Anonymous wrote:Where is your evidence that this is not a fair price, especially given the fact that the neighborhood would hold up development for years if not decades.
Anonymous wrote:Because getting the best price for an asset is not a Quaker value? Should Sidwell be paying $10 per pencil?
I cannot even fathom why this is a topic of conversation. The Washington Home wanted to sell its bricks and mortar business. They don't want to run it, as evidenced by the way it has been mismanaged for the last several years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the WH board was truly motivated to get the best price for the property to fund future hospice care services, why did they not market the property instead of entering into a confidential private sale with Sidwell? The NW DC real estate market is hot, and with competitive bidding it's easy to imagine that the price would have gone much higher. What if a much-maligned developer was willing to pay 30%-50% more for the property? If the property would sell at a premium for development because that is its highest and best use, wouldn't that have been in the WH's long-term interest? Maybe the fairest solution, if the WH board really is going to sell, is for Sidwell to stand aside and agree that WH can have a new, competitive tender, with Sidwell and other interested parties putting forward their best offers?
Because the sale to an intensive use developer would no doubt have been held up by neighborhood issues. All that needs to be factored into the price paid for the property. Washington Home was interested in getting out of the business quickly. Having said that, I think the price paid seems fair.
Anonymous wrote:If the WH board was truly motivated to get the best price for the property to fund future hospice care services, why did they not market the property instead of entering into a confidential private sale with Sidwell? The NW DC real estate market is hot, and with competitive bidding it's easy to imagine that the price would have gone much higher. What if a much-maligned developer was willing to pay 30%-50% more for the property? If the property would sell at a premium for development because that is its highest and best use, wouldn't that have been in the WH's long-term interest? Maybe the fairest solution, if the WH board really is going to sell, is for Sidwell to stand aside and agree that WH can have a new, competitive tender, with Sidwell and other interested parties putting forward their best offers?
Anonymous wrote:I've driven by the property and it's not small. Why couldn't Sidwell buy the vacant part to build its lower school and then Washington Home could take the cash to run the facility? A win-win.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please. What is Sidwell supposed to do -- take over the operation of the home? Washington Hone does not want to continue running the home/hospice at that location. Case closed.
Agreed. The paper's response is empty and silly.
+1. That's the bottom line.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please. What is Sidwell supposed to do -- take over the operation of the home? Washington Hone does not want to continue running the home/hospice at that location. Case closed.
Sidwell Friends has no more business running a nursing home and hospice than the board of Washington Home, God forbid, has in running a school.