Anonymous wrote:PP that would work but again you are taking students from an already underenrolled school. There is just not a demand NOW for two elem schools in these locations. I thnk it was reopened with the idea that maybe in 5-7 years there will be more demand. The increase in demand will come from Cap Q and the town homes and the still 400 units of public housing that are required to be rebuilt at Cap Q. I think this is why the boundary hasn't been drawn. Until the new public housing is built, it makes no sense to include folks from the other side of S Cap street.
Anonymous wrote:Without defending any PP advocating for keeping out low income OOB students, CQ residents worked extremely hard for the past several years to get To the point where VN is about to be modernized and reopened. Perhaps this has engendered a singular sense of ownership.
The sense of entitlement is breathtaking.Anonymous wrote:Why would the boundary extend across S. Cap to pick up Greenleaf Public housing when Greenleaf is THREE blocks from Amidon?
Anonymous wrote:Without defending any PP advocating for keeping out low income OOB students, CQ residents worked extremely hard for the past several years to get To the point where VN is about to be modernized and reopened. Perhaps this has engendered a singular sense of ownership.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find it odd that families that bought into Capitol Quarter, a large Hope VI development, are focusing so closely on limiting the % FARMS at Van Ness. Capitol Quarter and the rest of the replacement far Capper-Carrollsburg was built with the intention of mixing low income housing with market rate housing. The school should reflect the community's diversity. Hopefully most parents see that as an advantage of Van Ness and not a drawback.
Well, there is the fact that the neighborhood diversity is different from the school-age children diversity.
Please check the DCPS basic statistics on FARM for elementary schools. Every ES under 30% FARMs is a DCUM "success". There are two or three between 30 and 60, Watkins at 40% and Cap City at 55%.
Anonymous wrote:I find it odd that families that bought into Capitol Quarter, a large Hope VI development, are focusing so closely on limiting the % FARMS at Van Ness. Capitol Quarter and the rest of the replacement far Capper-Carrollsburg was built with the intention of mixing low income housing with market rate housing. The school should reflect the community's diversity. Hopefully most parents see that as an advantage of Van Ness and not a drawback.
Anonymous wrote:There is no way the Cap Quarters families will allow the boundary to extend over S Cap and include public housing like Greenleaf. There is a reason they lobbied for years for DCPS to do the study to determine to reopen Van Ness and that reason was NOT to include more public housing kids. Amidon is already underenrolled, and the biggest feeder of kids to AMidon comes from about 450 units of family public housing in SW.