Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PPP loans at privates=surprise teachers screwed not a penny to them.
I’m surprised you didn’t give back tuition for the 2 hours of zoom a day for 6 semesters. What a loss for the children.
Anonymous wrote:PPP loans at privates=surprise teachers screwed not a penny to them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:GDS refused PPP money because taking the funds woukd have conflicted with the school’s focus on social Justice.
Same with Potomac
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid’s teensy tiny little preschool got $700k. They didn’t refund a cent during that time. Pretty sure the owner lined her pockets with it.
they couldn’t use the money for refunds?
There were fairly rigorous reporting requirements for how the money was used in order to be forgiven. Otherwise it was a loan that had to be repaid.
Rigorous?!? Are you familiar with the PPP program?!? I am thinking not.
LOL looks like most every area DMV private school scored big! Congrats to the ones not found on that PPP search. I did not find St. Albans, NCS, GDS, Maret, St. Patrick's. I would like to hear why some schools took this money? This is wrong. Schools did not close. Tutiton for salaries was already there for out tuition dollars? Where did this money go to?
Anonymous wrote:GDS refused PPP money because taking the funds woukd have conflicted with the school’s focus on social Justice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't have a problem with this, and I'm not seeing anyone trying to explain why they believe these schools, who filled out the application and were granted the money under the conditions specified, should not have been allowed to do so. It cost a lot above normal operating costs to stay open under the conditions the CDC and local HHS required.
I see some who are mad that their public schools didn't use the money to stay open, but why does that mean private schools should not have been allowed to do so? It's great that some schools didn't need the money (some schools, like Holton, are seriously flush with cash), but others did need it to stay open and keep kids safely in school, which is what everybody wanted, right?
I do find the $5 mil to Sidwell puzzling and would be interesting in an accounting of that. It is the largest amount given to any school I could find.
It is terrible that public school in this area didn't use the funds to try to stay open. Many, many other public schools in other areas did. That doesn't make it "disgusting" that private schools made a different and better choice.
NP: just wanted to note, that staying open was not a requirement to have a PPP forgiven. We had to keep employees on and pay our bills, but there was no requirement about continuing to offer services or mode of services. I think the PPP program is flawed, but I don't fault institutions who applied and took the funds offered.
Anonymous wrote:My kids school got a huge amount, but I can well imagine what they did with it. They upgraded HVAC, invested in a lot of classroom technology for remote learning, rented tents for outdoor classrooms, and did weekly PCR testing of the entire school population. I really don’t think they lined their pockets, I think they used it for pandemic related expenses.
Anonymous wrote:I don't have a problem with this, and I'm not seeing anyone trying to explain why they believe these schools, who filled out the application and were granted the money under the conditions specified, should not have been allowed to do so. It cost a lot above normal operating costs to stay open under the conditions the CDC and local HHS required.
I see some who are mad that their public schools didn't use the money to stay open, but why does that mean private schools should not have been allowed to do so? It's great that some schools didn't need the money (some schools, like Holton, are seriously flush with cash), but others did need it to stay open and keep kids safely in school, which is what everybody wanted, right?
I do find the $5 mil to Sidwell puzzling and would be interesting in an accounting of that. It is the largest amount given to any school I could find.
It is terrible that public school in this area didn't use the funds to try to stay open. Many, many other public schools in other areas did. That doesn't make it "disgusting" that private schools made a different and better choice.