Anonymous wrote:Meanwhile at my Ward 7 school, we can't even get heat!
District of Corruption!
Anonymous wrote:Our family doesn't attend Murch and won't be, but I've toured it and it is in dire need of a renovation. I can't help but to think that yanking money from Murch is retaliation for the community being so up-in-arms about the prospect of its boundaries changing. I hope not...but how can Murch lose it's renovation after so many stalls when the Chancellor is planning to spend $20Million on a new HS for boys?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think they are holding on to Garrison until they can put a charter in there.
There's no way the neighborhood would support a "non-neighborhood" school there. Rumor I hear is that it might be part of a landswap with Akridge in place of Reeves center. After all it's 6 acres in the middle of Logan Circle, how many 100 boutique condos could go up here?
This is false. There is no way that would fly politically, swapping a shcool for condos without a competitive bidding process. Don't know about a charter but I know for sure its not part of the Land deal swap for soccer/akridge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think they are holding on to Garrison until they can put a charter in there.
There's no way the neighborhood would support a "non-neighborhood" school there. Rumor I hear is that it might be part of a landswap with Akridge in place of Reeves center. After all it's 6 acres in the middle of Logan Circle, how many 100 boutique condos could go up here?
Anonymous wrote:Whoa, taken from Murch and given to Janney. That won't sit well.
Anonymous wrote:I think they are holding on to Garrison until they can put a charter in there.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, this is exactly what I am talking about. There has been huge, vocal neighborhood support and buy-in in the early years for several years. The families enter and work hard to make it a strong school, like your friends are likely doing now. DCPS throws them a bone, they work harder, DCPS steals the bone, the kids get older, the parents realize DCPS is not going to create a better path for after early ed, the parents move their kids, new toddlers enter and the cycle repeats. The idea that neighborhood but-in turns the school around is patently false in DCPS. It is believed only by those who have small children and haven't watched the cycle repeat.
Anonymous wrote:So much for "Deal for All"