Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bowser took care of her base. As for those people in Ward 3 who are screaming about being pushed out of Deal to lesser-quality Hardy, consider this: Bowser lost Ward 3 big time, so she doesn't give a fu#@ what you think. No extended grandfathering for you.
Newsflash...7/8 of the city doesn't give a shit about you people. Especially after seeing the way you conduct yourselves on this board.
Yeah, why not spin off Ward 3 so you don't have to deal with such pesky entitled people? Let the ward join MoCo or something. Oh wait then how would you get spots at basically the only good public schools in the city? And who would pay the bills for all the spending schemes and no-show jobs program otherwise known as the DC government?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is Mary Cheh's view on OOB feeder rights? I can't see that ever being a politically viable stance to go back on that.
Not sure, but I know she is in favor of building a new middle school in upper NW. That would solve the Deal vs "raw Deal" (Hardy) problem.
Your statement is about 2 year old. She's now moved on, as the idea did not prove as popular as she had thought, and because Hardy has now leapfrogged and the increased number of actual IB parents (as well as a large group of IB prospective parents now working with the school) would see this as an hostile move.
What I know is that she is committed to protecting the present feeder rights of her constituency.
Like she did for Eaton?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is Mary Cheh's view on OOB feeder rights? I can't see that ever being a politically viable stance to go back on that.
Not sure, but I know she is in favor of building a new middle school in upper NW. That would solve the Deal vs "raw Deal" (Hardy) problem.
Your statement is about 2 year old. She's now moved on, as the idea did not prove as popular as she had thought, and because Hardy has now leapfrogged and the increased number of actual IB parents (as well as a large group of IB prospective parents now working with the school) would see this as an hostile move.
What I know is that she is committed to protecting the present feeder rights of her constituency.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is Mary Cheh's view on OOB feeder rights? I can't see that ever being a politically viable stance to go back on that.
Not sure, but I know she is in favor of building a new middle school in upper NW. That would solve the Deal vs "raw Deal" (Hardy) problem.
Anonymous wrote:What is Mary Cheh's view on OOB feeder rights? I can't see that ever being a politically viable stance to go back on that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do people suggest for the overcrowded schools, if not changing boundaries? Actual suggestions.
Feeder rights. Plain and simple. Deal is 31% OOB. Are people ok with that? Even if you're not willing to cut feeder rights the elementaries should cap the OOB enrollment even if it means cutting funding.
So, let me get this straight, are you arguing for eotp feeder rights to Deal, but that otherwise OOB families should not be allowed to go to Deal?
NP. I agree. I do not think its fair for Eaton to lose Deal and Hearst and others have 80% OOB to make Deal, the "overcrowded" school have 30% OOB.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, Eaton families never chose Hardy when they had the choice, so it will be surprising if it works out that way. Let's hope it turns out better!
That's why DCPS decided to force Eaton families kicking and screaming to Hardy. Ironically, many of the OOB students at Eaton will have separate neighborhood lifelines to Deal. For Eaton IB families, the "choice" is to suck up Hardy, hope for a good charter spot or dig deep for private (assuming your kid gets in).
Anonymous wrote:Well, Eaton families never chose Hardy when they had the choice, so it will be surprising if it works out that way. Let's hope it turns out better!
Anonymous wrote:The FAQ release says the changes extend the "grandfathering" policy under the new boundary rules issued under Gray (assume this refers to the statement in those rules that students reassigned to a new middle school that is not open yet will retain their "geographic and feeder pathway rights until the new school opens") to 2022. Does this mean kids who get to Deal under the grandfathering policy get to continue on to Wilson? For example a pk4 student this coming fall would be a 6th grader in 2022.
Anonymous wrote:The FAQ release says the changes extend the "grandfathering" policy under the new boundary rules issued under Gray (assume this refers to the statement in those rules that students reassigned to a new middle school that is not open yet will retain their "geographic and feeder pathway rights until the new school opens") to 2022. Does this mean kids who get to Deal under the grandfathering policy get to continue on to Wilson? For example a pk4 student this coming fall would be a 6th grader in 2022.
Anonymous wrote:The FAQ release says the changes extend the "grandfathering" policy under the new boundary rules issued under Gray (assume this refers to the statement in those rules that students reassigned to a new middle school that is not open yet will retain their "geographic and feeder pathway rights until the new school opens") to 2022. Does this mean kids who get to Deal under the grandfathering policy get to continue on to Wilson? For example a pk4 student this coming fall would be a 6th grader in 2022.