Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teacher parking is required by the union contract. The Murch site is not big enough to provide it without going underground. Going underground is expensive -- hence the latest DGS/DCPS effort not to do so at the expense of all of the facilities planned to go underground. Please lets keep focused on how the larger community can help current and future Murch families ensure that the renovation is one that includes common sense elements: a cafeteria, a gym that can actually accommodate the whole school, a modern library and a playground where 7 grades can play and exercise safely. Doesn't seem like a lot to ask -- and yet.... We could certainly use the support of any DC resident that is similarly seeking renovation or has completed or is nearing completion of the process.
The parking is a zoning requirement and the design provides the barest minimum parking required by zoning. The teacher's contract has nothing to do with it.
You both are right. But notice that DCPS did not say they are getting rid of the parking. DCPS doesn't care about the teacher contract but they don't want to hassle with a zoning variance, which calls for 45-55 spaces for a building this size. They are simply not putting it as far underground as the feasibility study concluded was the only way to fit a school with this large of an enrollment on such a small site. Remember, the city can't build on one third of the Murch site because it is National Park Service land, part of Fort Reno. The only thing that can go on that large swath of the property is play space. The addition will go where the current soccer field & basketball courts & trailers are. The parking is supposed to go under the addition.
It does seem kinda nuts that DCPS has let Murch get as large as it has. They should drastically throttle back any OOB enrollment as those student graduate and then shift more of the local school population to Hardy. This would have the effect of flipping Hardy overnight to a majority IB/neighborhood school, which the community would welcome. A win-win.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teacher parking is required by the union contract. The Murch site is not big enough to provide it without going underground. Going underground is expensive -- hence the latest DGS/DCPS effort not to do so at the expense of all of the facilities planned to go underground. Please lets keep focused on how the larger community can help current and future Murch families ensure that the renovation is one that includes common sense elements: a cafeteria, a gym that can actually accommodate the whole school, a modern library and a playground where 7 grades can play and exercise safely. Doesn't seem like a lot to ask -- and yet.... We could certainly use the support of any DC resident that is similarly seeking renovation or has completed or is nearing completion of the process.
The parking is a zoning requirement and the design provides the barest minimum parking required by zoning. The teacher's contract has nothing to do with it.
You both are right. But notice that DCPS did not say they are getting rid of the parking. DCPS doesn't care about the teacher contract but they don't want to hassle with a zoning variance, which calls for 45-55 spaces for a building this size. They are simply not putting it as far underground as the feasibility study concluded was the only way to fit a school with this large of an enrollment on such a small site. Remember, the city can't build on one third of the Murch site because it is National Park Service land, part of Fort Reno. The only thing that can go on that large swath of the property is play space. The addition will go where the current soccer field & basketball courts & trailers are. The parking is supposed to go under the addition.
Anonymous wrote:Teacher parking is required by the union contract. The Murch site is not big enough to provide it without going underground. Going underground is expensive -- hence the latest DGS/DCPS effort not to do so at the expense of all of the facilities planned to go underground. Please lets keep focused on how the larger community can help current and future Murch families ensure that the renovation is one that includes common sense elements: a cafeteria, a gym that can actually accommodate the whole school, a modern library and a playground where 7 grades can play and exercise safely. Doesn't seem like a lot to ask -- and yet.... We could certainly use the support of any DC resident that is similarly seeking renovation or has completed or is nearing completion of the process.
Anonymous wrote:Teacher parking is required by the union contract. The Murch site is not big enough to provide it without going underground. Going underground is expensive -- hence the latest DGS/DCPS effort not to do so at the expense of all of the facilities planned to go underground. Please lets keep focused on how the larger community can help current and future Murch families ensure that the renovation is one that includes common sense elements: a cafeteria, a gym that can actually accommodate the whole school, a modern library and a playground where 7 grades can play and exercise safely. Doesn't seem like a lot to ask -- and yet.... We could certainly use the support of any DC resident that is similarly seeking renovation or has completed or is nearing completion of the process.
Anonymous wrote:DGS won't need a relocation plan because the project will probably be delayed given this shortfall.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teacher parking is required by the union contract. The Murch site is not big enough to provide it without going underground. Going underground is expensive -- hence the latest DGS/DCPS effort not to do so at the expense of all of the facilities planned to go underground. Please lets keep focused on how the larger community can help current and future Murch families ensure that the renovation is one that includes common sense elements: a cafeteria, a gym that can actually accommodate the whole school, a modern library and a playground where 7 grades can play and exercise safely. Doesn't seem like a lot to ask -- and yet.... We could certainly use the support of any DC resident that is similarly seeking renovation or has completed or is nearing completion of the process.
The parking is a zoning requirement and the design provides the barest minimum parking required by zoning. The teacher's contract has nothing to do with it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And then when you think about what DCPS has sunk into Ellington and Dunbar, you come to the conclusion that Bowser and DCPS hate young non-poor children.
Most of those decisions predate Bowser; it's the old "Chocolate City" Democrat machine in action. Now personified in Bowser.
What would it take for a more capable and inclusive leader to win DC's Democratic primary next time?
Bowser was on the Council, so she is not blameless.
I think Catania would have been more capable and inclusive.
But he was running as an Independent. We need someone able to win the Democratic primary.
Or, as some PPs pointed earlier, a good lawsuit against the city.
No taxation without representation.
Why not start by dragging Mary Cheh to an urgent meeting with Murch parents, and demanding that $10 million be shaved from Duke Ellington's "bling palace" project and re-allocated to Murch?! What would be a modest cut for Ellington (currently about a $200 million renovation and still climbing ) would mean a very significant difference to Murch.
Sure.
Additionally, if I were a Murch parent, I'd mobilize neighbors and work with lawyers to find ways to pay lower property taxes, and fund the Munch renovation directly.
Very Trump-esque.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And then when you think about what DCPS has sunk into Ellington and Dunbar, you come to the conclusion that Bowser and DCPS hate young non-poor children.
Most of those decisions predate Bowser; it's the old "Chocolate City" Democrat machine in action. Now personified in Bowser.
What would it take for a more capable and inclusive leader to win DC's Democratic primary next time?
Bowser was on the Council, so she is not blameless.
I think Catania would have been more capable and inclusive.
But he was running as an Independent. We need someone able to win the Democratic primary.
Or, as some PPs pointed earlier, a good lawsuit against the city.
No taxation without representation.
Why not start by dragging Mary Cheh to an urgent meeting with Murch parents, and demanding that $10 million be shaved from Duke Ellington's "bling palace" project and re-allocated to Murch?! What would be a modest cut for Ellington (currently about a $200 million renovation and still climbing ) would mean a very significant difference to Murch.
Sure.
Additionally, if I were a Murch parent, I'd mobilize neighbors and work with lawyers to find ways to pay lower property taxes, and fund the Munch renovation directly.
Anonymous wrote:Teacher parking is required by the union contract. The Murch site is not big enough to provide it without going underground. Going underground is expensive -- hence the latest DGS/DCPS effort not to do so at the expense of all of the facilities planned to go underground. Please lets keep focused on how the larger community can help current and future Murch families ensure that the renovation is one that includes common sense elements: a cafeteria, a gym that can actually accommodate the whole school, a modern library and a playground where 7 grades can play and exercise safely. Doesn't seem like a lot to ask -- and yet.... We could certainly use the support of any DC resident that is similarly seeking renovation or has completed or is nearing completion of the process.
Anonymous wrote:Did Bowser win the precincts in the Murch district in 2014? I doubt it, and so when it comes to decisions on how to allocate scarcer and scarcer school renovation funds, she's going to favor projects either in (or primarily serving) the areas where she racked up a lot of support.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not going to talk about schools with 30 million dollar atriums and second floor kilns, but I will make the suggestion one more time to the DC community:
GIVE TEACHERS RESIDENTIAL PARKING PERMITS that allow them to park near the schools they serve. Murch is a perfect example of how this would work well--and cheaper than building your underground parking garage and losing your preK playground.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DGS won't need a relocation plan because the project will probably be delayed given this shortfall.
I secretly think this too.
Because if they wait long enough the families who are involved will go away either by moving or because their kids matriculate to middle school. Sad.