Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^^ absolutely would have made much more sense than Rosslyn. The price tag of that palace makes me grind my teeth. It's unbelievable. How much could have been saved if they had looked south?
None, because APS already owned land at Wilson site (e.g. was free) and there was no available site in south Arlington. Buying land would have added tens of millions.
Anonymous wrote:^^^ absolutely would have made much more sense than Rosslyn. The price tag of that palace makes me grind my teeth. It's unbelievable. How much could have been saved if they had looked south?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:11:35 - Discovery and Jamestown have such low FARMS rates because the houses around them cost minimum $700K and there's little to no rental housing. It's not rocket science that a neighborhood school surrounded by expensive housing will have fewer poor kids. (I'm not opposed to AH going up along Lee Highway or something to drive FARMS numbers up.)
I suspect ATS attracts more N. Arl kids because there are more middle class parents up there, the parents may be more willing to make the time and effort to do the school tours required by the application process, and because many people prefer to have their kids attend a closer school. As a 22207 parent whose child attends ATS, I would not have applied if the school were located in Crystal City, for example, because it would have been a PITA to do dropoff and pickup every day. The current location is less than 2 miles away.
To be fair, I think this is why ATS is centrally located. So that geography is not a barrier.
Faulty logic: It is not 'fair". It's not central; it's in N ARL. It's "centrally" located to great schools and quite far from lower quality schools.
Fair would be to move it to S. arl and make that building a neighborhood school.
If your child could go to a N. arl school and is at ATS, you know that it is not fair.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nottingham was at practically double capacity for several years until Discovery was built. It makes sense that APS is finally giving them some relief after severe overcrowding. Both Nottingham and Discovery are already treading towards being over capacity again in the next couple of years. Nothing is perfect, this is an issue that is not going away for anyone. Private is always an option.
OMG. This argument is so stupid. Since some schools might become overcapacity in a few years, lets guarantee that some are extremely overcapacity now.
The Nottingham petition parent has shown up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nottingham was at practically double capacity for several years until Discovery was built. It makes sense that APS is finally giving them some relief after severe overcrowding. Both Nottingham and Discovery are already treading towards being over capacity again in the next couple of years. Nothing is perfect, this is an issue that is not going away for anyone. Private is always an option.
OMG. This argument is so stupid. Since some schools might become overcapacity in a few years, lets guarantee that some are extremely overcapacity now.
Anonymous wrote:Nottingham was at practically double capacity for several years until Discovery was built. It makes sense that APS is finally giving them some relief after severe overcrowding. Both Nottingham and Discovery are already treading towards being over capacity again in the next couple of years. Nothing is perfect, this is an issue that is not going away for anyone. Private is always an option.
Anonymous wrote:and 3-miles does not = 10 min during rush-hour am/pm in ARL