Anonymous wrote:I was unwilling to live in Virginia and couldn't afford anything metro-accessible in Montgomery County, so we ended up here in PG. I like being on this side of the city for all the reasons people mentioned about green space and cost of living. Also, honestly, I like living in a majority-black area: it makes me feel like I'm back in Chicago or Philly, two places I lived as a child and young adult and really enjoyed.
Anonymous wrote:I remember when I moved to the DC area. I could not understand why people did not live in PG county. Then, the lawyer at my closing, who himself lived in PG, said "oh, its because of the forced busing". He was the only one willing to say it out loud. I decided, like him, that this would not discourage me from living in such a nice place with so little traffic, so much open land (due to the agriculture center and Goddard), such reasonably priced housing and such nice people. And the busing was ended several years later.
Anonymous wrote:taking into account all of the major pros and cons (which to me include cost of living, quality and access of public education at all levels, crime rate and quality of public services), I just don't see how anyone can choose to live in PG County over Fairfax County. But clearly reasonable people can disagree.
Anonymous wrote:Mount Rainierite here. Longtime DCUM poster. I won't argue there's nothing wrong with the county, but it is oftentimes unjustly maligned with a very broad and frankly offensive racist and classist brush. So I get a little defensive. I like where I live.
Anonymous wrote:
I saw one person mention Hope Academy in Landover. Has anybody else tried this? I didn't know about it when I had to choose a middle school for my children.
Anonymous wrote:taking into account all of the major pros and cons (which to me include cost of living, quality and access of public education at all levels, crime rate and quality of public services), I just don't see how anyone can choose to live in PG County over Fairfax County. But clearly reasonable people can disagree.