Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who's going to these new schools? Do you all think that everybody in DC wants to send their kids to Ward 3?
This has been answered repeatedly, the Foxhallers just don't believe the answers.
According to DCPS, Foxhall Elementary will be filled with children who live within 1.1 miles of the school.
If MacArthur School is a high school, it will be fed by Hardy Middle School, which is fed by Eaton, Hyde-Addison, Key, Mann and Stoddert. Plus Foxhall Elementary.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of these posts sounds a group of Ward 3 NIMBYs argueing with each other. PLEASE!!!! There are many people with worse problems.
Anonymous wrote:Who's going to these new schools? Do you all think that everybody in DC wants to send their kids to Ward 3?
Anonymous wrote:
I’m glad you asked as we have a clear answer. The reason is because the FCCA had the building declared “historic” to ensure the city wouldn’t be able to undertake the necessary renovations to make it a public school again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just did a quick google maps survey of the area and came up with a list of schools already in the area (1 mile cutoff)
Schools nearby:
Lab School Campus #1 (0.0 mi)
Lab School Campus #2 - Reservoir Rd (0.7 mi)
Georgetown Day School (0.3 mi)
Montessori School Of Washington DC (0.3 mi)
St. Patricks Episcopal Day School - Macarthur (0.4 mi)
St. Patricks Episcopal Day School - Whitehaven (0.7 mi)
George Washington University - Mount Vernon Campus (0.6 mi)
The River School (1.0 mi)
The Field School (0.9 mi)
Georgetown University (0.6 mi)
Washington International School (0.9 mi)
Duke Ellington (1.0 mi)
Did I miss any? Do we really need a 13th school in a 1 mile radius?
Looks to me like strong empirical evidence that this is a good location for schools.
Shrug. We're not part of the holy FCCA community, but we live a couple of blocks from Hardy Park.
The whole fear of a traffic apocalypse that would be brought about by a new school is nonsense. Traffic issues on MacArthur and Foxhall have never had anything to do with the schools in that area. That's just a drop in the bucket for roads that are commuter arteries from Maryland.
The FCCA people were the types who used pre-renovation Hardy Park as their own personal, off-leash dog park, then got all huffy when people told them their dogs need to be on a leash. To them, the park is a personal playground. If they could get away with it, they'd bulldoze the playground area to keep neighborhood kids out. They're a bunch of fundamentally dishonest, histrionic snobs who are horrified by the idea of public schools kids in their neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Hey Tammy Wynette, how do you feel standing next to your man? That woman-hating nonsense he quoted to the Post must really make your feel good. But, oh, I'm sure he's different in private...
Anonymous wrote:This means that the 550-student campus will be built on our relatively small park (Hardy Park and Rec Center).
It's not your park.
So I read that whole thing, and I can't tell what the point was. Certainly there was no "aha" moment where I thought, "hmm, she's got a point, I never thought of that..."
So once again, arguments that seem powerful to Foxhallers are completely unpersuasive to normal people.
Anonymous wrote:I am still trying to understand how the DC budget’s two-school, $100M+ capital expenditures came to be during the summer of 2020 —especially since it was a time when DC (the rest of the US and much of the world) was dealing with the economic, social, and health crises in the early months of the Coronavirus Pandemic. I have been scouring the DC govt website for everything I can find about the “process.”
Anonymous wrote:This means that the 550-student campus will be built on our relatively small park (Hardy Park and Rec Center).
It's not your park.
So I read that whole thing, and I can't tell what the point was. Certainly there was no "aha" moment where I thought, "hmm, she's got a point, I never thought of that..."
So once again, arguments that seem powerful to Foxhallers are completely unpersuasive to normal people.
This means that the 550-student campus will be built on our relatively small park (Hardy Park and Rec Center).