Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not true. They could easily do a lunch trailer. Kids in trailers are already walking inside to the cafeteria. They can just walk to the lunch trailer. And my kid, in a trailer, who walks to the cafeteria for lunch, gets 1/2 hour for lunch. Don't assume every school in Arlington works like yours does.
Can they put a kitchen in a trailer? Or not serve any hot food?
Yes. Hate the swap for whatever reason you want, but key is a larger building with a larger capacity to grow.
Dear uninformed,
Key has a smaller cafeteria and therefore building size is meaningless. There is no money to make capital improvements to fix this situation either so don't go all sideways on that too. I'm not affected either way but I look forward to you getting what you asked for - a crowded bare bones crappy program that has takes your child's entire elementary time to rebuild so you reap no benefits. Good for you - go swap!
Second that. You can bet your a$$ I will not support wasting my tax dollars on this misadventure.
+1000 These threads are going to be amazing in a few years when ASFS shows up and realizes what a dump the place is and that their kids start eating lunch at 10 a.m. It will take them years to rebuild what they have now-- just in time for their kids to go to middle school. I'm sure ASFS will be great again--- in about a decade but bye bye top rankings for awhile!
This swap is just a part of Dr. Murphy's plan to kill off both schools programs.
ASFS doesn't have a program. They do NOT. Moving Immersion 1 mile will not destroy it, drama llama.
riding a bus 1 extra mile does not take an hour, drama llama
Ah, another private school grad who thinks they know how public school buses work. How cute.
Wrong again. But do know how narcissistic personality disorder works and it is not looking good on you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not true. They could easily do a lunch trailer. Kids in trailers are already walking inside to the cafeteria. They can just walk to the lunch trailer. And my kid, in a trailer, who walks to the cafeteria for lunch, gets 1/2 hour for lunch. Don't assume every school in Arlington works like yours does.
Can they put a kitchen in a trailer? Or not serve any hot food?
Yes. Hate the swap for whatever reason you want, but key is a larger building with a larger capacity to grow.
Dear uninformed,
Key has a smaller cafeteria and therefore building size is meaningless. There is no money to make capital improvements to fix this situation either so don't go all sideways on that too. I'm not affected either way but I look forward to you getting what you asked for - a crowded bare bones crappy program that has takes your child's entire elementary time to rebuild so you reap no benefits. Good for you - go swap!
Second that. You can bet your a$$ I will not support wasting my tax dollars on this misadventure.
+1000 These threads are going to be amazing in a few years when ASFS shows up and realizes what a dump the place is and that their kids start eating lunch at 10 a.m. It will take them years to rebuild what they have now-- just in time for their kids to go to middle school. I'm sure ASFS will be great again--- in about a decade but bye bye top rankings for awhile!
This swap is just a part of Dr. Murphy's plan to kill off both schools programs.
ASFS doesn't have a program. They do NOT. Moving Immersion 1 mile will not destroy it, drama llama.
riding a bus 1 extra mile does not take an hour, drama llama
Ah, another private school grad who thinks they know how public school buses work. How cute.
Wrong again. But do know how narcissistic personality disorder works and it is not looking good on you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why should the rest of the county bear the cost of a swap just to allow that one community to avoid the consequences of the boundary changes that are going to impact every school community in the area? Why should resources be devoted to giving preferential treatment to this one school community that already has a history of having better facilities and opportunities than are made available at other Arlington elementary schools? I’ve heard people refer to it as a public-private.
Nobody calls it a public-private except ASFS people.
Even they don’t say it.
No, it’s the people who are assigned to south Arlington schools who say it.
OMG. Nobody here cares about either of your schools. Fight amongst yourselves over a lab that is doing little more than taking up space. We have actual problems.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why should the rest of the county bear the cost of a swap just to allow that one community to avoid the consequences of the boundary changes that are going to impact every school community in the area? Why should resources be devoted to giving preferential treatment to this one school community that already has a history of having better facilities and opportunities than are made available at other Arlington elementary schools? I’ve heard people refer to it as a public-private.
Nobody calls it a public-private except ASFS people.
Even they don’t say it.
No, it’s the people who are assigned to south Arlington schools who say it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not true. They could easily do a lunch trailer. Kids in trailers are already walking inside to the cafeteria. They can just walk to the lunch trailer. And my kid, in a trailer, who walks to the cafeteria for lunch, gets 1/2 hour for lunch. Don't assume every school in Arlington works like yours does.
Can they put a kitchen in a trailer? Or not serve any hot food?
Yes. Hate the swap for whatever reason you want, but key is a larger building with a larger capacity to grow.
Dear uninformed,
Key has a smaller cafeteria and therefore building size is meaningless. There is no money to make capital improvements to fix this situation either so don't go all sideways on that too. I'm not affected either way but I look forward to you getting what you asked for - a crowded bare bones crappy program that has takes your child's entire elementary time to rebuild so you reap no benefits. Good for you - go swap!
Second that. You can bet your a$$ I will not support wasting my tax dollars on this misadventure.
+1000 These threads are going to be amazing in a few years when ASFS shows up and realizes what a dump the place is and that their kids start eating lunch at 10 a.m. It will take them years to rebuild what they have now-- just in time for their kids to go to middle school. I'm sure ASFS will be great again--- in about a decade but bye bye top rankings for awhile!
This swap is just a part of Dr. Murphy's plan to kill off both schools programs.
ASFS doesn't have a program. They do NOT. Moving Immersion 1 mile will not destroy it, drama llama.
riding a bus 1 extra mile does not take an hour, drama llama
Ah, another private school grad who thinks they know how public school buses work. How cute.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why should the rest of the county bear the cost of a swap just to allow that one community to avoid the consequences of the boundary changes that are going to impact every school community in the area? Why should resources be devoted to giving preferential treatment to this one school community that already has a history of having better facilities and opportunities than are made available at other Arlington elementary schools? I’ve heard people refer to it as a public-private.
Nobody calls it a public-private except ASFS people.
Even they don’t say it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why should the rest of the county bear the cost of a swap just to allow that one community to avoid the consequences of the boundary changes that are going to impact every school community in the area? Why should resources be devoted to giving preferential treatment to this one school community that already has a history of having better facilities and opportunities than are made available at other Arlington elementary schools? I’ve heard people refer to it as a public-private.
Nobody calls it a public-private except ASFS people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not true. They could easily do a lunch trailer. Kids in trailers are already walking inside to the cafeteria. They can just walk to the lunch trailer. And my kid, in a trailer, who walks to the cafeteria for lunch, gets 1/2 hour for lunch. Don't assume every school in Arlington works like yours does.
Can they put a kitchen in a trailer? Or not serve any hot food?
Yes. Hate the swap for whatever reason you want, but key is a larger building with a larger capacity to grow.
Dear uninformed,
Key has a smaller cafeteria and therefore building size is meaningless. There is no money to make capital improvements to fix this situation either so don't go all sideways on that too. I'm not affected either way but I look forward to you getting what you asked for - a crowded bare bones crappy program that has takes your child's entire elementary time to rebuild so you reap no benefits. Good for you - go swap!
Second that. You can bet your a$$ I will not support wasting my tax dollars on this misadventure.
+1000 These threads are going to be amazing in a few years when ASFS shows up and realizes what a dump the place is and that their kids start eating lunch at 10 a.m. It will take them years to rebuild what they have now-- just in time for their kids to go to middle school. I'm sure ASFS will be great again--- in about a decade but bye bye top rankings for awhile!
This swap is just a part of Dr. Murphy's plan to kill off both schools programs.
ASFS doesn't have a program. They do NOT. Moving Immersion 1 mile will not destroy it, drama llama.
riding a bus 1 extra mile does not take an hour, drama llama
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not true. They could easily do a lunch trailer. Kids in trailers are already walking inside to the cafeteria. They can just walk to the lunch trailer. And my kid, in a trailer, who walks to the cafeteria for lunch, gets 1/2 hour for lunch. Don't assume every school in Arlington works like yours does.
Can they put a kitchen in a trailer? Or not serve any hot food?
Yes. Hate the swap for whatever reason you want, but key is a larger building with a larger capacity to grow.
Dear uninformed,
Key has a smaller cafeteria and therefore building size is meaningless. There is no money to make capital improvements to fix this situation either so don't go all sideways on that too. I'm not affected either way but I look forward to you getting what you asked for - a crowded bare bones crappy program that has takes your child's entire elementary time to rebuild so you reap no benefits. Good for you - go swap!
Second that. You can bet your a$$ I will not support wasting my tax dollars on this misadventure.
+1000 These threads are going to be amazing in a few years when ASFS shows up and realizes what a dump the place is and that their kids start eating lunch at 10 a.m. It will take them years to rebuild what they have now-- just in time for their kids to go to middle school. I'm sure ASFS will be great again--- in about a decade but bye bye top rankings for awhile!
This swap is just a part of Dr. Murphy's plan to kill off both schools programs.
ASFS doesn't have a program. They do NOT. Moving Immersion 1 mile will not destroy it, drama llama.
Anonymous wrote:Why should the rest of the county bear the cost of a swap just to allow that one community to avoid the consequences of the boundary changes that are going to impact every school community in the area? Why should resources be devoted to giving preferential treatment to this one school community that already has a history of having better facilities and opportunities than are made available at other Arlington elementary schools? I’ve heard people refer to it as a public-private.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not true. They could easily do a lunch trailer. Kids in trailers are already walking inside to the cafeteria. They can just walk to the lunch trailer. And my kid, in a trailer, who walks to the cafeteria for lunch, gets 1/2 hour for lunch. Don't assume every school in Arlington works like yours does.
Can they put a kitchen in a trailer? Or not serve any hot food?
Yes. Hate the swap for whatever reason you want, but key is a larger building with a larger capacity to grow.
Dear uninformed,
Key has a smaller cafeteria and therefore building size is meaningless. There is no money to make capital improvements to fix this situation either so don't go all sideways on that too. I'm not affected either way but I look forward to you getting what you asked for - a crowded bare bones crappy program that has takes your child's entire elementary time to rebuild so you reap no benefits. Good for you - go swap!
Second that. You can bet your a$$ I will not support wasting my tax dollars on this misadventure.
+1000 These threads are going to be amazing in a few years when ASFS shows up and realizes what a dump the place is and that their kids start eating lunch at 10 a.m. It will take them years to rebuild what they have now-- just in time for their kids to go to middle school. I'm sure ASFS will be great again--- in about a decade but bye bye top rankings for awhile!
This swap is just a part of Dr. Murphy's plan to kill off both schools programs.
Anonymous wrote:Why should the rest of the county bear the cost of a swap just to allow that one community to avoid the consequences of the boundary changes that are going to impact every school community in the area? Why should resources be devoted to giving preferential treatment to this one school community that already has a history of having better facilities and opportunities than are made available at other Arlington elementary schools? I’ve heard people refer to it as a public-private.
Anonymous wrote:Why should the rest of the county bear the cost of a swap just to allow that one community to avoid the consequences of the boundary changes that are going to impact every school community in the area? Why should resources be devoted to giving preferential treatment to this one school community that already has a history of having better facilities and opportunities than are made available at other Arlington elementary schools? I’ve heard people refer to it as a public-private.
Anonymous wrote:Why should the rest of the county bear the cost of a swap just to allow that one community to avoid the consequences of the boundary changes that are going to impact every school community in the area? Why should resources be devoted to giving preferential treatment to this one school community that already has a history of having better facilities and opportunities than are made available at other Arlington elementary schools? I’ve heard people refer to it as a public-private.