step up to the plate and reconfigure the school property to provide for a playing field on site?! They may not have if by September, but if they start working it (including downtown) then they could have a nice field by 2021-22.
Once again, public schools aren't independent entities like private schools. "Hardy" can't step up and do anything, they are reliant on DCPS and the entire DC government. The same DC government that just decided it would rather give away a $20 million+ public asset than let Hardy use it.
+1. The more relevant question is why Maret can’t step up to the plate and get its own field with the 50k/year they charge in tuition, like other self-respecting private schools.
Because they don't need to. They already have a field to use.
A public field gifted to them at a below market rate to them by a soon to be indicted politician whose soon attended Maret is not a option most legitimate private schools would choose.
Not gifted. Maret is paying. And other private schools, such as GDS, would eagerly consider a similar transaction if they had the need.
Maret is paying $95k/year. For a facility that DC taxpayers paid $15 million to buy 15 years ago, and are paying $7 million to renovate, that’s a gift.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can’t Hardy step up to the plate and reconfigure the school property to provide for a playing field on site?! They may not have if by September, but if they start working it (including downtown) then they could have a nice field by 2021-22.
Once again, public schools aren't independent entities like private schools. "Hardy" can't step up and do anything, they are reliant on DCPS and the entire DC government. The same DC government that just decided it would rather give away a $20 million+ public asset than let Hardy use it.
+1. The more relevant question is why Maret can’t step up to the plate and get its own field with the 50k/year they charge in tuition, like other self-respecting private schools.
Because they don't need to. They already have a field to use.
A public field gifted to them at a below market rate to them by a soon to be indicted politician whose soon attended Maret is not a option most legitimate private schools would choose.
Not gifted. Maret is paying. And other private schools, such as GDS, would eagerly consider a similar transaction if they had the need.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can’t Hardy step up to the plate and reconfigure the school property to provide for a playing field on site?! They may not have if by September, but if they start working it (including downtown) then they could have a nice field by 2021-22.
Once again, public schools aren't independent entities like private schools. "Hardy" can't step up and do anything, they are reliant on DCPS and the entire DC government. The same DC government that just decided it would rather give away a $20 million+ public asset than let Hardy use it.
+1. The more relevant question is why Maret can’t step up to the plate and get its own field with the 50k/year they charge in tuition, like other self-respecting private schools.
Because they don't need to. They already have a field to use.
A public field gifted to them at a below market rate to them by a soon to be indicted politician whose soon attended Maret is not a option most legitimate private schools would choose.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can’t Hardy step up to the plate and reconfigure the school property to provide for a playing field on site?! They may not have if by September, but if they start working it (including downtown) then they could have a nice field by 2021-22.
Once again, public schools aren't independent entities like private schools. "Hardy" can't step up and do anything, they are reliant on DCPS and the entire DC government. The same DC government that just decided it would rather give away a $20 million+ public asset than let Hardy use it.
+1. The more relevant question is why Maret can’t step up to the plate and get its own field with the 50k/year they charge in tuition, like other self-respecting private schools.
Because they don't need to. They already have a field to use.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can’t Hardy step up to the plate and reconfigure the school property to provide for a playing field on site?! They may not have if by September, but if they start working it (including downtown) then they could have a nice field by 2021-22.
Once again, public schools aren't independent entities like private schools. "Hardy" can't step up and do anything, they are reliant on DCPS and the entire DC government. The same DC government that just decided it would rather give away a $20 million+ public asset than let Hardy use it.
+1. The more relevant question is why Maret can’t step up to the plate and get its own field with the 50k/year they charge in tuition, like other self-respecting private schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can’t Hardy step up to the plate and reconfigure the school property to provide for a playing field on site?! They may not have if by September, but if they start working it (including downtown) then they could have a nice field by 2021-22.
Once again, public schools aren't independent entities like private schools. "Hardy" can't step up and do anything, they are reliant on DCPS and the entire DC government. The same DC government that just decided it would rather give away a $20 million+ public asset than let Hardy use it.
Anonymous wrote:Militant Maret parent who is getting some sort of enjoyment trying to bait parents with some fantasy land game of completely unfathomable proposals and attacking Hardy (which was renovated not long ago and has no ability to propose random 'renovations' and the poster clearly enjoys picking on families whose household income is less than what they pay for one year of their child's tuition), which isn't even the point here... clearly the only thing to do here is for Maret parents with all their money and influence to go buy something else.