Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is it possible for anyone to be surprised? Well, I mean, if you've been paying even a shred of attention to what this woman has been saying for a while. She says she wants "change" but I'm hoping she decides to "tweak" very little within the overall administration. This city could go off the wheels pretty quick if she brings back Marion Barry-era cronies.
Her transition team includes some pretty serious types, including Alice Rivlin. And I am sure the Mayor For Life will be delighted to see Tommy Wells leading the Transportation subcomm of the transition team.
Oh, and Bowser's brother is on the transition team, too. Cha-ching!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is it possible for anyone to be surprised? Well, I mean, if you've been paying even a shred of attention to what this woman has been saying for a while. She says she wants "change" but I'm hoping she decides to "tweak" very little within the overall administration. This city could go off the wheels pretty quick if she brings back Marion Barry-era cronies.
Her transition team includes some pretty serious types, including Alice Rivlin. And I am sure the Mayor For Life will be delighted to see Tommy Wells leading the Transportation subcomm of the transition team.
Anonymous wrote:The "additional options" language cited above is also interesting. The DME and Mayor hasn't merely instituted "additional options" for schools now feeding to next-level Deal. The same is true for the Jefferson via-a-vis its feed to Wilson, and Brent and Tyler vis-a-vis their feeder rights to Eliot-Hine. Problematic?
Anonymous wrote:Can anyone point me to the statutory language which codifies the one year notice?
Anonymous wrote:Recsinding the notification to save some parents from a change (that many are grandfathered for) harms some families where the change was an improvement to them, right?
Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, let me guess, those who fill out applications in December will have to redo them once she tweaks the boundaries?
If she wants to change the boundaries, she is required by law to give notice a year in advance. The mayor's plan has not yet changed boundaries (that takes effect at the end of August). So, Bowser could announce in January that the current boundaries (pre-DME recomendations) would remain in effect. That would really only be a problem for those trying to get into pre-k because otherwise you don't have to lottery for your inbounds school. Charters don't have boundaries, so it wouldn't impact them either. I'm sure that there are some other cases in which someone's plans would be upset, but I think a delay would be more of a publicity problem than anything. Then, she would have until the end of August to announce her new boundaries.
But, the PR problem is of such magnitude that I find it hard to believe she will actually do it. She might be able to tweak grandfathering. The Crestwood/16th Street Heights situation is easy because Unicorn won't be open for a while. She can easily allow for a longer grandfathering period and kick that down the road a ways. Allowing EotR kids to keep going to Eastern might be more difficult, but there might still be room for them at Eastern if she simply grandfathers them as well. That leaves the students in SW who are getting booted from Wilson to Eastern in the lurch. It's not clear to me that anyone cares about them (and maybe not even them). But grandfathering could kick that problem down the road as well. But, maybe she does want to take the heat for stopping the new boundaries. We'll see.
I'm not sure about this.
1. Could the one-year notice requirement be construed so that leaving boundaries as they are after announcing a change would also be considered a change? In other words, would a court allow Bowser to decide on Feb. 1 2015 that all the boundaries for 2015-6 will be the same as they were in 2014-15, or would they say that decision was a change requiring one year's notice? I could imagine a judge issuing a restraining order and litigants dragging things out past the 3/2/15 deadline for the PK-8 lottery. Then it would be a real mess to change things after that.
2. If they did allow Bowser to do that, it's a big problem for Van Ness for 2015-16 since it wouldn't have a boundary. The kids would be in their current (Amidon-Bowen) boundary. And THAT is a big problem because Amidon (as well as Van Ness) are schools where there is a right to PK for IB families who list it in their lottery choices. Amidon could be overfull of PK in that scenario, and families that prefer Van Ness would be pissed. They could open it as a boundaryless school (with proximity preference?) but that would be politically very unpleasant.
3. There are families that like the boundary changes. For example, those in the expanded Cleveland feeder zone. They might have decided not to enter the lottery because their K-5 kid could go to Cleveland, and then all of a sudden would have to get up to speed on where to apply if they didn't like the school they ended up having the right to attend. It would really suck.
jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, let me guess, those who fill out applications in December will have to redo them once she tweaks the boundaries?
If she wants to change the boundaries, she is required by law to give notice a year in advance. The mayor's plan has not yet changed boundaries (that takes effect at the end of August). So, Bowser could announce in January that the current boundaries (pre-DME recomendations) would remain in effect. That would really only be a problem for those trying to get into pre-k because otherwise you don't have to lottery for your inbounds school. Charters don't have boundaries, so it wouldn't impact them either. I'm sure that there are some other cases in which someone's plans would be upset, but I think a delay would be more of a publicity problem than anything. Then, she would have until the end of August to announce her new boundaries.
But, the PR problem is of such magnitude that I find it hard to believe she will actually do it. She might be able to tweak grandfathering. The Crestwood/16th Street Heights situation is easy because Unicorn won't be open for a while. She can easily allow for a longer grandfathering period and kick that down the road a ways. Allowing EotR kids to keep going to Eastern might be more difficult, but there might still be room for them at Eastern if she simply grandfathers them as well. That leaves the students in SW who are getting booted from Wilson to Eastern in the lurch. It's not clear to me that anyone cares about them (and maybe not even them). But grandfathering could kick that problem down the road as well. But, maybe she does want to take the heat for stopping the new boundaries. We'll see.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Settle down everybody. I didn't vote for Bowser. But she's not stupid, and she's not ill-prepared.
You can disagree with her about her position (or lack of position) on the boundary changes without disparaging her competence.
Stupid is as stupid does.
Anonymous wrote:How is it possible for anyone to be surprised? Well, I mean, if you've been paying even a shred of attention to what this woman has been saying for a while. She says she wants "change" but I'm hoping she decides to "tweak" very little within the overall administration. This city could go off the wheels pretty quick if she brings back Marion Barry-era cronies.
Anonymous wrote:Settle down everybody. I didn't vote for Bowser. But she's not stupid, and she's not ill-prepared.
You can disagree with her about her position (or lack of position) on the boundary changes without disparaging her competence.