Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The fact that the board ignored their own regulations, unnecessarily distressed the community, and diverted attention from other important objectives in this renaming process is sufficient evidence that they are not capable of administering an additional $315M.
So you're saying the board is to blame for the roaring opposition that met the proposal to name Stuart after someone or something, other than a traitor?
The issue didn't have to be controversial. Proponents sensibly argued that Stuart shouldn't be named after a Confederate general anymore. The process got out of control only after so many people grabbed their proverbial pitchforks and mounted massive resistance against the name change. The outcry from even the suggestion to change the name put the board in a jam: keeping the name would unacceptably signal their approval of commemorating a traitor, but changing the name would incense Lost Cause believers and others who still hold Confederate generals like Stuart in high regard.
Regardless, I'm having a hard time understanding why the board's handling of difficult social issue like this has any bearing on how they would properly allocate capital funds. The actual expense involved in changing Stuart's name is a rounding error in the bond proposal. If you have a bona fide problem with how the board proposes to deploy bond funds on a large scale, such as building a new school versus expanding existing facilities, then sure, a no vote may make sense. But it sounds like you're mostly mad about the Stuart issue and grasping at other excuses to support making an indiscriminate political statement about it.
Anonymous wrote:The fact that the board ignored their own regulations, unnecessarily distressed the community, and diverted attention from other important objectives in this renaming process is sufficient evidence that they are not capable of administering an additional $315M.
Anonymous wrote:Why isn't a vote on bonds a legitimate exercise of the political process? Seems to me that you can decide whether this board has shown the good judgement to allocate resources (money) to your preferred objectives - if not, then don't give them any more money. It's that simple.
The fact that the board ignored their own regulations, unnecessarily distressed the community, and diverted attention from other important objectives in this renaming process is sufficient evidence that they are not capable of administering an additional $315M. So I'll vote NO.
Anonymous wrote:You need to read some history, rather than spout the latest catch phrases from your mom's group on Facebook. Summarizing Stuart as a traitor is incredibly naive.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not who youre adressing, but yes. I'm voting no. Screw the name changes. And get rid of the illegal students before you ask me for another dime.
Anonymous wrote:This name change movement only started in 2015. Are you suggesting people were really venerating Confederate figures in 2010 or 1998? The fact is that people associated the school names more with the surrounding community and the schools' traditions than with the namesakes.
Anonymous wrote:But, either way, I'd be less concerned with the SJW fixation on school names if the School Board could demonstrate that it was otherwise exercising prudent management of FCPS's resources - i.e., looking to use to available capacity at schools like Lee and Mount Vernon, accelerating the overdue renovation at Falls Church, and moving promptly to build a new high school in western Fairfax that might discourage the continued flight of higher income families to Loudoun. But instead we get lectures on how painful names like "Stuart" are to a handful of people from the likes of Ryan McElveen, along with capital spending projects that are arbitrary and will only aggravate existing disparities between schools (West Potomac vs. Mount Vernon, Madison vs. Marshall, etc.)
Vote NO if you want to send a strong message that FCPS needs to go back to the drawing board and come up with something better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. The point was that it would NO LONGER have been named after Jeb. They could have removed all reference to him and just called it Stuart--as many had for years. Do you think of George Washington every time you hear "Washington, DC"?
Not every time, but yeah, I do associate the name "Washington, DC" with George Washington. Because that's what happens when you name places after people.
The school still would have been named after Jeb if it were changed to "Stuart," but with plausible deniability. Besides, if you're changing the name already, why not go with one that indisputably isn't based on a Confederate general?
Anonymous wrote:And, your other points show a lack of understanding of other issues. You are using today's lens. The fact is that Lee and others were part of the fabric of Virginia.
Public institutions shouldn't be named after traitors--especially traitors who waged war in order to enslave other people. That should be a non-controversial proposition. If you think it's correct, then it's irrelevant how deeply the traitor is "part of the fabric." Suggesting otherwise is just buying into the Lost Cause nonsense, while dismissing the many prominent Virginians chose to fight for their country instead of against it. Of course I'm using "today's lens" because we have progressed as a society (I hope) to the point where we no longer believe in commemorating people who rebel against the United States in service of a racist cause.
Anonymous wrote:No. The point was that it would NO LONGER have been named after Jeb. They could have removed all reference to him and just called it Stuart--as many had for years. Do you think of George Washington every time you hear "Washington, DC"?
Anonymous wrote:And, your other points show a lack of understanding of other issues. You are using today's lens. The fact is that Lee and others were part of the fabric of Virginia.
Anonymous wrote:Changing a school name so it’s no longer a homage to a Confederate general?! The horror!
You’re really going to vote against $315 million in much-needed money for important capital projects, at historically low interest rates, directed at improving children’s education—because you can’t stand the thought of investing a fraction of a percent of that amount so we’re not commemorating someone who committed treason and waged war against the United States?
Just want to make sure we’re clear on that.
Then vote no and STFU. People who can see beyond the single issue know that there are schools in dire need of renovation. Also, if this name change turns out to be expensive because none of the loudmouth supporters put their money where their mouth is, then the SB will have hard numbers to point to when new proposals come up. Do we really need to keep rehashing the Stuart name change for another two or more years. Just move on, and if it's an expensive debacle, be front and center with the numbers when someone proposes another name change. Simple. Stop tying everything to it. If you object to the capital expenditures the bonds are supposed to cover, that's different.
Anonymous wrote:Other names will follow, and they'll cost even more money (let's see how much FCPS tries to bury in the capital budget), plus the projects they actually want to find are, for the most part, bad choices that will delay other capital projects that are needed and will aggravate demographic disparities within FCPS. So it's time to vote NO and tell FCPS we're tired of their BS.
Agree. Poor stewardship of taxpayers' funds.
The whole name change debacle should never have happened. They could have dropped the Jeb and eliminated anything that said Jeb over years at no cost. Had they done this at the beginning of this whole name change process (two years ago), Jeb would have pretty much disappeared by now and the costs would have been almost nil. Instead, I'm betting that some purchases over the last two years have gone to "Jeb" included signs, uniforms, etc.