Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As far as walking to asfs, there are a lot of concerns with crossing kirkwood to widen its walk zone. Currently only a handful of kids walk to school, mostly from the Clarendon area. Those parents who walk regularly have expressed deep concerns about people regularly crossing kirkwood— it’s objectuvely not a safe road to cross and little can be done short of adding a traffic light. The county has to do a traffic study before doing something like that, so any traffic mitigation’s would be a few years off. There’s a bunch of extra concerns like the back stairs would need to be widened and a handicap ramp added, which is difficult since the county does not own the land directly next to the stairs (it’s someone’s house on either side). They likely will expand the walk zone to include part of Lyon village, but I really hope it doesn’t result in someone being hit by a car.
I agree Kirkwood is a tough street to cross. However, a crossing guard at the crosswalk at the bottom of the stairs would adequately deal with this problem. I don't see any reason why the stairs would have to be widened. I can't see any practical way to add a handicap ramp to get up that hill. Even if you did, it would be so steep as to be essentially unusable. If that is a requirement, then the project wouldn't work. I don't think that the ADA or common decency would require a ramp there. In any event, there is already a sidewalk which runs up 14th St. which could be used if necessary.
Anonymous wrote:I may be wrong- but I actually don't think ASFS and Key will swap- although I think it is being actively considered. I really think they will both become neighborhood schools. That quadrant is where seats are needed the most. There is no land in that quadrant. The only way they are going to get seats there is by either 1)drawing funny neighborhood boundaries or 2)moving Key.
I don't think they will just swap b/c ultimately it will not help the seat problem.
Anonymous wrote:And you forget that McKinley could loose over 400 kids to Reed, that's a lot of space and not that far from either Ballston or ATS. I think creative boundary drawing is must. We need very thoughtful dive into better data in the fall. If APS projections are correct in 2021 when Fleet and Reed are open and Drew is neighborhood we will have an excess capacity. Well if that's correct this should be able to be worked out. A few of our Board members have alluded to some crazy boundary maps.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I may be wrong- but I actually don't think ASFS and Key will swap- although I think it is being actively considered. I really think they will both become neighborhood schools. That quadrant is where seats are needed the most. There is no land in that quadrant. The only way they are going to get seats there is by either 1)drawing funny neighborhood boundaries or 2)moving Key.
I don't think they will just swap b/c ultimately it will not help the seat problem.
This. the fundamental problem is more students then seats after the lottery change at key. Right now in bounds make up about half the population, but will likely drop to 1/12 all things being equal. That’s about 300 more kids in the shared zone to seat.
It needs to move where there are seats, leave both schools as neighborhoods schools.
Where's that? Mars? Nobody has 700 extra seats, not in any quadrant. I think they are definitely talking about a simple swap because they cannot undertake a multi-school shuffle. In terms of community, swapping these two schools makes sense because they are geographically close together and, because of their history of a shared boundary, there's overlap on sports teams and clubs/activities that are linked to school boundary.
Haha...we need neighborhood schools there so the most logical thing to do is right size immersion and to the Key->ATS->Tuckahoe/Nottingham shuffle.
That may help your neck of the woods but it does nothing to solve the growing Ballston area. They want ATS as a neighborhood school to deal with that. Not to house immersion. Sorry, try again.
Couldn’t some of Ballston/VA square be pulled into a neighborhood ASFS boundary? The county really needs to stop approving fill in developments without addressing the school capacity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I may be wrong- but I actually don't think ASFS and Key will swap- although I think it is being actively considered. I really think they will both become neighborhood schools. That quadrant is where seats are needed the most. There is no land in that quadrant. The only way they are going to get seats there is by either 1)drawing funny neighborhood boundaries or 2)moving Key.
I don't think they will just swap b/c ultimately it will not help the seat problem.
This. the fundamental problem is more students then seats after the lottery change at key. Right now in bounds make up about half the population, but will likely drop to 1/12 all things being equal. That’s about 300 more kids in the shared zone to seat.
It needs to move where there are seats, leave both schools as neighborhoods schools.
Where's that? Mars? Nobody has 700 extra seats, not in any quadrant. I think they are definitely talking about a simple swap because they cannot undertake a multi-school shuffle. In terms of community, swapping these two schools makes sense because they are geographically close together and, because of their history of a shared boundary, there's overlap on sports teams and clubs/activities that are linked to school boundary.
Haha...we need neighborhood schools there so the most logical thing to do is right size immersion and to the Key->ATS->Tuckahoe/Nottingham shuffle.
That may help your neck of the woods but it does nothing to solve the growing Ballston area. They want ATS as a neighborhood school to deal with that. Not to house immersion. Sorry, try again.
Couldn’t some of Ballston/VA square be pulled into a neighborhood ASFS boundary? The county really needs to stop approving fill in developments without addressing the school capacity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I may be wrong- but I actually don't think ASFS and Key will swap- although I think it is being actively considered. I really think they will both become neighborhood schools. That quadrant is where seats are needed the most. There is no land in that quadrant. The only way they are going to get seats there is by either 1)drawing funny neighborhood boundaries or 2)moving Key.
I don't think they will just swap b/c ultimately it will not help the seat problem.
This. the fundamental problem is more students then seats after the lottery change at key. Right now in bounds make up about half the population, but will likely drop to 1/12 all things being equal. That’s about 300 more kids in the shared zone to seat.
It needs to move where there are seats, leave both schools as neighborhoods schools.
Where's that? Mars? Nobody has 700 extra seats, not in any quadrant. I think they are definitely talking about a simple swap because they cannot undertake a multi-school shuffle. In terms of community, swapping these two schools makes sense because they are geographically close together and, because of their history of a shared boundary, there's overlap on sports teams and clubs/activities that are linked to school boundary.
Haha...we need neighborhood schools there so the most logical thing to do is right size immersion and to the Key->ATS->Tuckahoe/Nottingham shuffle.
That may help your neck of the woods but it does nothing to solve the growing Ballston area. They want ATS as a neighborhood school to deal with that. Not to house immersion. Sorry, try again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I may be wrong- but I actually don't think ASFS and Key will swap- although I think it is being actively considered. I really think they will both become neighborhood schools. That quadrant is where seats are needed the most. There is no land in that quadrant. The only way they are going to get seats there is by either 1)drawing funny neighborhood boundaries or 2)moving Key.
I don't think they will just swap b/c ultimately it will not help the seat problem.
This. the fundamental problem is more students then seats after the lottery change at key. Right now in bounds make up about half the population, but will likely drop to 1/12 all things being equal. That’s about 300 more kids in the shared zone to seat.
It needs to move where there are seats, leave both schools as neighborhoods schools.
Where's that? Mars? Nobody has 700 extra seats, not in any quadrant. I think they are definitely talking about a simple swap because they cannot undertake a multi-school shuffle. In terms of community, swapping these two schools makes sense because they are geographically close together and, because of their history of a shared boundary, there's overlap on sports teams and clubs/activities that are linked to school boundary.
Haha...we need neighborhood schools there so the most logical thing to do is right size immersion and to the Key->ATS->Tuckahoe/Nottingham shuffle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
There is a sidewalk up 14th St. all the way to Kirkwood; its on the south side of 14th St.
I’ll double check when I walk to school tomorrow but I’m pretty sure you are wrong. 14th streets side walk on the south is cracked and has tree roots pulling up on one side, and then has half a block where it doesn’t exist. On the side closer to the school, it doesn’t go all the way to kirkwood. That and that hill is is really steep. There needs to be a ramp added to the stairs for handicapped parents and parents with small children/strollers, or you can’t expand the walk zone past kirkwood. Either that or set up a crosswalk with a light at 13th street.
It’s a safety issue— you might be ok crossing it but think about literally hundreds of kids doing it on a daily basis. Someone is going to get hurt. And then people will point to this and say that aps put us in this position by saying if you inflate your walker numbers you will get to keep your school.
Honestly, pp, I think you are just literally trying to come up with roadblocks here. Kids and parents can cross Kirkwood with a crossing guard, kids and parents can walk up and down those stairs as they are currently designed, kids and parents can walk up and down 14th on the one side that has a sidewalk even if, gasp, it is a steep hill, and the school has existed for how many years already without a ramp at the back entrance so I don’t see how that would all of a sudden be required.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
There is a sidewalk up 14th St. all the way to Kirkwood; its on the south side of 14th St.
I’ll double check when I walk to school tomorrow but I’m pretty sure you are wrong. 14th streets side walk on the south is cracked and has tree roots pulling up on one side, and then has half a block where it doesn’t exist. On the side closer to the school, it doesn’t go all the way to kirkwood. That and that hill is is really steep. There needs to be a ramp added to the stairs for handicapped parents and parents with small children/strollers, or you can’t expand the walk zone past kirkwood. Either that or set up a crosswalk with a light at 13th street.
It’s a safety issue— you might be ok crossing it but think about literally hundreds of kids doing it on a daily basis. Someone is going to get hurt. And then people will point to this and say that aps put us in this position by saying if you inflate your walker numbers you will get to keep your school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I may be wrong- but I actually don't think ASFS and Key will swap- although I think it is being actively considered. I really think they will both become neighborhood schools. That quadrant is where seats are needed the most. There is no land in that quadrant. The only way they are going to get seats there is by either 1)drawing funny neighborhood boundaries or 2)moving Key.
I don't think they will just swap b/c ultimately it will not help the seat problem.
This. the fundamental problem is more students then seats after the lottery change at key. Right now in bounds make up about half the population, but will likely drop to 1/12 all things being equal. That’s about 300 more kids in the shared zone to seat.
It needs to move where there are seats, leave both schools as neighborhoods schools.
Where's that? Mars? Nobody has 700 extra seats, not in any quadrant. I think they are definitely talking about a simple swap because they cannot undertake a multi-school shuffle. In terms of community, swapping these two schools makes sense because they are geographically close together and, because of their history of a shared boundary, there's overlap on sports teams and clubs/activities that are linked to school boundary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As far as walking to asfs, there are a lot of concerns with crossing kirkwood to widen its walk zone. Currently only a handful of kids walk to school, mostly from the Clarendon area. Those parents who walk regularly have expressed deep concerns about people regularly crossing kirkwood— it’s objectuvely not a safe road to cross and little can be done short of adding a traffic light. The county has to do a traffic study before doing something like that, so any traffic mitigation’s would be a few years off. There’s a bunch of extra concerns like the back stairs would need to be widened and a handicap ramp added, which is difficult since the county does not own the land directly next to the stairs (it’s someone’s house on either side). They likely will expand the walk zone to include part of Lyon village, but I really hope it doesn’t result in someone being hit by a car.
I agree Kirkwood is a tough street to cross. However, a crossing guard at the crosswalk at the bottom of the stairs would adequately deal with this problem. I don't see any reason why the stairs would have to be widened. I can't see any practical way to add a handicap ramp to get up that hill. Even if you did, it would be so steep as to be essentially unusable. If that is a requirement, then the project wouldn't work. I don't think that the ADA or common decency would require a ramp there. In any event, there is already a sidewalk which runs up 14th St. which could be used if necessary.
The side walk on 14th street doesn’t go all the way to kirkwood. It ends about half a block before. There isn’t a crosswalk at 13th, which has a contiguous sidewalk. So unless you widen the stairs and add a ramp, no way you can force people to cross kirkwood to widen the walk zone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I may be wrong- but I actually don't think ASFS and Key will swap- although I think it is being actively considered. I really think they will both become neighborhood schools. That quadrant is where seats are needed the most. There is no land in that quadrant. The only way they are going to get seats there is by either 1)drawing funny neighborhood boundaries or 2)moving Key.
I don't think they will just swap b/c ultimately it will not help the seat problem.
This. the fundamental problem is more students then seats after the lottery change at key. Right now in bounds make up about half the population, but will likely drop to 1/12 all things being equal. That’s about 300 more kids in the shared zone to seat.
It needs to move where there are seats, leave both schools as neighborhoods schools.