Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bowser, Grosso, and Niles effectively killed this school. Sure, they'll fill the seats but this school will be damaged. The commute is across town and will take a minimum of one hour each way on a good day. Try it yourself. That's if the busses arrive on time, they have problems bussing the kids to Hardy.
Grosso/Council gave away Hardy and Ellington is $150M over budget and they have the nerve to let this happen.
They "gave away Hardy..."[?] Who'd they give it to? WTF...?
I think the PP means the Old Hardy school on Foxhall...which private Lab School has its mitts on, even though all upper NW schools are over capacity and could use a creative pressure release that a property like Old Hardy could offer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bowser, Grosso, and Niles effectively killed this school. Sure, they'll fill the seats but this school will be damaged. The commute is across town and will take a minimum of one hour each way on a good day. Try it yourself. That's if the busses arrive on time, they have problems bussing the kids to Hardy.
Grosso/Council gave away Hardy and Ellington is $150M over budget and they have the nerve to let this happen.
They "gave away Hardy..."[?] Who'd they give it to? WTF...?
I think the PP means the Old Hardy school on Foxhall...which private Lab School has its mitts on, even though all upper NW schools are over capacity and could use a creative pressure release that a property like Old Hardy could offer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bowser, Grosso, and Niles effectively killed this school. Sure, they'll fill the seats but this school will be damaged. The commute is across town and will take a minimum of one hour each way on a good day. Try it yourself. That's if the busses arrive on time, they have problems bussing the kids to Hardy.
Grosso/Council gave away Hardy and Ellington is $150M over budget and they have the nerve to let this happen.
They "gave away Hardy..."[?] Who'd they give it to? WTF...?
Anonymous wrote:Bowser, Grosso, and Niles effectively killed this school. Sure, they'll fill the seats but this school will be damaged. The commute is across town and will take a minimum of one hour each way on a good day. Try it yourself. That's if the busses arrive on time, they have problems bussing the kids to Hardy.
Grosso/Council gave away Hardy and Ellington is $150M over budget and they have the nerve to let this happen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought the problem was that the Mayor promised the UDC space once it's available, but when the parents agreed to it, nobody got back to them about it. Don't have to be from Georgetown and a snowflake's mom to upset over it. You give us options, we choose one and then you disappear on us.
I wouldn't want my kids bussed too far if closer option available. And why give them crap about opening a new school, and yes, they have a right to "crowd" their neighborhood school once it's all new and shiny.
UDC is further away.
Maybe by distance, but not if you consider time. The busses will make the traffic even worse in Columbia Heights/U Street.
UDC is easier for parents to get to also if they have to pick up their kids. Even a bus goes goes up Wisconsin and then few long blocks.
Not necessarily. Hyde is 50% OOB. You don't know where the other enrolled families are coming from and the planning needs to anticipate everyone's needs, not just the families who live in Georgetown.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought the problem was that the Mayor promised the UDC space once it's available, but when the parents agreed to it, nobody got back to them about it. Don't have to be from Georgetown and a snowflake's mom to upset over it. You give us options, we choose one and then you disappear on us.
I wouldn't want my kids bussed too far if closer option available. And why give them crap about opening a new school, and yes, they have a right to "crowd" their neighborhood school once it's all new and shiny.
UDC is further away.
Maybe by distance, but not if you consider time. The busses will make the traffic even worse in Columbia Heights/U Street.
UDC is easier for parents to get to also if they have to pick up their kids. Even a bus goes goes up Wisconsin and then few long blocks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please state why starting a new school is "insufferable." Parents don't like their options, so they start a new school. Isn't that the American Way?
We call these "charter schools" here in DC. Look it up.
Except that these parents don't want to try and meet the standards for charters, so they are starting a private school I personally like credentialed teachers, schools with a track record, arts funding, employment regulations etc., so I won't be choosing a private school. The splinter group is, of course, free to do as theory see fit.
A lot of those standards are not required by charter schools. If you want highly qualified teachers, you're taking about public school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought the problem was that the Mayor promised the UDC space once it's available, but when the parents agreed to it, nobody got back to them about it. Don't have to be from Georgetown and a snowflake's mom to upset over it. You give us options, we choose one and then you disappear on us.
I wouldn't want my kids bussed too far if closer option available. And why give them crap about opening a new school, and yes, they have a right to "crowd" their neighborhood school once it's all new and shiny.
UDC is further away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought the problem was that the Mayor promised the UDC space once it's available, but when the parents agreed to it, nobody got back to them about it. Don't have to be from Georgetown and a snowflake's mom to upset over it. You give us options, we choose one and then you disappear on us.
I wouldn't want my kids bussed too far if closer option available. And why give them crap about opening a new school, and yes, they have a right to "crowd" their neighborhood school once it's all new and shiny.
UDC is further away.
UDC = WOTP.
Is UDC easier to get to? Seems like getting up there from G-Town in the morning would be a reverse commute right up Wisconsin, whereas getting over to Columbia Heights would be cross-town. Getting across town on U and Florida and Q at rush hour can be hellish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought the problem was that the Mayor promised the UDC space once it's available, but when the parents agreed to it, nobody got back to them about it. Don't have to be from Georgetown and a snowflake's mom to upset over it. You give us options, we choose one and then you disappear on us.
I wouldn't want my kids bussed too far if closer option available. And why give them crap about opening a new school, and yes, they have a right to "crowd" their neighborhood school once it's all new and shiny.
UDC is further away.
UDC = WOTP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please state why starting a new school is "insufferable." Parents don't like their options, so they start a new school. Isn't that the American Way?
We call these "charter schools" here in DC. Look it up.
Except that these parents don't want to try and meet the standards for charters, so they are starting a private school I personally like credentialed teachers, schools with a track record, arts funding, employment regulations etc., so I won't be choosing a private school. The splinter group is, of course, free to do as theory see fit.