Anonymous wrote:When I attended all the DME meetings a couple years back about boundaries I realized that there are some hardcore alums who feel very invested in any issue relating to their beloved alma mater, never mind that they have not attended in 40 years and no longer have school aged children. It's ridiculous that people like the school's chancellor would make decisions based on anything other than what's best for the students. I recall looking through the website about the Roosevelt open house tour and the photos were chock full of alums.
jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:Send all the kids to Roosevelt...the Petworth people just fainted. Talking about neighborhood fights...blood shed up and down Georgia Avenue, if the Coolidge and Roosevelt student are mixed. Who are you?
This is always what I hear when this subject comes up. But, I really don't understand it. Are these two school populations raised like Arabs and Israelis or something? Are they genetically predisposed to hate each other? I find it hard to believe that two very small groups of children (and in the case of Roosevelt, a group heavily made up of immigrants with no historical attachment to the school) can't get along. I think these problems are more relevant to the adults who probably need to work out their own issues outside of the school environment.
Anonymous wrote:Send all the kids to Roosevelt...the Petworth people just fainted. Talking about neighborhood fights...blood shed up and down Georgia Avenue, if the Coolidge and Roosevelt student are mixed. Who are you?
To be honest the only issue which our neighborhood is even more divided over is the proposed dog park at the Takoma rec center, next door to Coolidge. It's ugly.
Anonymous wrote:If DCPS believed the population is rebounding, they would be focused on Coolidge. The population isn't that high, Paul just opened a high school guaranteed to eat Coolidge's lunch, and it's on the edge of the city. Basically, check in again in when Roosevelt is oversubscribed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find it really interesting how often over the last decade I've read and heard that Dcps makes decisions to spend hundreds of millions on half empty schools because of the squeaky wheel alumni. I loved my high school but I don't expect it to remain the same or even continue to exist. I get having fond memories and all that, but perhaps back off and allow the city to change in ways that make the most sense, not demand that we stay stuck in the past based on some weird obsession with nostalgia. Why do our elects officials allow people who haven't been students in decades to dictate our school planning?
Because they vote. Because they turn out in large numbers at stuff like candidates' forums, the Ward 4 Democrats meetings, and fundraisers. Because the first question that gets asked when anyone stands up to give their opinion at a community meeting is "how long have you lived here?" and if the answer is less than half your life people will scoff at you out loud. Because "native Washingtonian" is the most important thing you can be here if you want your ideas to matter--and being a white 10-year-old born at GW or Washington Hospital Center or Sibley is not going to cut it. That may change over time, for better or worse, but it sure hasn't changed yet.
And yet, demographics will shape that corner of the district too. What percentage of those "Native Washingtonians" are actually parents of young children? They won't be families using the schools. Coolidge's population will continue to decline because old families are too old have children to send there. Young families feel no attraction to this proposed model.
Other than the developers who pay into Bowser's campaign, low-bid to get the deal, and then inflate the final price tag nobody benefits.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:I guess I haven't been paying attention, but I just learned that Coolidge has been budgeted nearly $160 million for its renovation. That will likely be delayed because Chairman Mendelson is in the process of taking that money to use for the homeless shelters. But, the funds are supposed to be restored for Coolidge next year.
Coolidge currently has 400 students according to profiles.dcps.dc.gov. As we have been discussion on this forum, Murch (620 students) and Shepherd (318 students) are struggling for funds to complete their renovations. I know that it is supposed to be some sort of political third rail, but wouldn't it make sense to mothball Coolidge and send its students to newly-renovated Roosevelt until the space is actually needed?
Yes! A thousand times yes!
Some people have b*tched about the $180M price tag for Duke Ellington but at least Ellington gets used! Renovating Coolidge would accomplish nothing - the population will still be in decline. Coolidge is totally unnecessary.
The population in the northern part of the city is definitely not in decline. If you look at a 10 year horizon, it absolutely makes sense to have MS / HS capacity in the area.