Anonymous wrote:They need to just open up a new IB elementary school in the area and allow zero OOBs to enter future classes.
This renovation plan is stupid.
Anonymous wrote:Another way to imagine how it could impact you is the part about Reno Road. It should outrage everyone in NW DC and Maryland (!) who commutes via Reno.
There will be a driveway that is in use especially during the morning rush hour when teachers are arriving at work as well as garbage and delivery trucks that need to access the loading dock.
Imagine how much longer your commute will be on a Monday morning when a line of cars and a garbage truck are stopped between the lights at Nebraska and Davenport to make a left turn into the driveway in the rain while traffic backs up in both directions and kids are crossing the street to get into school or go over to Deal.
Why would any other city department - DDOT, DPW, the Mayor's office think creating this sort of traffic jam on a commuter road is a good idea?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It would be really obvious to take some pressure off of Murch, to move some kids. Maybe 100-150, but to argue that the student body size is irrelevant to the renovation issues at hand is not being honest about the challenges of the space on site.
You move 150 kids and there is a real chance you can swing on site and save the DC tax payers millions of dollars and preserve open space. Is this not worth exploring, maybe just a little bit? Pretty please.
Where are those 150 kids going? And which kids?
You're not going to move the boundaries between now and August.
They don't exist yet. DCPS is insisting on building for a larger student body then the school has now; but won't get the funding needed to make that happen. This last minute redesign just highlights how ridiculous it is to try to increase the size of the student body on this lot. They can't do it. There aren't even enough classrooms in the reconfiguration.
Then DCPS will just bring back the trailers I suppose, which would be most unfortunate. This renovation needs to happen soon. The trailers (surrounded by chain link fence) are starting to resemble a low security prison camp. Depressing.
My elementary school in Montgomery County had trailers for most of the time I went there. I survived.
It's fascinating that this situation has not started a larger conversation on what is an appropriate and safe size for an early childhood education school. Rather, its turned into an engineering exercise to determine which side can squeeze more little kids on to a tiny lot. Think people are missing the bigger picture here. Fascinating.
Anonymous wrote:
My elementary school in Montgomery County had trailers for most of the time I went there. I survived.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It would be really obvious to take some pressure off of Murch, to move some kids. Maybe 100-150, but to argue that the student body size is irrelevant to the renovation issues at hand is not being honest about the challenges of the space on site.
You move 150 kids and there is a real chance you can swing on site and save the DC tax payers millions of dollars and preserve open space. Is this not worth exploring, maybe just a little bit? Pretty please.
Where are those 150 kids going? And which kids?
You're not going to move the boundaries between now and August.
They don't exist yet. DCPS is insisting on building for a larger student body then the school has now; but won't get the funding needed to make that happen. This last minute redesign just highlights how ridiculous it is to try to increase the size of the student body on this lot. They can't do it. There aren't even enough classrooms in the reconfiguration.
Then DCPS will just bring back the trailers I suppose, which would be most unfortunate. This renovation needs to happen soon. The trailers (surrounded by chain link fence) are starting to resemble a low security prison camp. Depressing.
My elementary school in Montgomery County had trailers for most of the time I went there. I survived.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It would be really obvious to take some pressure off of Murch, to move some kids. Maybe 100-150, but to argue that the student body size is irrelevant to the renovation issues at hand is not being honest about the challenges of the space on site.
You move 150 kids and there is a real chance you can swing on site and save the DC tax payers millions of dollars and preserve open space. Is this not worth exploring, maybe just a little bit? Pretty please.
Where are those 150 kids going? And which kids?
You're not going to move the boundaries between now and August.
They don't exist yet. DCPS is insisting on building for a larger student body then the school has now; but won't get the funding needed to make that happen. This last minute redesign just highlights how ridiculous it is to try to increase the size of the student body on this lot. They can't do it. There aren't even enough classrooms in the reconfiguration.
Then DCPS will just bring back the trailers I suppose, which would be most unfortunate. This renovation needs to happen soon. The trailers (surrounded by chain link fence) are starting to resemble a low security prison camp. Depressing.
Anonymous wrote:So what, if anything, is the next step? Are Grosso and Cheh doing anything to remedy?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Over time, Murch needs to attrit the 100 or so OOB student slots at the school, as they leave or "graduate." It's nonsensical to have OOB students when the school is so overcrowded.
I agree. Even with the new boundary changes that reduced the number of children within Murch's boundary, Murch could barely fit all its anticipated in-boundary students into the school. And to make matters worse, DCPS is projecting the in-boundary student population for Murch to increase by 43% by 2020. That's a crowded school. I'm not sure how much the renovation might increase the capacity when all the changes are done. But it's almost certain the only way all the in-boundary will even fit is if the OOB is reduced.
Current Murch building capacity = 488
Enrollment 2013-14 = 626
Number of grade-appropriate public school students in the revised boundary = 476
Expected in-bounds student population by 2020 (+43%) = 681
Anticipated capacity of renovated Murch = 700
OOB spaces available after renovations = 19 (depending on actual enrollment obviously)
Just a technicality, but that 488 number includes the trailers that have been there for 36 years now. The brick building is 388 capacity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Over time, Murch needs to attrit the 100 or so OOB student slots at the school, as they leave or "graduate." It's nonsensical to have OOB students when the school is so overcrowded.
I agree. Even with the new boundary changes that reduced the number of children within Murch's boundary, Murch could barely fit all its anticipated in-boundary students into the school. And to make matters worse, DCPS is projecting the in-boundary student population for Murch to increase by 43% by 2020. That's a crowded school. I'm not sure how much the renovation might increase the capacity when all the changes are done. But it's almost certain the only way all the in-boundary will even fit is if the OOB is reduced.
Current Murch building capacity = 488
Enrollment 2013-14 = 626
Number of grade-appropriate public school students in the revised boundary = 476
Expected in-bounds student population by 2020 (+43%) = 681
Anticipated capacity of renovated Murch = 700
OOB spaces available after renovations = 19 (depending on actual enrollment obviously)