Anonymous
Post 08/21/2023 15:29     Subject: APS DHMS walk zone nuclear option

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Oh look. We should have done a Rosslyn MS after all.

+1


Why do people keep talking about a Rosslyn middle school? How would have helped this situation? Truly don’t understand the point.


Not sure because the kids who live near Hamm would have been bused there, so I am not sure how that would have been better for them than busing to WMS. Some ppl just like to complain. And also they don't get it.


The PP who say we should have built at Rosslyn are NOT current Hamm/Taylor parents, that was clear from other parts of the post.

I just don’t see why anyone is lamenting that option, unless they mean abolish HBW so that middle schools would have more capacity (1100 sear Hamm, 1100 seat Heights), but no Taylor/Hamm parent would consider that? So really confused who is advocating for Rosslyn?


One take away I have from the Rosslyn point is that APS staff planners are really terrible. How could they locate a “neighborhood” MS so far away from the needed seats? That is, they justified spending millions on building DHMS as a neighborhood school and just in a heartbeat APS is now saying, woops, we don’t need those seats there.

Same argument re: Cardinal/closing Nottingham.

Bottom line for me is they are wholly incompetent and so parents should fight for what they want. This is not a do what’s best for the system when it’s comes to your own children/family. And that’s Ok.


NOPE! It was the local community that wanted its "walkable" middle school and insisted on the Stratford site becoming the neighborhood middle school. Per usual, APS gave in.


Community didn’t care if it was walkable; they just didn’t want the ridiculous dreg of land that is the heights site for 1100 students. I know people who could walk to the Heights who wanted the Hamm site because the whole “warehouse” model was obscene.


That's fine, in fact I get it. Just don't complain now about what you got.


They aren’t complaining! Quite the opposite - current Hamm families love the school and want to stay. That is what they are advocating for.


They are complaining about the very foreseeable results of putting two middle schools too close to each other. Which is exactly what they wanted.


What misinformed and accusatory comment.

If they had situated Hamm at the Heights sight, it would have the same boundaries — and we would have the same imbalance. It’s a result of fewer families going to public school in the wealthy 22207 zip code (see Nottingham).

And Hamm and WMS are no closer than WMS and Swanson — they in fact make a very good fixed radius circle with WMS as the focal point.

If anything Kenmore and Swanson are Very close, and Kenmore and Jefferson are certainly close than WMS and Hamm.

You just want to claim the move is for some made of reason (schools are too close), and then somehow blame the Hamm parents? What an agenda!

Maybe if Hamm had been placed at the heights, they would all be delighted to be zoned to WMS, because it would be such an awful site for a large neighborhood school and require extensive busing anyways since the population of middle school students is much smalller in Rosslyn and many in Lyon Village leave for private by grade 6.

But as far as decision that were best for Hamm students, the Stratford site for Hamm was a winner hands down. It’s the best middle school on the county, and now the staff want to tear apart it’s community?


1. People in LV wanted the Rosslyn school.

2. Hamm is great because of the principal, not because of entitled parents.


1. Probably because they had friends at HB, at least half of LV goes private for middle school.

2. Agree that she is great. But disrupting a student body every 4 years isn't healthy.


1. False

3. Middle school is relatively short. DHMS will be fine.


Thanks for your well documented response. We lived in Lyon Village and during that time -- most of our neighbors went private (or to HB, but that's another kettle of fish). They really didn't care where the middle school went, it wasn't for their kids.


I have lived in LV for many years. Most families *do not* send their kids to private schools for middle school. Not then, not now.

And many families are very engaged in APS. Most wanted the Rosslyn school.


It was the neighborhood surrounding the Stratford site that wanted it for Hamm. They wanted their "walkable" middle school. That's what dictated what happened. Period.


Nope. We lived in Rosslyn and we didn’t want the warehouse middle school. It wasn’t about walkable, it was about functional site for a middle school.

Now that it’s about avoiding excessively long bus rides — these will be the longest bus rides in Arlington except for option rides.


I guess we should just go to virtual school after all. That way, nobody has to bus anywhere and they don't have to walk in the rain, either. We'll just bring school to you, literally, right in your home. We'll call it public homeschooling.

If you don't like that, then perhaps you can figure out a way for APS to provide a school on every block so everyone can walk - not just some; so everybody can have a non-warehouse (whatever that is) school they don't have to take an excessively long (however long that is) bus ride to - not just some.
Anonymous
Post 08/21/2023 15:25     Subject: APS DHMS walk zone nuclear option

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Oh look. We should have done a Rosslyn MS after all.

+1


Why do people keep talking about a Rosslyn middle school? How would have helped this situation? Truly don’t understand the point.


Not sure because the kids who live near Hamm would have been bused there, so I am not sure how that would have been better for them than busing to WMS. Some ppl just like to complain. And also they don't get it.


The PP who say we should have built at Rosslyn are NOT current Hamm/Taylor parents, that was clear from other parts of the post.

I just don’t see why anyone is lamenting that option, unless they mean abolish HBW so that middle schools would have more capacity (1100 sear Hamm, 1100 seat Heights), but no Taylor/Hamm parent would consider that? So really confused who is advocating for Rosslyn?


One take away I have from the Rosslyn point is that APS staff planners are really terrible. How could they locate a “neighborhood” MS so far away from the needed seats? That is, they justified spending millions on building DHMS as a neighborhood school and just in a heartbeat APS is now saying, woops, we don’t need those seats there.

Same argument re: Cardinal/closing Nottingham.

Bottom line for me is they are wholly incompetent and so parents should fight for what they want. This is not a do what’s best for the system when it’s comes to your own children/family. And that’s Ok.


NOPE! It was the local community that wanted its "walkable" middle school and insisted on the Stratford site becoming the neighborhood middle school. Per usual, APS gave in.


Community didn’t care if it was walkable; they just didn’t want the ridiculous dreg of land that is the heights site for 1100 students. I know people who could walk to the Heights who wanted the Hamm site because the whole “warehouse” model was obscene.


That's fine, in fact I get it. Just don't complain now about what you got.


They aren’t complaining! Quite the opposite - current Hamm families love the school and want to stay. That is what they are advocating for.


They are complaining about the very foreseeable results of putting two middle schools too close to each other. Which is exactly what they wanted.


What misinformed and accusatory comment.

If they had situated Hamm at the Heights sight, it would have the same boundaries — and we would have the same imbalance. It’s a result of fewer families going to public school in the wealthy 22207 zip code (see Nottingham).

And Hamm and WMS are no closer than WMS and Swanson — they in fact make a very good fixed radius circle with WMS as the focal point.

If anything Kenmore and Swanson are Very close, and Kenmore and Jefferson are certainly close than WMS and Hamm.

You just want to claim the move is for some made of reason (schools are too close), and then somehow blame the Hamm parents? What an agenda!

Maybe if Hamm had been placed at the heights, they would all be delighted to be zoned to WMS, because it would be such an awful site for a large neighborhood school and require extensive busing anyways since the population of middle school students is much smalller in Rosslyn and many in Lyon Village leave for private by grade 6.

But as far as decision that were best for Hamm students, the Stratford site for Hamm was a winner hands down. It’s the best middle school on the county, and now the staff want to tear apart it’s community?


1. People in LV wanted the Rosslyn school.

2. Hamm is great because of the principal, not because of entitled parents.


1. Probably because they had friends at HB, at least half of LV goes private for middle school.

2. Agree that she is great. But disrupting a student body every 4 years isn't healthy.


1. False

3. Middle school is relatively short. DHMS will be fine.


Thanks for your well documented response. We lived in Lyon Village and during that time -- most of our neighbors went private (or to HB, but that's another kettle of fish). They really didn't care where the middle school went, it wasn't for their kids.


I have lived in LV for many years. Most families *do not* send their kids to private schools for middle school. Not then, not now.

And many families are very engaged in APS. Most wanted the Rosslyn school.


It was the neighborhood surrounding the Stratford site that wanted it for Hamm. They wanted their "walkable" middle school. That's what dictated what happened. Period.


I want my street turned into a pedestrian walkway and a kids playground on the lot at the corner and a fire station around the corner. So because I want it, it will it happen? Period.


if it were up to APS, probably!
What point are you trying to make? Are you trying to refute that it was the surrounding neighborhood crying out for a walkable neighborhood middle school that resulted in HB moving? 'cause APS wasn't proposing a new HB building. They proposed a new middle school and the neighborhood wanted theirs in their neighborhood.
Anonymous
Post 08/21/2023 14:38     Subject: APS DHMS walk zone nuclear option

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Oh look. We should have done a Rosslyn MS after all.

+1


Why do people keep talking about a Rosslyn middle school? How would have helped this situation? Truly don’t understand the point.


Not sure because the kids who live near Hamm would have been bused there, so I am not sure how that would have been better for them than busing to WMS. Some ppl just like to complain. And also they don't get it.


The PP who say we should have built at Rosslyn are NOT current Hamm/Taylor parents, that was clear from other parts of the post.

I just don’t see why anyone is lamenting that option, unless they mean abolish HBW so that middle schools would have more capacity (1100 sear Hamm, 1100 seat Heights), but no Taylor/Hamm parent would consider that? So really confused who is advocating for Rosslyn?


One take away I have from the Rosslyn point is that APS staff planners are really terrible. How could they locate a “neighborhood” MS so far away from the needed seats? That is, they justified spending millions on building DHMS as a neighborhood school and just in a heartbeat APS is now saying, woops, we don’t need those seats there.

Same argument re: Cardinal/closing Nottingham.

Bottom line for me is they are wholly incompetent and so parents should fight for what they want. This is not a do what’s best for the system when it’s comes to your own children/family. And that’s Ok.


NOPE! It was the local community that wanted its "walkable" middle school and insisted on the Stratford site becoming the neighborhood middle school. Per usual, APS gave in.


Community didn’t care if it was walkable; they just didn’t want the ridiculous dreg of land that is the heights site for 1100 students. I know people who could walk to the Heights who wanted the Hamm site because the whole “warehouse” model was obscene.


That's fine, in fact I get it. Just don't complain now about what you got.


They aren’t complaining! Quite the opposite - current Hamm families love the school and want to stay. That is what they are advocating for.


They are complaining about the very foreseeable results of putting two middle schools too close to each other. Which is exactly what they wanted.


What misinformed and accusatory comment.

If they had situated Hamm at the Heights sight, it would have the same boundaries — and we would have the same imbalance. It’s a result of fewer families going to public school in the wealthy 22207 zip code (see Nottingham).

And Hamm and WMS are no closer than WMS and Swanson — they in fact make a very good fixed radius circle with WMS as the focal point.

If anything Kenmore and Swanson are Very close, and Kenmore and Jefferson are certainly close than WMS and Hamm.

You just want to claim the move is for some made of reason (schools are too close), and then somehow blame the Hamm parents? What an agenda!

Maybe if Hamm had been placed at the heights, they would all be delighted to be zoned to WMS, because it would be such an awful site for a large neighborhood school and require extensive busing anyways since the population of middle school students is much smalller in Rosslyn and many in Lyon Village leave for private by grade 6.

But as far as decision that were best for Hamm students, the Stratford site for Hamm was a winner hands down. It’s the best middle school on the county, and now the staff want to tear apart it’s community?


1. People in LV wanted the Rosslyn school.

2. Hamm is great because of the principal, not because of entitled parents.


1. Probably because they had friends at HB, at least half of LV goes private for middle school.

2. Agree that she is great. But disrupting a student body every 4 years isn't healthy.


1. False

3. Middle school is relatively short. DHMS will be fine.


Thanks for your well documented response. We lived in Lyon Village and during that time -- most of our neighbors went private (or to HB, but that's another kettle of fish). They really didn't care where the middle school went, it wasn't for their kids.


I have lived in LV for many years. Most families *do not* send their kids to private schools for middle school. Not then, not now.

And many families are very engaged in APS. Most wanted the Rosslyn school.


It was the neighborhood surrounding the Stratford site that wanted it for Hamm. They wanted their "walkable" middle school. That's what dictated what happened. Period.


Nope. We lived in Rosslyn and we didn’t want the warehouse middle school. It wasn’t about walkable, it was about functional site for a middle school.

Now that it’s about avoiding excessively long bus rides — these will be the longest bus rides in Arlington except for option rides.
Anonymous
Post 08/21/2023 14:37     Subject: APS DHMS walk zone nuclear option

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Oh look. We should have done a Rosslyn MS after all.

+1


Why do people keep talking about a Rosslyn middle school? How would have helped this situation? Truly don’t understand the point.


Not sure because the kids who live near Hamm would have been bused there, so I am not sure how that would have been better for them than busing to WMS. Some ppl just like to complain. And also they don't get it.


The PP who say we should have built at Rosslyn are NOT current Hamm/Taylor parents, that was clear from other parts of the post.

I just don’t see why anyone is lamenting that option, unless they mean abolish HBW so that middle schools would have more capacity (1100 sear Hamm, 1100 seat Heights), but no Taylor/Hamm parent would consider that? So really confused who is advocating for Rosslyn?


One take away I have from the Rosslyn point is that APS staff planners are really terrible. How could they locate a “neighborhood” MS so far away from the needed seats? That is, they justified spending millions on building DHMS as a neighborhood school and just in a heartbeat APS is now saying, woops, we don’t need those seats there.

Same argument re: Cardinal/closing Nottingham.

Bottom line for me is they are wholly incompetent and so parents should fight for what they want. This is not a do what’s best for the system when it’s comes to your own children/family. And that’s Ok.


NOPE! It was the local community that wanted its "walkable" middle school and insisted on the Stratford site becoming the neighborhood middle school. Per usual, APS gave in.


Community didn’t care if it was walkable; they just didn’t want the ridiculous dreg of land that is the heights site for 1100 students. I know people who could walk to the Heights who wanted the Hamm site because the whole “warehouse” model was obscene.


That's fine, in fact I get it. Just don't complain now about what you got.


They aren’t complaining! Quite the opposite - current Hamm families love the school and want to stay. That is what they are advocating for.


They are complaining about the very foreseeable results of putting two middle schools too close to each other. Which is exactly what they wanted.


What misinformed and accusatory comment.

If they had situated Hamm at the Heights sight, it would have the same boundaries — and we would have the same imbalance. It’s a result of fewer families going to public school in the wealthy 22207 zip code (see Nottingham).

And Hamm and WMS are no closer than WMS and Swanson — they in fact make a very good fixed radius circle with WMS as the focal point.

If anything Kenmore and Swanson are Very close, and Kenmore and Jefferson are certainly close than WMS and Hamm.

You just want to claim the move is for some made of reason (schools are too close), and then somehow blame the Hamm parents? What an agenda!

Maybe if Hamm had been placed at the heights, they would all be delighted to be zoned to WMS, because it would be such an awful site for a large neighborhood school and require extensive busing anyways since the population of middle school students is much smalller in Rosslyn and many in Lyon Village leave for private by grade 6.

But as far as decision that were best for Hamm students, the Stratford site for Hamm was a winner hands down. It’s the best middle school on the county, and now the staff want to tear apart it’s community?


1. People in LV wanted the Rosslyn school.

2. Hamm is great because of the principal, not because of entitled parents.


1. Probably because they had friends at HB, at least half of LV goes private for middle school.

2. Agree that she is great. But disrupting a student body every 4 years isn't healthy.


1. False

3. Middle school is relatively short. DHMS will be fine.


Thanks for your well documented response. We lived in Lyon Village and during that time -- most of our neighbors went private (or to HB, but that's another kettle of fish). They really didn't care where the middle school went, it wasn't for their kids.


I have lived in LV for many years. Most families *do not* send their kids to private schools for middle school. Not then, not now.

And many families are very engaged in APS. Most wanted the Rosslyn school.


It was the neighborhood surrounding the Stratford site that wanted it for Hamm. They wanted their "walkable" middle school. That's what dictated what happened. Period.


I want my street turned into a pedestrian walkway and a kids playground on the lot at the corner and a fire station around the corner. So because I want it, it will it happen? Period.
Anonymous
Post 08/21/2023 13:45     Subject: APS DHMS walk zone nuclear option

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Oh look. We should have done a Rosslyn MS after all.

+1


Why do people keep talking about a Rosslyn middle school? How would have helped this situation? Truly don’t understand the point.


Not sure because the kids who live near Hamm would have been bused there, so I am not sure how that would have been better for them than busing to WMS. Some ppl just like to complain. And also they don't get it.


The PP who say we should have built at Rosslyn are NOT current Hamm/Taylor parents, that was clear from other parts of the post.

I just don’t see why anyone is lamenting that option, unless they mean abolish HBW so that middle schools would have more capacity (1100 sear Hamm, 1100 seat Heights), but no Taylor/Hamm parent would consider that? So really confused who is advocating for Rosslyn?


One take away I have from the Rosslyn point is that APS staff planners are really terrible. How could they locate a “neighborhood” MS so far away from the needed seats? That is, they justified spending millions on building DHMS as a neighborhood school and just in a heartbeat APS is now saying, woops, we don’t need those seats there.

Same argument re: Cardinal/closing Nottingham.

Bottom line for me is they are wholly incompetent and so parents should fight for what they want. This is not a do what’s best for the system when it’s comes to your own children/family. And that’s Ok.


NOPE! It was the local community that wanted its "walkable" middle school and insisted on the Stratford site becoming the neighborhood middle school. Per usual, APS gave in.


Community didn’t care if it was walkable; they just didn’t want the ridiculous dreg of land that is the heights site for 1100 students. I know people who could walk to the Heights who wanted the Hamm site because the whole “warehouse” model was obscene.


That's fine, in fact I get it. Just don't complain now about what you got.


They aren’t complaining! Quite the opposite - current Hamm families love the school and want to stay. That is what they are advocating for.


They are complaining about the very foreseeable results of putting two middle schools too close to each other. Which is exactly what they wanted.


What misinformed and accusatory comment.

If they had situated Hamm at the Heights sight, it would have the same boundaries — and we would have the same imbalance. It’s a result of fewer families going to public school in the wealthy 22207 zip code (see Nottingham).

And Hamm and WMS are no closer than WMS and Swanson — they in fact make a very good fixed radius circle with WMS as the focal point.

If anything Kenmore and Swanson are Very close, and Kenmore and Jefferson are certainly close than WMS and Hamm.

You just want to claim the move is for some made of reason (schools are too close), and then somehow blame the Hamm parents? What an agenda!

Maybe if Hamm had been placed at the heights, they would all be delighted to be zoned to WMS, because it would be such an awful site for a large neighborhood school and require extensive busing anyways since the population of middle school students is much smalller in Rosslyn and many in Lyon Village leave for private by grade 6.

But as far as decision that were best for Hamm students, the Stratford site for Hamm was a winner hands down. It’s the best middle school on the county, and now the staff want to tear apart it’s community?


1. People in LV wanted the Rosslyn school.

2. Hamm is great because of the principal, not because of entitled parents.


1. Probably because they had friends at HB, at least half of LV goes private for middle school.

2. Agree that she is great. But disrupting a student body every 4 years isn't healthy.


1. False

3. Middle school is relatively short. DHMS will be fine.


Thanks for your well documented response. We lived in Lyon Village and during that time -- most of our neighbors went private (or to HB, but that's another kettle of fish). They really didn't care where the middle school went, it wasn't for their kids.


I have lived in LV for many years. Most families *do not* send their kids to private schools for middle school. Not then, not now.

And many families are very engaged in APS. Most wanted the Rosslyn school.


It was the neighborhood surrounding the Stratford site that wanted it for Hamm. They wanted their "walkable" middle school. That's what dictated what happened. Period.
Anonymous
Post 08/21/2023 13:02     Subject: APS DHMS walk zone nuclear option

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Oh look. We should have done a Rosslyn MS after all.

+1


Why do people keep talking about a Rosslyn middle school? How would have helped this situation? Truly don’t understand the point.


Not sure because the kids who live near Hamm would have been bused there, so I am not sure how that would have been better for them than busing to WMS. Some ppl just like to complain. And also they don't get it.


The PP who say we should have built at Rosslyn are NOT current Hamm/Taylor parents, that was clear from other parts of the post.

I just don’t see why anyone is lamenting that option, unless they mean abolish HBW so that middle schools would have more capacity (1100 sear Hamm, 1100 seat Heights), but no Taylor/Hamm parent would consider that? So really confused who is advocating for Rosslyn?


One take away I have from the Rosslyn point is that APS staff planners are really terrible. How could they locate a “neighborhood” MS so far away from the needed seats? That is, they justified spending millions on building DHMS as a neighborhood school and just in a heartbeat APS is now saying, woops, we don’t need those seats there.

Same argument re: Cardinal/closing Nottingham.

Bottom line for me is they are wholly incompetent and so parents should fight for what they want. This is not a do what’s best for the system when it’s comes to your own children/family. And that’s Ok.


NOPE! It was the local community that wanted its "walkable" middle school and insisted on the Stratford site becoming the neighborhood middle school. Per usual, APS gave in.


Community didn’t care if it was walkable; they just didn’t want the ridiculous dreg of land that is the heights site for 1100 students. I know people who could walk to the Heights who wanted the Hamm site because the whole “warehouse” model was obscene.


That's fine, in fact I get it. Just don't complain now about what you got.


They aren’t complaining! Quite the opposite - current Hamm families love the school and want to stay. That is what they are advocating for.


They are complaining about the very foreseeable results of putting two middle schools too close to each other. Which is exactly what they wanted.


What misinformed and accusatory comment.

If they had situated Hamm at the Heights sight, it would have the same boundaries — and we would have the same imbalance. It’s a result of fewer families going to public school in the wealthy 22207 zip code (see Nottingham).

And Hamm and WMS are no closer than WMS and Swanson — they in fact make a very good fixed radius circle with WMS as the focal point.

If anything Kenmore and Swanson are Very close, and Kenmore and Jefferson are certainly close than WMS and Hamm.

You just want to claim the move is for some made of reason (schools are too close), and then somehow blame the Hamm parents? What an agenda!

Maybe if Hamm had been placed at the heights, they would all be delighted to be zoned to WMS, because it would be such an awful site for a large neighborhood school and require extensive busing anyways since the population of middle school students is much smalller in Rosslyn and many in Lyon Village leave for private by grade 6.

But as far as decision that were best for Hamm students, the Stratford site for Hamm was a winner hands down. It’s the best middle school on the county, and now the staff want to tear apart it’s community?


1. People in LV wanted the Rosslyn school.

2. Hamm is great because of the principal, not because of entitled parents.


1. Probably because they had friends at HB, at least half of LV goes private for middle school.

2. Agree that she is great. But disrupting a student body every 4 years isn't healthy.


1. False

3. Middle school is relatively short. DHMS will be fine.


Thanks for your well documented response. We lived in Lyon Village and during that time -- most of our neighbors went private (or to HB, but that's another kettle of fish). They really didn't care where the middle school went, it wasn't for their kids.


I have lived in LV for many years. Most families *do not* send their kids to private schools for middle school. Not then, not now.

And many families are very engaged in APS. Most wanted the Rosslyn school.
Anonymous
Post 08/21/2023 12:59     Subject: APS DHMS walk zone nuclear option

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Oh look. We should have done a Rosslyn MS after all.

+1


Why do people keep talking about a Rosslyn middle school? How would have helped this situation? Truly don’t understand the point.


Not sure because the kids who live near Hamm would have been bused there, so I am not sure how that would have been better for them than busing to WMS. Some ppl just like to complain. And also they don't get it.


The PP who say we should have built at Rosslyn are NOT current Hamm/Taylor parents, that was clear from other parts of the post.

I just don’t see why anyone is lamenting that option, unless they mean abolish HBW so that middle schools would have more capacity (1100 sear Hamm, 1100 seat Heights), but no Taylor/Hamm parent would consider that? So really confused who is advocating for Rosslyn?


One take away I have from the Rosslyn point is that APS staff planners are really terrible. How could they locate a “neighborhood” MS so far away from the needed seats? That is, they justified spending millions on building DHMS as a neighborhood school and just in a heartbeat APS is now saying, woops, we don’t need those seats there.

Same argument re: Cardinal/closing Nottingham.

Bottom line for me is they are wholly incompetent and so parents should fight for what they want. This is not a do what’s best for the system when it’s comes to your own children/family. And that’s Ok.


NOPE! It was the local community that wanted its "walkable" middle school and insisted on the Stratford site becoming the neighborhood middle school. Per usual, APS gave in.


Community didn’t care if it was walkable; they just didn’t want the ridiculous dreg of land that is the heights site for 1100 students. I know people who could walk to the Heights who wanted the Hamm site because the whole “warehouse” model was obscene.


That's fine, in fact I get it. Just don't complain now about what you got.


They aren’t complaining! Quite the opposite - current Hamm families love the school and want to stay. That is what they are advocating for.


They are complaining about the very foreseeable results of putting two middle schools too close to each other. Which is exactly what they wanted.


What misinformed and accusatory comment.

If they had situated Hamm at the Heights sight, it would have the same boundaries — and we would have the same imbalance. It’s a result of fewer families going to public school in the wealthy 22207 zip code (see Nottingham).

And Hamm and WMS are no closer than WMS and Swanson — they in fact make a very good fixed radius circle with WMS as the focal point.

If anything Kenmore and Swanson are Very close, and Kenmore and Jefferson are certainly close than WMS and Hamm.

You just want to claim the move is for some made of reason (schools are too close), and then somehow blame the Hamm parents? What an agenda!

Maybe if Hamm had been placed at the heights, they would all be delighted to be zoned to WMS, because it would be such an awful site for a large neighborhood school and require extensive busing anyways since the population of middle school students is much smalller in Rosslyn and many in Lyon Village leave for private by grade 6.

But as far as decision that were best for Hamm students, the Stratford site for Hamm was a winner hands down. It’s the best middle school on the county, and now the staff want to tear apart it’s community?


You’re wrong - WMS boundaries are too small because they are constrained by Hamms walk zone. This would not be the case if the MD had been sited elsewhere. And DH parents wouldn’t be walkable to Rosalyn so they wouldn’t care which school they were bused to.


Haha, no they would be happy not to be bused to a Rosslyn warehouse.

They would not have made boundaries different enough to address a middle school at 65% capacity! Get real. The boundaries aren’t the issue, it’s the private school exodus. As it was DHMS is also under enrolled, at 800 pupils. The location of the middle school for Stratford vs Rosslyn is immaterial, get over it.


We all know that very little would make these people happy. that's not exactly the standard APS should use.

Of course it's the boundaries. DH was underenrolled even before Covid.


Intentionally. There were very few 8th graders at the start because they were grandfathered to their old MS. At the time, enrollments were still skyrocketing and it was going to fill very quickly based on projections.

Then, covid hit the first year it opened.


Covid hit at the end of Hamm's first year. Before that it was very underenrolled, so much so that they allowed in transfers because they had messed up and put too few kids there and knew it. Which was because it was too close to WMS.


Yes, they planned for it to be under-enrolled on day 1 because (1) there were minimal 8th graders due to grandfathering and (2) projected increases in the near term due to new apartment buildings opening, growth, etc.
Anonymous
Post 08/21/2023 12:40     Subject: APS DHMS walk zone nuclear option

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Oh look. We should have done a Rosslyn MS after all.

+1


Why do people keep talking about a Rosslyn middle school? How would have helped this situation? Truly don’t understand the point.


Not sure because the kids who live near Hamm would have been bused there, so I am not sure how that would have been better for them than busing to WMS. Some ppl just like to complain. And also they don't get it.


The PP who say we should have built at Rosslyn are NOT current Hamm/Taylor parents, that was clear from other parts of the post.

I just don’t see why anyone is lamenting that option, unless they mean abolish HBW so that middle schools would have more capacity (1100 sear Hamm, 1100 seat Heights), but no Taylor/Hamm parent would consider that? So really confused who is advocating for Rosslyn?


One take away I have from the Rosslyn point is that APS staff planners are really terrible. How could they locate a “neighborhood” MS so far away from the needed seats? That is, they justified spending millions on building DHMS as a neighborhood school and just in a heartbeat APS is now saying, woops, we don’t need those seats there.

Same argument re: Cardinal/closing Nottingham.

Bottom line for me is they are wholly incompetent and so parents should fight for what they want. This is not a do what’s best for the system when it’s comes to your own children/family. And that’s Ok.


NOPE! It was the local community that wanted its "walkable" middle school and insisted on the Stratford site becoming the neighborhood middle school. Per usual, APS gave in.


Community didn’t care if it was walkable; they just didn’t want the ridiculous dreg of land that is the heights site for 1100 students. I know people who could walk to the Heights who wanted the Hamm site because the whole “warehouse” model was obscene.


That's fine, in fact I get it. Just don't complain now about what you got.


They aren’t complaining! Quite the opposite - current Hamm families love the school and want to stay. That is what they are advocating for.


They are complaining about the very foreseeable results of putting two middle schools too close to each other. Which is exactly what they wanted.


What misinformed and accusatory comment.

If they had situated Hamm at the Heights sight, it would have the same boundaries — and we would have the same imbalance. It’s a result of fewer families going to public school in the wealthy 22207 zip code (see Nottingham).

And Hamm and WMS are no closer than WMS and Swanson — they in fact make a very good fixed radius circle with WMS as the focal point.

If anything Kenmore and Swanson are Very close, and Kenmore and Jefferson are certainly close than WMS and Hamm.

You just want to claim the move is for some made of reason (schools are too close), and then somehow blame the Hamm parents? What an agenda!

Maybe if Hamm had been placed at the heights, they would all be delighted to be zoned to WMS, because it would be such an awful site for a large neighborhood school and require extensive busing anyways since the population of middle school students is much smalller in Rosslyn and many in Lyon Village leave for private by grade 6.

But as far as decision that were best for Hamm students, the Stratford site for Hamm was a winner hands down. It’s the best middle school on the county, and now the staff want to tear apart it’s community?


You’re wrong - WMS boundaries are too small because they are constrained by Hamms walk zone. This would not be the case if the MD had been sited elsewhere. And DH parents wouldn’t be walkable to Rosalyn so they wouldn’t care which school they were bused to.


Haha, no they would be happy not to be bused to a Rosslyn warehouse.

They would not have made boundaries different enough to address a middle school at 65% capacity! Get real. The boundaries aren’t the issue, it’s the private school exodus. As it was DHMS is also under enrolled, at 800 pupils. The location of the middle school for Stratford vs Rosslyn is immaterial, get over it.


We all know that very little would make these people happy. that's not exactly the standard APS should use.

Of course it's the boundaries. DH was underenrolled even before Covid.


Intentionally. There were very few 8th graders at the start because they were grandfathered to their old MS. At the time, enrollments were still skyrocketing and it was going to fill very quickly based on projections.

Then, covid hit the first year it opened.


Covid hit at the end of Hamm's first year. Before that it was very underenrolled, so much so that they allowed in transfers because they had messed up and put too few kids there and knew it. Which was because it was too close to WMS.
Anonymous
Post 08/21/2023 12:34     Subject: APS DHMS walk zone nuclear option

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Oh look. We should have done a Rosslyn MS after all.

+1


Why do people keep talking about a Rosslyn middle school? How would have helped this situation? Truly don’t understand the point.


Not sure because the kids who live near Hamm would have been bused there, so I am not sure how that would have been better for them than busing to WMS. Some ppl just like to complain. And also they don't get it.


The PP who say we should have built at Rosslyn are NOT current Hamm/Taylor parents, that was clear from other parts of the post.

I just don’t see why anyone is lamenting that option, unless they mean abolish HBW so that middle schools would have more capacity (1100 sear Hamm, 1100 seat Heights), but no Taylor/Hamm parent would consider that? So really confused who is advocating for Rosslyn?


One take away I have from the Rosslyn point is that APS staff planners are really terrible. How could they locate a “neighborhood” MS so far away from the needed seats? That is, they justified spending millions on building DHMS as a neighborhood school and just in a heartbeat APS is now saying, woops, we don’t need those seats there.

Same argument re: Cardinal/closing Nottingham.

Bottom line for me is they are wholly incompetent and so parents should fight for what they want. This is not a do what’s best for the system when it’s comes to your own children/family. And that’s Ok.


NOPE! It was the local community that wanted its "walkable" middle school and insisted on the Stratford site becoming the neighborhood middle school. Per usual, APS gave in.


Community didn’t care if it was walkable; they just didn’t want the ridiculous dreg of land that is the heights site for 1100 students. I know people who could walk to the Heights who wanted the Hamm site because the whole “warehouse” model was obscene.


That's fine, in fact I get it. Just don't complain now about what you got.


They aren’t complaining! Quite the opposite - current Hamm families love the school and want to stay. That is what they are advocating for.


They are complaining about the very foreseeable results of putting two middle schools too close to each other. Which is exactly what they wanted.


What misinformed and accusatory comment.

If they had situated Hamm at the Heights sight, it would have the same boundaries — and we would have the same imbalance. It’s a result of fewer families going to public school in the wealthy 22207 zip code (see Nottingham).

And Hamm and WMS are no closer than WMS and Swanson — they in fact make a very good fixed radius circle with WMS as the focal point.

If anything Kenmore and Swanson are Very close, and Kenmore and Jefferson are certainly close than WMS and Hamm.

You just want to claim the move is for some made of reason (schools are too close), and then somehow blame the Hamm parents? What an agenda!

Maybe if Hamm had been placed at the heights, they would all be delighted to be zoned to WMS, because it would be such an awful site for a large neighborhood school and require extensive busing anyways since the population of middle school students is much smalller in Rosslyn and many in Lyon Village leave for private by grade 6.

But as far as decision that were best for Hamm students, the Stratford site for Hamm was a winner hands down. It’s the best middle school on the county, and now the staff want to tear apart it’s community?


1. People in LV wanted the Rosslyn school.

2. Hamm is great because of the principal, not because of entitled parents.


1. Probably because they had friends at HB, at least half of LV goes private for middle school.

2. Agree that she is great. But disrupting a student body every 4 years isn't healthy.


MS is only 3 years. The student body is "disrupted" all the time.
Anonymous
Post 08/21/2023 12:02     Subject: APS DHMS walk zone nuclear option

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Oh look. We should have done a Rosslyn MS after all.

+1


Why do people keep talking about a Rosslyn middle school? How would have helped this situation? Truly don’t understand the point.


Not sure because the kids who live near Hamm would have been bused there, so I am not sure how that would have been better for them than busing to WMS. Some ppl just like to complain. And also they don't get it.


The PP who say we should have built at Rosslyn are NOT current Hamm/Taylor parents, that was clear from other parts of the post.

I just don’t see why anyone is lamenting that option, unless they mean abolish HBW so that middle schools would have more capacity (1100 sear Hamm, 1100 seat Heights), but no Taylor/Hamm parent would consider that? So really confused who is advocating for Rosslyn?


One take away I have from the Rosslyn point is that APS staff planners are really terrible. How could they locate a “neighborhood” MS so far away from the needed seats? That is, they justified spending millions on building DHMS as a neighborhood school and just in a heartbeat APS is now saying, woops, we don’t need those seats there.

Same argument re: Cardinal/closing Nottingham.

Bottom line for me is they are wholly incompetent and so parents should fight for what they want. This is not a do what’s best for the system when it’s comes to your own children/family. And that’s Ok.


NOPE! It was the local community that wanted its "walkable" middle school and insisted on the Stratford site becoming the neighborhood middle school. Per usual, APS gave in.


Community didn’t care if it was walkable; they just didn’t want the ridiculous dreg of land that is the heights site for 1100 students. I know people who could walk to the Heights who wanted the Hamm site because the whole “warehouse” model was obscene.


That's fine, in fact I get it. Just don't complain now about what you got.


They aren’t complaining! Quite the opposite - current Hamm families love the school and want to stay. That is what they are advocating for.


They are complaining about the very foreseeable results of putting two middle schools too close to each other. Which is exactly what they wanted.


What misinformed and accusatory comment.

If they had situated Hamm at the Heights sight, it would have the same boundaries — and we would have the same imbalance. It’s a result of fewer families going to public school in the wealthy 22207 zip code (see Nottingham).

And Hamm and WMS are no closer than WMS and Swanson — they in fact make a very good fixed radius circle with WMS as the focal point.

If anything Kenmore and Swanson are Very close, and Kenmore and Jefferson are certainly close than WMS and Hamm.

You just want to claim the move is for some made of reason (schools are too close), and then somehow blame the Hamm parents? What an agenda!

Maybe if Hamm had been placed at the heights, they would all be delighted to be zoned to WMS, because it would be such an awful site for a large neighborhood school and require extensive busing anyways since the population of middle school students is much smalller in Rosslyn and many in Lyon Village leave for private by grade 6.

But as far as decision that were best for Hamm students, the Stratford site for Hamm was a winner hands down. It’s the best middle school on the county, and now the staff want to tear apart it’s community?


1. People in LV wanted the Rosslyn school.

2. Hamm is great because of the principal, not because of entitled parents.


1. Probably because they had friends at HB, at least half of LV goes private for middle school.

2. Agree that she is great. But disrupting a student body every 4 years isn't healthy.


1. False

3. Middle school is relatively short. DHMS will be fine.


Thanks for your well documented response. We lived in Lyon Village and during that time -- most of our neighbors went private (or to HB, but that's another kettle of fish). They really didn't care where the middle school went, it wasn't for their kids.
Anonymous
Post 08/21/2023 11:54     Subject: APS DHMS walk zone nuclear option

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Oh look. We should have done a Rosslyn MS after all.

+1


Why do people keep talking about a Rosslyn middle school? How would have helped this situation? Truly don’t understand the point.


Not sure because the kids who live near Hamm would have been bused there, so I am not sure how that would have been better for them than busing to WMS. Some ppl just like to complain. And also they don't get it.


The PP who say we should have built at Rosslyn are NOT current Hamm/Taylor parents, that was clear from other parts of the post.

I just don’t see why anyone is lamenting that option, unless they mean abolish HBW so that middle schools would have more capacity (1100 sear Hamm, 1100 seat Heights), but no Taylor/Hamm parent would consider that? So really confused who is advocating for Rosslyn?


One take away I have from the Rosslyn point is that APS staff planners are really terrible. How could they locate a “neighborhood” MS so far away from the needed seats? That is, they justified spending millions on building DHMS as a neighborhood school and just in a heartbeat APS is now saying, woops, we don’t need those seats there.

Same argument re: Cardinal/closing Nottingham.

Bottom line for me is they are wholly incompetent and so parents should fight for what they want. This is not a do what’s best for the system when it’s comes to your own children/family. And that’s Ok.


NOPE! It was the local community that wanted its "walkable" middle school and insisted on the Stratford site becoming the neighborhood middle school. Per usual, APS gave in.


Community didn’t care if it was walkable; they just didn’t want the ridiculous dreg of land that is the heights site for 1100 students. I know people who could walk to the Heights who wanted the Hamm site because the whole “warehouse” model was obscene.


That's fine, in fact I get it. Just don't complain now about what you got.


They aren’t complaining! Quite the opposite - current Hamm families love the school and want to stay. That is what they are advocating for.


They are complaining about the very foreseeable results of putting two middle schools too close to each other. Which is exactly what they wanted.


What misinformed and accusatory comment.

If they had situated Hamm at the Heights sight, it would have the same boundaries — and we would have the same imbalance. It’s a result of fewer families going to public school in the wealthy 22207 zip code (see Nottingham).

And Hamm and WMS are no closer than WMS and Swanson — they in fact make a very good fixed radius circle with WMS as the focal point.

If anything Kenmore and Swanson are Very close, and Kenmore and Jefferson are certainly close than WMS and Hamm.

You just want to claim the move is for some made of reason (schools are too close), and then somehow blame the Hamm parents? What an agenda!

Maybe if Hamm had been placed at the heights, they would all be delighted to be zoned to WMS, because it would be such an awful site for a large neighborhood school and require extensive busing anyways since the population of middle school students is much smalller in Rosslyn and many in Lyon Village leave for private by grade 6.

But as far as decision that were best for Hamm students, the Stratford site for Hamm was a winner hands down. It’s the best middle school on the county, and now the staff want to tear apart it’s community?


1. People in LV wanted the Rosslyn school.

2. Hamm is great because of the principal, not because of entitled parents.


1. Probably because they had friends at HB, at least half of LV goes private for middle school.

2. Agree that she is great. But disrupting a student body every 4 years isn't healthy.


This is the mindset I struggle with. It's really just not that big of a deal. The toxic adults are the one who struggle the hardest. And by the way, most of the adults are normal and fine.
Anonymous
Post 08/21/2023 11:21     Subject: APS DHMS walk zone nuclear option

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Oh look. We should have done a Rosslyn MS after all.

+1


Why do people keep talking about a Rosslyn middle school? How would have helped this situation? Truly don’t understand the point.


Not sure because the kids who live near Hamm would have been bused there, so I am not sure how that would have been better for them than busing to WMS. Some ppl just like to complain. And also they don't get it.


The PP who say we should have built at Rosslyn are NOT current Hamm/Taylor parents, that was clear from other parts of the post.

I just don’t see why anyone is lamenting that option, unless they mean abolish HBW so that middle schools would have more capacity (1100 sear Hamm, 1100 seat Heights), but no Taylor/Hamm parent would consider that? So really confused who is advocating for Rosslyn?


One take away I have from the Rosslyn point is that APS staff planners are really terrible. How could they locate a “neighborhood” MS so far away from the needed seats? That is, they justified spending millions on building DHMS as a neighborhood school and just in a heartbeat APS is now saying, woops, we don’t need those seats there.

Same argument re: Cardinal/closing Nottingham.

Bottom line for me is they are wholly incompetent and so parents should fight for what they want. This is not a do what’s best for the system when it’s comes to your own children/family. And that’s Ok.


NOPE! It was the local community that wanted its "walkable" middle school and insisted on the Stratford site becoming the neighborhood middle school. Per usual, APS gave in.


Community didn’t care if it was walkable; they just didn’t want the ridiculous dreg of land that is the heights site for 1100 students. I know people who could walk to the Heights who wanted the Hamm site because the whole “warehouse” model was obscene.


That's fine, in fact I get it. Just don't complain now about what you got.


They aren’t complaining! Quite the opposite - current Hamm families love the school and want to stay. That is what they are advocating for.


They are complaining about the very foreseeable results of putting two middle schools too close to each other. Which is exactly what they wanted.


What misinformed and accusatory comment.

If they had situated Hamm at the Heights sight, it would have the same boundaries — and we would have the same imbalance. It’s a result of fewer families going to public school in the wealthy 22207 zip code (see Nottingham).

And Hamm and WMS are no closer than WMS and Swanson — they in fact make a very good fixed radius circle with WMS as the focal point.

If anything Kenmore and Swanson are Very close, and Kenmore and Jefferson are certainly close than WMS and Hamm.

You just want to claim the move is for some made of reason (schools are too close), and then somehow blame the Hamm parents? What an agenda!

Maybe if Hamm had been placed at the heights, they would all be delighted to be zoned to WMS, because it would be such an awful site for a large neighborhood school and require extensive busing anyways since the population of middle school students is much smalller in Rosslyn and many in Lyon Village leave for private by grade 6.

But as far as decision that were best for Hamm students, the Stratford site for Hamm was a winner hands down. It’s the best middle school on the county, and now the staff want to tear apart it’s community?


1. People in LV wanted the Rosslyn school.

2. Hamm is great because of the principal, not because of entitled parents.


1. Probably because they had friends at HB, at least half of LV goes private for middle school.

2. Agree that she is great. But disrupting a student body every 4 years isn't healthy.


1. False

3. Middle school is relatively short. DHMS will be fine.
Anonymous
Post 08/21/2023 11:20     Subject: APS DHMS walk zone nuclear option

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Oh look. We should have done a Rosslyn MS after all.

+1


Why do people keep talking about a Rosslyn middle school? How would have helped this situation? Truly don’t understand the point.


Not sure because the kids who live near Hamm would have been bused there, so I am not sure how that would have been better for them than busing to WMS. Some ppl just like to complain. And also they don't get it.


The PP who say we should have built at Rosslyn are NOT current Hamm/Taylor parents, that was clear from other parts of the post.

I just don’t see why anyone is lamenting that option, unless they mean abolish HBW so that middle schools would have more capacity (1100 sear Hamm, 1100 seat Heights), but no Taylor/Hamm parent would consider that? So really confused who is advocating for Rosslyn?


One take away I have from the Rosslyn point is that APS staff planners are really terrible. How could they locate a “neighborhood” MS so far away from the needed seats? That is, they justified spending millions on building DHMS as a neighborhood school and just in a heartbeat APS is now saying, woops, we don’t need those seats there.

Same argument re: Cardinal/closing Nottingham.

Bottom line for me is they are wholly incompetent and so parents should fight for what they want. This is not a do what’s best for the system when it’s comes to your own children/family. And that’s Ok.


NOPE! It was the local community that wanted its "walkable" middle school and insisted on the Stratford site becoming the neighborhood middle school. Per usual, APS gave in.


Community didn’t care if it was walkable; they just didn’t want the ridiculous dreg of land that is the heights site for 1100 students. I know people who could walk to the Heights who wanted the Hamm site because the whole “warehouse” model was obscene.


That's fine, in fact I get it. Just don't complain now about what you got.


They aren’t complaining! Quite the opposite - current Hamm families love the school and want to stay. That is what they are advocating for.


They are complaining about the very foreseeable results of putting two middle schools too close to each other. Which is exactly what they wanted.


What misinformed and accusatory comment.

If they had situated Hamm at the Heights sight, it would have the same boundaries — and we would have the same imbalance. It’s a result of fewer families going to public school in the wealthy 22207 zip code (see Nottingham).

And Hamm and WMS are no closer than WMS and Swanson — they in fact make a very good fixed radius circle with WMS as the focal point.

If anything Kenmore and Swanson are Very close, and Kenmore and Jefferson are certainly close than WMS and Hamm.

You just want to claim the move is for some made of reason (schools are too close), and then somehow blame the Hamm parents? What an agenda!

Maybe if Hamm had been placed at the heights, they would all be delighted to be zoned to WMS, because it would be such an awful site for a large neighborhood school and require extensive busing anyways since the population of middle school students is much smalller in Rosslyn and many in Lyon Village leave for private by grade 6.

But as far as decision that were best for Hamm students, the Stratford site for Hamm was a winner hands down. It’s the best middle school on the county, and now the staff want to tear apart it’s community?


1. People in LV wanted the Rosslyn school.

2. Hamm is great because of the principal, not because of entitled parents.


1. Probably because they had friends at HB, at least half of LV goes private for middle school.

2. Agree that she is great. But disrupting a student body every 4 years isn't healthy.
Anonymous
Post 08/21/2023 09:41     Subject: APS DHMS walk zone nuclear option

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Oh look. We should have done a Rosslyn MS after all.

+1


Why do people keep talking about a Rosslyn middle school? How would have helped this situation? Truly don’t understand the point.


Not sure because the kids who live near Hamm would have been bused there, so I am not sure how that would have been better for them than busing to WMS. Some ppl just like to complain. And also they don't get it.


The PP who say we should have built at Rosslyn are NOT current Hamm/Taylor parents, that was clear from other parts of the post.

I just don’t see why anyone is lamenting that option, unless they mean abolish HBW so that middle schools would have more capacity (1100 sear Hamm, 1100 seat Heights), but no Taylor/Hamm parent would consider that? So really confused who is advocating for Rosslyn?


One take away I have from the Rosslyn point is that APS staff planners are really terrible. How could they locate a “neighborhood” MS so far away from the needed seats? That is, they justified spending millions on building DHMS as a neighborhood school and just in a heartbeat APS is now saying, woops, we don’t need those seats there.

Same argument re: Cardinal/closing Nottingham.

Bottom line for me is they are wholly incompetent and so parents should fight for what they want. This is not a do what’s best for the system when it’s comes to your own children/family. And that’s Ok.


NOPE! It was the local community that wanted its "walkable" middle school and insisted on the Stratford site becoming the neighborhood middle school. Per usual, APS gave in.


Community didn’t care if it was walkable; they just didn’t want the ridiculous dreg of land that is the heights site for 1100 students. I know people who could walk to the Heights who wanted the Hamm site because the whole “warehouse” model was obscene.


That's fine, in fact I get it. Just don't complain now about what you got.


They aren’t complaining! Quite the opposite - current Hamm families love the school and want to stay. That is what they are advocating for.


They are complaining about the very foreseeable results of putting two middle schools too close to each other. Which is exactly what they wanted.


What misinformed and accusatory comment.

If they had situated Hamm at the Heights sight, it would have the same boundaries — and we would have the same imbalance. It’s a result of fewer families going to public school in the wealthy 22207 zip code (see Nottingham).

And Hamm and WMS are no closer than WMS and Swanson — they in fact make a very good fixed radius circle with WMS as the focal point.

If anything Kenmore and Swanson are Very close, and Kenmore and Jefferson are certainly close than WMS and Hamm.

You just want to claim the move is for some made of reason (schools are too close), and then somehow blame the Hamm parents? What an agenda!

Maybe if Hamm had been placed at the heights, they would all be delighted to be zoned to WMS, because it would be such an awful site for a large neighborhood school and require extensive busing anyways since the population of middle school students is much smalller in Rosslyn and many in Lyon Village leave for private by grade 6.

But as far as decision that were best for Hamm students, the Stratford site for Hamm was a winner hands down. It’s the best middle school on the county, and now the staff want to tear apart it’s community?


You’re wrong - WMS boundaries are too small because they are constrained by Hamms walk zone. This would not be the case if the MD had been sited elsewhere. And DH parents wouldn’t be walkable to Rosalyn so they wouldn’t care which school they were bused to.


Haha, no they would be happy not to be bused to a Rosslyn warehouse.

They would not have made boundaries different enough to address a middle school at 65% capacity! Get real. The boundaries aren’t the issue, it’s the private school exodus. As it was DHMS is also under enrolled, at 800 pupils. The location of the middle school for Stratford vs Rosslyn is immaterial, get over it.


We all know that very little would make these people happy. that's not exactly the standard APS should use.

Of course it's the boundaries. DH was underenrolled even before Covid.


Intentionally. There were very few 8th graders at the start because they were grandfathered to their old MS. At the time, enrollments were still skyrocketing and it was going to fill very quickly based on projections.

Then, covid hit the first year it opened.
Anonymous
Post 08/21/2023 09:38     Subject: APS DHMS walk zone nuclear option

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Oh look. We should have done a Rosslyn MS after all.

+1


Why do people keep talking about a Rosslyn middle school? How would have helped this situation? Truly don’t understand the point.


Not sure because the kids who live near Hamm would have been bused there, so I am not sure how that would have been better for them than busing to WMS. Some ppl just like to complain. And also they don't get it.


The PP who say we should have built at Rosslyn are NOT current Hamm/Taylor parents, that was clear from other parts of the post.

I just don’t see why anyone is lamenting that option, unless they mean abolish HBW so that middle schools would have more capacity (1100 sear Hamm, 1100 seat Heights), but no Taylor/Hamm parent would consider that? So really confused who is advocating for Rosslyn?


One take away I have from the Rosslyn point is that APS staff planners are really terrible. How could they locate a “neighborhood” MS so far away from the needed seats? That is, they justified spending millions on building DHMS as a neighborhood school and just in a heartbeat APS is now saying, woops, we don’t need those seats there.

Same argument re: Cardinal/closing Nottingham.

Bottom line for me is they are wholly incompetent and so parents should fight for what they want. This is not a do what’s best for the system when it’s comes to your own children/family. And that’s Ok.


NOPE! It was the local community that wanted its "walkable" middle school and insisted on the Stratford site becoming the neighborhood middle school. Per usual, APS gave in.


Community didn’t care if it was walkable; they just didn’t want the ridiculous dreg of land that is the heights site for 1100 students. I know people who could walk to the Heights who wanted the Hamm site because the whole “warehouse” model was obscene.


That's fine, in fact I get it. Just don't complain now about what you got.


They aren’t complaining! Quite the opposite - current Hamm families love the school and want to stay. That is what they are advocating for.


They are complaining about the very foreseeable results of putting two middle schools too close to each other. Which is exactly what they wanted.


What misinformed and accusatory comment.

If they had situated Hamm at the Heights sight, it would have the same boundaries — and we would have the same imbalance. It’s a result of fewer families going to public school in the wealthy 22207 zip code (see Nottingham).

And Hamm and WMS are no closer than WMS and Swanson — they in fact make a very good fixed radius circle with WMS as the focal point.

If anything Kenmore and Swanson are Very close, and Kenmore and Jefferson are certainly close than WMS and Hamm.

You just want to claim the move is for some made of reason (schools are too close), and then somehow blame the Hamm parents? What an agenda!

Maybe if Hamm had been placed at the heights, they would all be delighted to be zoned to WMS, because it would be such an awful site for a large neighborhood school and require extensive busing anyways since the population of middle school students is much smalller in Rosslyn and many in Lyon Village leave for private by grade 6.

But as far as decision that were best for Hamm students, the Stratford site for Hamm was a winner hands down. It’s the best middle school on the county, and now the staff want to tear apart it’s community?


You’re wrong - WMS boundaries are too small because they are constrained by Hamms walk zone. This would not be the case if the MD had been sited elsewhere. And DH parents wouldn’t be walkable to Rosalyn so they wouldn’t care which school they were bused to.


Haha, no they would be happy not to be bused to a Rosslyn warehouse.

They would not have made boundaries different enough to address a middle school at 65% capacity! Get real. The boundaries aren’t the issue, it’s the private school exodus. As it was DHMS is also under enrolled, at 800 pupils. The location of the middle school for Stratford vs Rosslyn is immaterial, get over it.


Well the Donaldson Run families wouldn’t have been happy. Clearly. That’s why they pushed so hard. The rest of us would be ok with it.