Anonymous wrote:The KAA folks can go complain in the private school forum. The school closed and the building was sold. This is done. I knew no one who attended that school. The Teachers and Admin can apply to work at FCPS. The parents can raise money to build a new school someplace else. They can complain to the Saudi’s about no longer funding it.
The funniest thing is most of you writing here are clueless of how resourceful the KAA community actually is! You think Saudi money ran the school? In actuality, the non Saudi KAA community actively held this school up. They were the real resources way more than $150 million! Do you know this community has already come together to create another school? In a matter of months! Staff members have been hired and that new school is ready to start this fall! You guys are arguing about the county being able to start WH in a few years?! Imagine creating a school in a few months… can only money buy that type of resourcefulness?
Anonymous wrote:I think the KAA people have been complaining just to each other and don't realize how ridiculous their complaints are to non-KAA people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you want to take the position that we’re cash-strapped and the only sensible approach is to change boundaries to avail of capacity wherever located, then fine, but in that case we should also be looking at ways to move kids in western Fairfax into Herndon and not acquiring the KAA, even at what may seem like a bargain price.
Herndon High is not near the area of KAA. The only school that would likely be close to Herndon High would be Coates. I don't see the School Board sending Coates to Herndon.
Get rid of IB at South Lakes. Problem solved.
KAA is about 6.5 miles from HHS, which is less than a lot of kids travel now to Oakton and Langley.
They may have had reservations about sending Coates to Herndon but Thru proposed to pull low-income kids out of Fort Hunt and send them to Hybla Valley and to move kids at a Title I school from McLean to Falls Church, so who knows. It’s moot if Coates ends up at the new school.
People have been suggesting that FCPS eliminate IB at various schools for years and the only thing that’s ever happened is that they’ve added some AP courses at Lewis. I understand the suggestion that it would reduce pupil placements out of Herndon, but good luck convincing them to eliminate it at South Lakes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ya'all should be concerned over the lack of transparency over this sale. Guaranteed it was an inside job for a long time coming and you should be holding your fcps people responsible because there were many bids even higher than fcps that were denied and turned down with legitimate funds in place. this was absolutely not a sale that happened by luck in the past few weeks. and if that is the inside dealing i would be concerned about the transparency of fcps to begin with.
Well I'm just happy that FCPS was able to right the wrong they did in selling both this property years ago and in selling the land in the Fairfax/ Fair Lakes area. It was their land to begin with. Now we can stop worrying about aquiring the last high school property needed in Fairfax for some time.
Exactly. The shady dealings were whatever transpired for KAA to get this land in the first place when it had already been earmarked for the future western HS. It was a gut punch when it was taken away with no input from the community. I don't care how the county got it back, I'm just glad they did.
Anonymous wrote:If you want to take the position that we’re cash-strapped and the only sensible approach is to change boundaries to avail of capacity wherever located, then fine, but in that case we should also be looking at ways to move kids in western Fairfax into Herndon and not acquiring the KAA, even at what may seem like a bargain price.
Herndon High is not near the area of KAA. The only school that would likely be close to Herndon High would be Coates. I don't see the School Board sending Coates to Herndon.
Get rid of IB at South Lakes. Problem solved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ya'all should be concerned over the lack of transparency over this sale. Guaranteed it was an inside job for a long time coming and you should be holding your fcps people responsible because there were many bids even higher than fcps that were denied and turned down with legitimate funds in place. this was absolutely not a sale that happened by luck in the past few weeks. and if that is the inside dealing i would be concerned about the transparency of fcps to begin with.
Who knows, maybe the agreement was due to the fact that the County sold the land to the Saudi's with no real discussion to build the school many years back. Maybe the sale to FCPS was a return the favor. the article I just read said that the others bidding for the land where data centers and private users. I am fine with FCPS getting the school, especially since there should have been a HS built there over 10 years ago.
DP.
Rubber stamps are a big problem in this country, at all layers of government.
This is a lot less expensive then buying land and building a new building. And it is significantly faster. So the process saved time and money and we ended up with a new HS right were one was planned to be built years ago. I can see why you are concerned....
Sure, but with a lacking process it’s worth asking some questions about the $150 million transaction that just popped up out of nowhere and approved with little discussion.
Not really. A property unexpectedly became available that almost perfectly suited FCPS's needs, and they made an offer for it. There's nothing shady about it. Its actually one of the only smart things FCPS has done in quite some time.
Unquestioning buffoons get the government they deserve.
I think it is safe to say that this board has had plenty of people questioning FCPS decisions. The fact that most of the people on the board seem to be on board with the purchase of a pre built high school in one of the most crowded school areas in the county is a minor miracle. The only thing less surprising is that the Great Falls families are complaining about said purchase.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How does the is impact boundary rewrites or just something new in mix?
The School Board is having a work session tomorrow afternoon on the status of the boundary review. The impact of the KAA deal will surely come up.
If you want to take the position that we’re cash-strapped and the only sensible approach is to change boundaries to avail of capacity wherever located, then fine, but in that case we should also be looking at ways to move kids in western Fairfax into Herndon and not acquiring the KAA, even at what may seem like a bargain price.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ya'all should be concerned over the lack of transparency over this sale. Guaranteed it was an inside job for a long time coming and you should be holding your fcps people responsible because there were many bids even higher than fcps that were denied and turned down with legitimate funds in place. this was absolutely not a sale that happened by luck in the past few weeks. and if that is the inside dealing i would be concerned about the transparency of fcps to begin with.
Who knows, maybe the agreement was due to the fact that the County sold the land to the Saudi's with no real discussion to build the school many years back. Maybe the sale to FCPS was a return the favor. the article I just read said that the others bidding for the land where data centers and private users. I am fine with FCPS getting the school, especially since there should have been a HS built there over 10 years ago.
DP.
Rubber stamps are a big problem in this country, at all layers of government.
This is a lot less expensive then buying land and building a new building. And it is significantly faster. So the process saved time and money and we ended up with a new HS right were one was planned to be built years ago. I can see why you are concerned....
Sure, but with a lacking process it’s worth asking some questions about the $150 million transaction that just popped up out of nowhere and approved with little discussion.
Not really. A property unexpectedly became available that almost perfectly suited FCPS's needs, and they made an offer for it. There's nothing shady about it. Its actually one of the only smart things FCPS has done in quite some time.
Unquestioning buffoons get the government they deserve.
I think it is safe to say that this board has had plenty of people questioning FCPS decisions. The fact that most of the people on the board seem to be on board with the purchase of a pre built high school in one of the most crowded school areas in the county is a minor miracle. The only thing less surprising is that the Great Falls families are complaining about said purchase.
DP. Seems to me the county-wide win-win is if they pursue the new HS near Carson but also commit to expanding McLean and say that removing the bulk of the $450M currently allocated to a western HS from FCPS’s cash flow projections makes that possible in another decade or so.
Until that happens Great Falls will assume, and perhaps justifiably so, that the plan is to favor the Carson area with a new school, continue to move McLean kids into Langley, and eventually move part of Great Falls into Herndon. They don’t want that, and while you can insult them for their views, I don’t recall seeing people at Westfield or South Lakes keen to get moved into Herndon or people at Chantilly keen to move to Westfield.
This could be a great opportunity to engage in some longer-term planning that would make a lot of people happy, or it could turn out to be incredibly polarizing.
It sounds like a case could be made for McLean HS to jump the queue and get an out-of-cycle expansion, and that would assuage the fears of Great Falls parents having to associate with lowly Herndon. However, taking a stance against this much needed school as they have for the better part of the last two decades has turned many against them. They are actively trying to sabotage other communities rather than advocate for their own.
If you take Great Falls out of the picture you still have McLean overcrowded for a decade, already recently redistricted, and sitting with the smallest capacity of any HS in the county, even though only Marshall has more enrollment growth potential.
The party line has been there’s no money for an expansion and they should just suck it up and expect more boundary changes with Langley, Falls Church, and Marshall.
But now they are prepared to build a new school in western Fairfax when they could have said the moment has passed and people there should just accept getting redistricted without any new high school. And they are also saying the KAA acquisition frees up about $280M in money that otherwise would have eventually been spent on the western HS.
I don’t know that McLean jumps the queue, because there are still some renovations left in the queue. As it turns out, however, almost all of those renovations are of schools in western Fairfax. It wouldn’t be crazy to say that, if western Fairfax is getting a new HS, some of the ES in western Fairfax are going to see their renovations deferred and McLean (in eastern Fairfax) is going to jump the queue ahead of them. But I don’t see that happening. More likely, they could just agree that some of the money budgeted for a western HS will get spent on McLean later. Either way, Great Falls would be an indirect beneficiary, not the primary beneficiary.
Or, maybe they just hate both McLean and Great Falls so much that they invest nothing in McLean, keep moving kids to Langley, and eventually trigger a Langley-to-Herndon move. It’s not like Robyn Lady cares much about either McLean or Langley. But an approach of caviar for the folks near Carson, crumbs for McLean, and uncertainty for Great Falls is something that would result in continued sniping, yet could be avoided with some deft planning and messaging.
Isn't there a scenario in which the growth in Tysons requires both--that McLean does get expanded, and some McLean kids move to Langley and trigger a Langley-to-Herndon move?
I don't think this is a caviar and crumbs issue fueled by hate for McLean and Great Falls. Growth is hard to predict. Sure, Tysons believes they will expand majorly, and clearly are to a large degree. Exactly how much more growth will happen, and how many public school students that will add to FCPS is less clear.