Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, that's the kind of suggestions you get when you want to build a 4,000 student school on the smallest parcel of land because "we can't touch the north Arlington schools". We're already in a defeatist attitude. We're all telling ourselves we're being pragmatic, when we've already lost, because we have less to work with and refuse to as the rest of the county to give up its precious space to balance the load across 4 campuses.
I've spent significant time on both Yorktown and W-L campuses. Both have very little additional space to give. Maybe some, but not much. Remember also, the more kids per school the fewer resources to go around in terms of extracurricular opportunities.
The right space is Kenmore, but Tannia Talento and the Glen Carlyn neighborhood have shut that down. It's the largest APS parcel in the area, and it's being blocked by special interests. Not all loud and NIMBY parents are in north Arlington.
Anonymous wrote:Well, that's the kind of suggestions you get when you want to build a 4,000 student school on the smallest parcel of land because "we can't touch the north Arlington schools". We're already in a defeatist attitude. We're all telling ourselves we're being pragmatic, when we've already lost, because we have less to work with and refuse to as the rest of the county to give up its precious space to balance the load across 4 campuses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as the CC facility has access to amenities it needs, I'm okay with it not being on site. It's a short ride to TJ, Wakefield, Barcroft Rec, Arlington Mill, or Walter Reed. We need to use some of these resources.
My kids will go to this school. I would rather there be some workarounds in place while we wait for the amenities, because I don't think it will happen all at once.
Sorry, but my kids would also have to go to this school too and there's no way I agree with "waiting" for amenities that will never come. After APS builds the office-building style HS and forces kids to go there, they will be on to the next crisis.
It's funny and sad to me how some people are conditioned to accept less, right off the bat, every time. HB and Reed parents certainly didn't, and good on them for fighting for their kids.
I agree completely, this applies to many people in S. A., like the PP who suggested APS pay for high school students "swimming in outdoor apartment pools on the Pike when the weather is good enough".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not realistic to change Ytown through boundary. I’m in south Arlington and even I understand that.
Fight for a better spread of AH if that’s your goal.
A new hs at CC could help shoulder some of the burden off Wakefield in a meaningful way. Even if it’s 10% reduction of Wakefield farms.
That would be significant.
Quit being ungrateful West Pike residents.
We're mid-Pike, so I don't know where we'd wind up, CC I think but who knows. Even so, I am opposed to the idea of taking the entire SE portion of the county to a school at the CC. That will not amount to a 10% reduction in fr/lfor Wakefield, because the school will be back-filled with all the kids in the Arlington Mill neighborhood currently zoned to W-L. And if you take all of SE to the CC, there won't be enough UMC neighborhoods in the SW left zoned to Wakefiled to balance the student who would be added. As long as you don't take the CC boundary all the way down to 395, there can still be contiguous CC and Wakefiled boundaries that may not be 100% balanced, but that don't push Wakefield to be even more highly segregated. Can we at least agree on that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as the CC facility has access to amenities it needs, I'm okay with it not being on site. It's a short ride to TJ, Wakefield, Barcroft Rec, Arlington Mill, or Walter Reed. We need to use some of these resources.
My kids will go to this school. I would rather there be some workarounds in place while we wait for the amenities, because I don't think it will happen all at once.
Sorry, but my kids would also have to go to this school too and there's no way I agree with "waiting" for amenities that will never come. After APS builds the office-building style HS and forces kids to go there, they will be on to the next crisis.
It's funny and sad to me how some people are conditioned to accept less, right off the bat, every time. HB and Reed parents certainly didn't, and good on them for fighting for their kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not realistic to change Ytown through boundary. I’m in south Arlington and even I understand that.
Fight for a better spread of AH if that’s your goal.
A new hs at CC could help shoulder some of the burden off Wakefield in a meaningful way. Even if it’s 10% reduction of Wakefield farms.
That would be significant.
Quit being ungrateful West Pike residents.
We're mid-Pike, so I don't know where we'd wind up, CC I think but who knows. Even so, I am opposed to the idea of taking the entire SE portion of the county to a school at the CC. That will not amount to a 10% reduction in fr/lfor Wakefield, because the school will be back-filled with all the kids in the Arlington Mill neighborhood currently zoned to W-L. And if you take all of SE to the CC, there won't be enough UMC neighborhoods in the SW left zoned to Wakefiled to balance the student who would be added. As long as you don't take the CC boundary all the way down to 395, there can still be contiguous CC and Wakefiled boundaries that may not be 100% balanced, but that don't push Wakefield to be even more highly segregated. Can we at least agree on that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not realistic to change Ytown through boundary. I’m in south Arlington and even I understand that.
Fight for a better spread of AH if that’s your goal.
A new hs at CC could help shoulder some of the burden off Wakefield in a meaningful way. Even if it’s 10% reduction of Wakefield farms.
That would be significant.
Quit being ungrateful West Pike residents.
We're mid-Pike, so I don't know where we'd wind up, CC I think but who knows. Even so, I am opposed to the idea of taking the entire SE portion of the county to a school at the CC. That will not amount to a 10% reduction in fr/lfor Wakefield, because the school will be back-filled with all the kids in the Arlington Mill neighborhood currently zoned to W-L. And if you take all of SE to the CC, there won't be enough UMC neighborhoods in the SW left zoned to Wakefiled to balance the student who would be added. As long as you don't take the CC boundary all the way down to 395, there can still be contiguous CC and Wakefiled boundaries that may not be 100% balanced, but that don't push Wakefield to be even more highly segregated. Can we at least agree on that?
Anonymous wrote:Not realistic to change Ytown through boundary. I’m in south Arlington and even I understand that.
Fight for a better spread of AH if that’s your goal.
A new hs at CC could help shoulder some of the burden off Wakefield in a meaningful way. Even if it’s 10% reduction of Wakefield farms.
That would be significant.
Quit being ungrateful West Pike residents.
Anonymous wrote:SES lottery for all schools. Done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as the CC facility has access to amenities it needs, I'm okay with it not being on site. It's a short ride to TJ, Wakefield, Barcroft Rec, Arlington Mill, or Walter Reed. We need to use some of these resources.
My kids will go to this school. I would rather there be some workarounds in place while we wait for the amenities, because I don't think it will happen all at once.
Sorry, but my kids would also have to go to this school too and there's no way I agree with "waiting" for amenities that will never come. After APS builds the office-building style HS and forces kids to go there, they will be on to the next crisis.
It's funny and sad to me how some people are conditioned to accept less, right off the bat, every time. HB and Reed parents certainly didn't, and good on them for fighting for their kids.
It’s the default south Arlington position. Every time. Our kids aren’t worth as much. That’s how we act.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as the CC facility has access to amenities it needs, I'm okay with it not being on site. It's a short ride to TJ, Wakefield, Barcroft Rec, Arlington Mill, or Walter Reed. We need to use some of these resources.
My kids will go to this school. I would rather there be some workarounds in place while we wait for the amenities, because I don't think it will happen all at once.
Sorry, but my kids would also have to go to this school too and there's no way I agree with "waiting" for amenities that will never come. After APS builds the office-building style HS and forces kids to go there, they will be on to the next crisis.
It's funny and sad to me how some people are conditioned to accept less, right off the bat, every time. HB and Reed parents certainly didn't, and good on them for fighting for their kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as the CC facility has access to amenities it needs, I'm okay with it not being on site. It's a short ride to TJ, Wakefield, Barcroft Rec, Arlington Mill, or Walter Reed. We need to use some of these resources.
My kids will go to this school. I would rather there be some workarounds in place while we wait for the amenities, because I don't think it will happen all at once.
Sorry, but my kids would also have to go to this school too and there's no way I agree with "waiting" for amenities that will never come. After APS builds the office-building style HS and forces kids to go there, they will be on to the next crisis.
Anonymous wrote:As long as the CC facility has access to amenities it needs, I'm okay with it not being on site. It's a short ride to TJ, Wakefield, Barcroft Rec, Arlington Mill, or Walter Reed. We need to use some of these resources.
My kids will go to this school. I would rather there be some workarounds in place while we wait for the amenities, because I don't think it will happen all at once.