Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Meant to say high rises. It is wishful thinking that current data about children in high rises will be true in 10 years. It is like budgeting for a family of four with kids in ES and imagining that budget will still feed them when they are teenagers. The data may be true today, but the projected trend is clearly going to change.
Your statement is based on what? Has there been an increasing trend in the number of MCPS students per high-rise unit?
You make decisions based on the information you currently have.
Yes and it was acknowledged by MCPS. They are trying to play with new methodology to predict numbers.
Where and when?
I recall it BOE saying that in work session. They admitted that projections for high density areas in certain locations were totally off due to taking average of entire county.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Meant to say high rises. It is wishful thinking that current data about children in high rises will be true in 10 years. It is like budgeting for a family of four with kids in ES and imagining that budget will still feed them when they are teenagers. The data may be true today, but the projected trend is clearly going to change.
Your statement is based on what? Has there been an increasing trend in the number of MCPS students per high-rise unit?
You make decisions based on the information you currently have.
Yes and it was acknowledged by MCPS. They are trying to play with new methodology to predict numbers.
Where and when?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Meant to say high rises. It is wishful thinking that current data about children in high rises will be true in 10 years. It is like budgeting for a family of four with kids in ES and imagining that budget will still feed them when they are teenagers. The data may be true today, but the projected trend is clearly going to change.
Your statement is based on what? Has there been an increasing trend in the number of MCPS students per high-rise unit?
You make decisions based on the information you currently have.
Yes and it was acknowledged by MCPS. They are trying to play with new methodology to predict numbers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, as far as I know, the Planning Board has NEVER decided that children only live, and will always only live, in single-family detached houses. People keep saying this on DCUM, but they haven't provided any evidence to support it. And actually there's plenty of evidence against it. The county has 50+ years of experience with children who live in townhouses and garden apartments.
Then the overcrowding in schools isn’t just an ignorant, incompetent mistake, it is something far worse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, as far as I know, the Planning Board has NEVER decided that children only live, and will always only live, in single-family detached houses. People keep saying this on DCUM, but they haven't provided any evidence to support it. And actually there's plenty of evidence against it. The county has 50+ years of experience with children who live in townhouses and garden apartments.
Then the overcrowding in schools isn’t just an ignorant, incompetent mistake, it is something far worse.
Anonymous wrote:Also, as far as I know, the Planning Board has NEVER decided that children only live, and will always only live, in single-family detached houses. People keep saying this on DCUM, but they haven't provided any evidence to support it. And actually there's plenty of evidence against it. The county has 50+ years of experience with children who live in townhouses and garden apartments.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Meant to say high rises. It is wishful thinking that current data about children in high rises will be true in 10 years. It is like budgeting for a family of four with kids in ES and imagining that budget will still feed them when they are teenagers. The data may be true today, but the projected trend is clearly going to change.
Your statement is based on what? Has there been an increasing trend in the number of MCPS students per high-rise unit?
You make decisions based on the information you currently have.
Anonymous wrote:The only thing they should be building in moco is more schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yah, if I seem a bit... hostile, it is because I have lived here all my life and I am well aware of 1990’s Planning Board. Doesn’t mean this one gets to make the same mistakes and act surprised if the same problems emerge.
Clarksburg is a planning mistake they won't make again, if only because they can't (unless they break the Ag Reserve).
That will come next. Guaranteed.
Developers recognize the potential to make money. And the County leaders will eventually cave.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, as far as I know, the Planning Board has NEVER decided that children only live, and will always only live, in single-family detached houses. People keep saying this on DCUM, but they haven't provided any evidence to support it. And actually there's plenty of evidence against it. The county has 50+ years of experience with children who live in townhouses and garden apartments.
The high rises have been a relatively new addition.
The obsession with high density housing has really taken off over the past decade. Huge push for urbanization in a County that is meant to be a suburb of DC.