Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:that map will NEVER happen. Yorktown folks will fight to keep their kids away from a kemore HS and they will win. As it is, it is hard enough to keep north of 50 kids in Kemore as a middle school.
One of reasons for not putting the HS at kemore was the lack of space for facilties and the fact that it would be a high FARMs school. So, now this wealthier area is willing to do it without the facilities to avoid a bus ride to WF or WL and avoid WF all together.
To me, if the county would allow busing to lower the FARMs rates at WF, then we could look simply at facilities and not at demographics.
Do it differently, then. YHS can have what it has. The real issue is to make sure the western Pike AH high rises and the eastern pike close in area (Johnson Hill / Hoffman-Boston area) that is gentrifying slowly aren't in the same school. Give the eastern pike time to continue to even out, and the Wakefield demographics will continue to slowly improve. West pike can continue to go to WL or can go to Career Center HS. I get that moving Arl Heights will take out some of the already-gentrified neighborhoods, and I don't know the numbers, but the concentrated high-FARMS housing is where my concern mainly lies.
What are you talking about? You are basically saying - let's make it worse by taking the best part of south arl out of Wakefield.
I'm saying what I think is the primary issue to be worried about and to try to avoid. Sure, would be nice to keep Arl Heights where it is. It would also be nice to have a pony. If the Career Ctr HS is what the board picks, it's not realistic to keep Arl Heights at Wakefield. From my position zoned for Wakefield, I think I could live with that so long as they keep the west pike area out of Wakefield too. There is no solution that's going to make everyone happy. The county is out of ponies.
And where are you zoned?
Wakefield.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the Arlington Heights folks trying to get out of Wakefield. Folks in Oakridge zone will support it too because it will get that wealthy area out of Wakefield.
If this school goes in, Wakefield's FARMs rates will go up dramatically.
Then where do you propose putting the high school?? There are only so many places to put it-Kenmore, Career Center, and Ed center. None of those sites solve the problem you are talking about.
Bullshit. Kenmore absolutely solves that problem. But it would involve pulling from Yorktown.
Anonymous wrote:"Delete your account" intended for 13:07.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:that map will NEVER happen. Yorktown folks will fight to keep their kids away from a kemore HS and they will win. As it is, it is hard enough to keep north of 50 kids in Kemore as a middle school.
One of reasons for not putting the HS at kemore was the lack of space for facilties and the fact that it would be a high FARMs school. So, now this wealthier area is willing to do it without the facilities to avoid a bus ride to WF or WL and avoid WF all together.
To me, if the county would allow busing to lower the FARMs rates at WF, then we could look simply at facilities and not at demographics.
Do it differently, then. YHS can have what it has. The real issue is to make sure the western Pike AH high rises and the eastern pike close in area (Johnson Hill / Hoffman-Boston area) that is gentrifying slowly aren't in the same school. Give the eastern pike time to continue to even out, and the Wakefield demographics will continue to slowly improve. West pike can continue to go to WL or can go to Career Center HS. I get that moving Arl Heights will take out some of the already-gentrified neighborhoods, and I don't know the numbers, but the concentrated high-FARMS housing is where my concern mainly lies.
What are you talking about? You are basically saying - let's make it worse by taking the best part of south arl out of Wakefield.
I'm saying what I think is the primary issue to be worried about and to try to avoid. Sure, would be nice to keep Arl Heights where it is. It would also be nice to have a pony. If the Career Ctr HS is what the board picks, it's not realistic to keep Arl Heights at Wakefield. From my position zoned for Wakefield, I think I could live with that so long as they keep the west pike area out of Wakefield too. There is no solution that's going to make everyone happy. The county is out of ponies.
And where are you zoned?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in Alcova - I don't think people in N Arlington realize who rapidly the area around the Ed Center is gentrifying - in fact, it is mostly gentrified. Many people already send their children to W-L. If you aren't zoned for Henry, the elem that is moving, a lot of those students are transfers to other schools.
I think a high school at the Ed Center would be a stretch, but I would still support it. It would take the whole piece of land: the Ed Center, Library, and Human Services, along with Henry too though. Arlington is way too small to support all of this for long though. It would turn Wakefield into a low SES school, instead of the slow balancing that is happening.
Do you mean the Career Center?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:that map will NEVER happen. Yorktown folks will fight to keep their kids away from a kemore HS and they will win. As it is, it is hard enough to keep north of 50 kids in Kemore as a middle school.
One of reasons for not putting the HS at kemore was the lack of space for facilties and the fact that it would be a high FARMs school. So, now this wealthier area is willing to do it without the facilities to avoid a bus ride to WF or WL and avoid WF all together.
To me, if the county would allow busing to lower the FARMs rates at WF, then we could look simply at facilities and not at demographics.
Do it differently, then. YHS can have what it has. The real issue is to make sure the western Pike AH high rises and the eastern pike close in area (Johnson Hill / Hoffman-Boston area) that is gentrifying slowly aren't in the same school. Give the eastern pike time to continue to even out, and the Wakefield demographics will continue to slowly improve. West pike can continue to go to WL or can go to Career Center HS. I get that moving Arl Heights will take out some of the already-gentrified neighborhoods, and I don't know the numbers, but the concentrated high-FARMS housing is where my concern mainly lies.
What are you talking about? You are basically saying - let's make it worse by taking the best part of south arl out of Wakefield.
I'm saying what I think is the primary issue to be worried about and to try to avoid. Sure, would be nice to keep Arl Heights where it is. It would also be nice to have a pony. If the Career Ctr HS is what the board picks, it's not realistic to keep Arl Heights at Wakefield. From my position zoned for Wakefield, I think I could live with that so long as they keep the west pike area out of Wakefield too. There is no solution that's going to make everyone happy. The county is out of ponies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:that map will NEVER happen. Yorktown folks will fight to keep their kids away from a kemore HS and they will win. As it is, it is hard enough to keep north of 50 kids in Kemore as a middle school.
One of reasons for not putting the HS at kemore was the lack of space for facilties and the fact that it would be a high FARMs school. So, now this wealthier area is willing to do it without the facilities to avoid a bus ride to WF or WL and avoid WF all together.
To me, if the county would allow busing to lower the FARMs rates at WF, then we could look simply at facilities and not at demographics.
Do it differently, then. YHS can have what it has. The real issue is to make sure the western Pike AH high rises and the eastern pike close in area (Johnson Hill / Hoffman-Boston area) that is gentrifying slowly aren't in the same school. Give the eastern pike time to continue to even out, and the Wakefield demographics will continue to slowly improve. West pike can continue to go to WL or can go to Career Center HS. I get that moving Arl Heights will take out some of the already-gentrified neighborhoods, and I don't know the numbers, but the concentrated high-FARMS housing is where my concern mainly lies.
What are you talking about? You are basically saying - let's make it worse by taking the best part of south arl out of Wakefield.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:that map will NEVER happen. Yorktown folks will fight to keep their kids away from a kemore HS and they will win. As it is, it is hard enough to keep north of 50 kids in Kemore as a middle school.
One of reasons for not putting the HS at kemore was the lack of space for facilties and the fact that it would be a high FARMs school. So, now this wealthier area is willing to do it without the facilities to avoid a bus ride to WF or WL and avoid WF all together.
To me, if the county would allow busing to lower the FARMs rates at WF, then we could look simply at facilities and not at demographics.
Do it differently, then. YHS can have what it has. The real issue is to make sure the western Pike AH high rises and the eastern pike close in area (Johnson Hill / Hoffman-Boston area) that is gentrifying slowly aren't in the same school. Give the eastern pike time to continue to even out, and the Wakefield demographics will continue to slowly improve. West pike can continue to go to WL or can go to Career Center HS. I get that moving Arl Heights will take out some of the already-gentrified neighborhoods, and I don't know the numbers, but the concentrated high-FARMS housing is where my concern mainly lies.
Anonymous wrote:that map will NEVER happen. Yorktown folks will fight to keep their kids away from a kemore HS and they will win. As it is, it is hard enough to keep north of 50 kids in Kemore as a middle school.
One of reasons for not putting the HS at kemore was the lack of space for facilties and the fact that it would be a high FARMs school. So, now this wealthier area is willing to do it without the facilities to avoid a bus ride to WF or WL and avoid WF all together.
To me, if the county would allow busing to lower the FARMs rates at WF, then we could look simply at facilities and not at demographics.
Anonymous wrote:What about if Wakefield drew more from the North? This was a map drawn back when this board was discussing Kenmore, but you get the idea -- slide the red area down a bit to the south and move the southern "thumb" boarder back over toward Arlington Heights -- would that balance better?