Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Very interesting
Yes the question is where are the young whites going in the area
Personally I think its a combo of
less marriage/kids overall, going to private, white flight to Howard
The hispanic population has nearly doubled in less than 15 years.
Something has to give here. The tax base is shrinking and costs are increasing its not sustainable
+1
There is no way this county can support the kind of development/growth that has been occurring. Something will have to give. Police forces, schools all need funding and when that goes down, the standard of living goes down.
Welcome to the third world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Very interesting
Yes the question is where are the young whites going in the area
Personally I think its a combo of
less marriage/kids overall, going to private, white flight to Howard
The hispanic population has nearly doubled in less than 15 years.
Something has to give here. The tax base is shrinking and costs are increasing its not sustainable
+1
There is no way this county can support the kind of development/growth that has been occurring. Something will have to give. Police forces, schools all need funding and when that goes down, the standard of living goes down.
Welcome to the third world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who is this person who keeps claiming white flight is going to Howard County. I've lived in DC on and off for 15 years, in the city and in the suburbs, and have never even met anyone who lives in Howard County let alone someone willing to do that commute. A handful of colleagues live in Anne Arundel County for specific school options, but this idea that a large number of Montgomery County residents will flee that far is unlikely.
I agree. I live in ch ch md and am pretty happy with the public schools. The idea that we or any of our neighbors would "flee" to Howard County is ludicrous. Close to zero crime, great public transport links to DC, good stores and amenities....love it here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who is this person who keeps claiming white flight is going to Howard County. I've lived in DC on and off for 15 years, in the city and in the suburbs, and have never even met anyone who lives in Howard County let alone someone willing to do that commute. A handful of colleagues live in Anne Arundel County for specific school options, but this idea that a large number of Montgomery County residents will flee that far is unlikely.
FWIW, we know of several families that moved to Howard County. Many government agencies are moving toward a better telework policy, which means government workers won't all need to live close-in. I work in Anne Arundel County and often meet people who commute to DC from there also.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Very interesting
Yes the question is where are the young whites going in the area
Personally I think its a combo of
less marriage/kids overall, going to private, white flight to Howard
The hispanic population has nearly doubled in less than 15 years.
Something has to give here. The tax base is shrinking and costs are increasing its not sustainable
+1
There is no way this county can support the kind of development/growth that has been occurring. Something will have to give. Police forces, schools all need funding and when that goes down, the standard of living goes down.
they need some way to curtail the development. I see new housing being built all over the place. Just look at crown farm. We don't have the infrastructure to deal with this. The schools certainly can't handle more kids.
The development recently seems OUT OF CONTROL. There is high density housing going up all over the county. Where is the plan for corresponding schools/roads, etc. The housing goes up so quickly and people move in, but I haven't seen them building more schools at the same time. The City of Rockville had a video out recently about projected population growth. I can't remember the numbers, but it is going to be an HUGE increase.
There's development in the Shady Grove area, in Olney, in Rockville, all over. I drive around the county a good deal and see condos/townhouses going up everywhere.
I agree that it's out of control. Who approves all of this development?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder why so many people who immigrate to the US come to Montgomery County. Not to knock MoCo, but I can think of so many other places in this country that are more affordable, have less crime, and would be easier to transition to. Maybe there are more resources for the Hispanic community; I don't know... But MoCo is pricey and not an easy place to move to.
I guess you haven't heard of the corrupt Casa De Maryland? That is why illegal immigration is #2 in Montgomery County, MD right after Los Angeles County, CA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Very interesting
Yes the question is where are the young whites going in the area
Personally I think its a combo of
less marriage/kids overall, going to private, white flight to Howard
The hispanic population has nearly doubled in less than 15 years.
Something has to give here. The tax base is shrinking and costs are increasing its not sustainable
+1
There is no way this county can support the kind of development/growth that has been occurring. Something will have to give. Police forces, schools all need funding and when that goes down, the standard of living goes down.
they need some way to curtail the development. I see new housing being built all over the place. Just look at crown farm. We don't have the infrastructure to deal with this. The schools certainly can't handle more kids.
The development recently seems OUT OF CONTROL. There is high density housing going up all over the county. Where is the plan for corresponding schools/roads, etc. The housing goes up so quickly and people move in, but I haven't seen them building more schools at the same time. The City of Rockville had a video out recently about projected population growth. I can't remember the numbers, but it is going to be an HUGE increase.
There's development in the Shady Grove area, in Olney, in Rockville, all over. I drive around the county a good deal and see condos/townhouses going up everywhere.
Anonymous wrote:Who is this person who keeps claiming white flight is going to Howard County. I've lived in DC on and off for 15 years, in the city and in the suburbs, and have never even met anyone who lives in Howard County let alone someone willing to do that commute. A handful of colleagues live in Anne Arundel County for specific school options, but this idea that a large number of Montgomery County residents will flee that far is unlikely.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Very interesting
Yes the question is where are the young whites going in the area
Personally I think its a combo of
less marriage/kids overall, going to private, white flight to Howard
The hispanic population has nearly doubled in less than 15 years.
Something has to give here. The tax base is shrinking and costs are increasing its not sustainable
+1
There is no way this county can support the kind of development/growth that has been occurring. Something will have to give. Police forces, schools all need funding and when that goes down, the standard of living goes down.
they need some way to curtail the development. I see new housing being built all over the place. Just look at crown farm. We don't have the infrastructure to deal with this. The schools certainly can't handle more kids.
The solutions is pretty obvious: we need a ton of charter schools. Maybe we can for once learn something from DC![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Very interesting
Yes the question is where are the young whites going in the area
Personally I think its a combo of
less marriage/kids overall, going to private, white flight to Howard
The hispanic population has nearly doubled in less than 15 years.
Something has to give here. The tax base is shrinking and costs are increasing its not sustainable
+1
There is no way this county can support the kind of development/growth that has been occurring. Something will have to give. Police forces, schools all need funding and when that goes down, the standard of living goes down.
they need some way to curtail the development. I see new housing being built all over the place. Just look at crown farm. We don't have the infrastructure to deal with this. The schools certainly can't handle more kids.
Anonymous wrote:Who is this person who keeps claiming white flight is going to Howard County. I've lived in DC on and off for 15 years, in the city and in the suburbs, and have never even met anyone who lives in Howard County let alone someone willing to do that commute. A handful of colleagues live in Anne Arundel County for specific school options, but this idea that a large number of Montgomery County residents will flee that far is unlikely.
Anonymous wrote:My guess is that a lot of white families had kids in MCPS and those kids graduated. And the majority of new arrivals to the county have not been white. Therefore white numbers went down and others went up.
I see this in my own neighborhood. Most of my white neighbors are older couples - emptynesters. Every time one of them moves out - a non-white family moves in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Is it a numerical drop or a proportional drop?
According to the chart in the OP link, it is a numerical drop. According to the chart, the number of White, Non-Hispanic students enrolled dropped from 68,849 in 2000 to 46,604 in 2016.
Interesting! I'll bet some of it is white families staying in DC since the big drop comes right around the time DC implemented free preK and expanded the charter effort. Some of it is probably fewer kids identifying as only white, and some of it is just demographic shifts nationwide. Interestingly, the number of Black kids isn't rising quickly, nor the number of Asian kids. The only group with real growth is Hispanics, which is almost certainly related to turmoil in Central and South America over the past decade.