Anonymous wrote:Any American University parents interested in car pool we on Massachusetts Av and Macomb.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:why doesn't DCPS consider actual school buses for MacArthur if WMATA isn't going to help? Most school districts across the nation rely on actual school buses. Somehow in DC we have been conditioned to think that's an impossibility. It's not. If we can have school buses for special programs (like the autism program) they can do it for a new high school located in a difficult spot to reach, if they want it to be a success. It can be a temporary fix until the WMATA starts playing nice.
Have you seen how awful the busses are this year? My kid rides an osse bus and it takes them 2.5 hours to get home. They canāt handle the amount of kids they bus now.
Then you kid needs to go to a school closer to home. Or you need to drive them. Or you need to move. Or carpool with other families. How can you allow a commute like that for your child and not come up with a better solution?
Well I have a job so I canāt just go and pick my kid up. And just fyi. The school is 6 miles away. So Iām not sure how much closer I could move. But thanks for trying to blame a parent rather than where the blame should actually be.
If you're ok with your child spending 2.5 hours a day to get home from school, then I'm not sure what to tell you.
Itās not as easy as it seems. My job helps pay our mortgage to be in a Wilson feeder for my other children. Iād love for my kid to be able to attend our neighborhood school. It would mean that I wouldnāt have to worry about getting a high School diploma vs a certificate. Trying to figure out if they will ever live independently. Thatās why I have to keep working. I may be supporting my child for the rest of my life and maybe the rest of theirs. So yes. Iād love to find a way to make shorter commute. Iāve emailed, called, tweeted, sent letters etc. but my main focus is trying to provide the best economic outcomes I can for my disabled child. Itās something I hope you donāt have to understand or experience cause it sucks.
Anonymous wrote:I canāt believe this school is a thing when there are underenrolled high schools in the city. Itās criminal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:why doesn't DCPS consider actual school buses for MacArthur if WMATA isn't going to help? Most school districts across the nation rely on actual school buses. Somehow in DC we have been conditioned to think that's an impossibility. It's not. If we can have school buses for special programs (like the autism program) they can do it for a new high school located in a difficult spot to reach, if they want it to be a success. It can be a temporary fix until the WMATA starts playing nice.
Have you seen how awful the busses are this year? My kid rides an osse bus and it takes them 2.5 hours to get home. They canāt handle the amount of kids they bus now.
Then you kid needs to go to a school closer to home. Or you need to drive them. Or you need to move. Or carpool with other families. How can you allow a commute like that for your child and not come up with a better solution?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:why doesn't DCPS consider actual school buses for MacArthur if WMATA isn't going to help? Most school districts across the nation rely on actual school buses. Somehow in DC we have been conditioned to think that's an impossibility. It's not. If we can have school buses for special programs (like the autism program) they can do it for a new high school located in a difficult spot to reach, if they want it to be a success. It can be a temporary fix until the WMATA starts playing nice.
Have you seen how awful the busses are this year? My kid rides an osse bus and it takes them 2.5 hours to get home. They canāt handle the amount of kids they bus now.
Then you kid needs to go to a school closer to home. Or you need to drive them. Or you need to move. Or carpool with other families. How can you allow a commute like that for your child and not come up with a better solution?
Well I have a job so I canāt just go and pick my kid up. And just fyi. The school is 6 miles away. So Iām not sure how much closer I could move. But thanks for trying to blame a parent rather than where the blame should actually be.
If you're ok with your child spending 2.5 hours a day to get home from school, then I'm not sure what to tell you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:why doesn't DCPS consider actual school buses for MacArthur if WMATA isn't going to help? Most school districts across the nation rely on actual school buses. Somehow in DC we have been conditioned to think that's an impossibility. It's not. If we can have school buses for special programs (like the autism program) they can do it for a new high school located in a difficult spot to reach, if they want it to be a success. It can be a temporary fix until the WMATA starts playing nice.
Have you seen how awful the busses are this year? My kid rides an osse bus and it takes them 2.5 hours to get home. They canāt handle the amount of kids they bus now.
Then you kid needs to go to a school closer to home. Or you need to drive them. Or you need to move. Or carpool with other families. How can you allow a commute like that for your child and not come up with a better solution?
Well I have a job so I canāt just go and pick my kid up. And just fyi. The school is 6 miles away. So Iām not sure how much closer I could move. But thanks for trying to blame a parent rather than where the blame should actually be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:why doesn't DCPS consider actual school buses for MacArthur if WMATA isn't going to help? Most school districts across the nation rely on actual school buses. Somehow in DC we have been conditioned to think that's an impossibility. It's not. If we can have school buses for special programs (like the autism program) they can do it for a new high school located in a difficult spot to reach, if they want it to be a success. It can be a temporary fix until the WMATA starts playing nice.
Have you seen how awful the busses are this year? My kid rides an osse bus and it takes them 2.5 hours to get home. They canāt handle the amount of kids they bus now.
Then you kid needs to go to a school closer to home. Or you need to drive them. Or you need to move. Or carpool with other families. How can you allow a commute like that for your child and not come up with a better solution?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:why doesn't DCPS consider actual school buses for MacArthur if WMATA isn't going to help? Most school districts across the nation rely on actual school buses. Somehow in DC we have been conditioned to think that's an impossibility. It's not. If we can have school buses for special programs (like the autism program) they can do it for a new high school located in a difficult spot to reach, if they want it to be a success. It can be a temporary fix until the WMATA starts playing nice.
Have you seen how awful the busses are this year? My kid rides an osse bus and it takes them 2.5 hours to get home. They canāt handle the amount of kids they bus now.
Anonymous wrote:why doesn't DCPS consider actual school buses for MacArthur if WMATA isn't going to help? Most school districts across the nation rely on actual school buses. Somehow in DC we have been conditioned to think that's an impossibility. It's not. If we can have school buses for special programs (like the autism program) they can do it for a new high school located in a difficult spot to reach, if they want it to be a success. It can be a temporary fix until the WMATA starts playing nice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I canāt believe this school is a thing when there are underenrolled high schools in the city. Itās criminal.
I guess the city could have instead cut back the number of OOB seats at J-R. But thatās not a great option for any politician interested in winning an election. Some people may also argue that such a policy would not be āequitableā.
dp: Of course, it would have made far more sense overall to send everyone to their neighborhood schools and spend the Macarthur on staff and resources for the nicely-renovated, under-enrolled schools. But that is too logical for DCPS.
*the Macarthur MONEY
At the risk of sounding "inequitable," tax-paying DC families inbound for Ward 3 schools deserve to access non-overcrowded public education, too.