Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is filing a lawsuit our only option? Looking for options, ideas.
At this rate, DC is going to be the last place in America to reopen schools even as we have among the smallest coronavirus caseloads in the country.
Back to OPs original question, I too would like to know what realistic options are. I feel so helpless. Voting Bowser out
is not a solution for the immediate future. What are the options for parents to make their voices heard in a unified manner?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What I find maddening is that the Mayor and the DCPS administrators can be so slack and so incompetent and so seemingly unconcerned, and we’re just stuck with the pathetic results.
We are considering moving out of DC for the first time ever.
Okay?
Good luck finding a school system in America that isn't shut down every other week because of Covid. Maybe a two - three hour trafficless drive in a super rural community would be your best bet. But don't get sick out there! The hospitals are even further away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is filing a lawsuit our only option? Looking for options, ideas.
At this rate, DC is going to be the last place in America to reopen schools even as we have among the smallest coronavirus caseloads in the country.
Back to OPs original question, I too would like to know what realistic options are. I feel so helpless. Voting Bowser out
is not a solution for the immediate future. What are the options for parents to make their voices heard in a unified manner?
It's very demoralizing. It's like our teachers and our elected officials are conspiring against our children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is filing a lawsuit our only option? Looking for options, ideas.
At this rate, DC is going to be the last place in America to reopen schools even as we have among the smallest coronavirus caseloads in the country.
Back to OPs original question, I too would like to know what realistic options are. I feel so helpless. Voting Bowser out
is not a solution for the immediate future. What are the options for parents to make their voices heard in a unified manner?
It's very demoralizing. It's like our teachers and our elected officials are conspiring against our children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think a lawsuit is the way to go. Something like an open letter to Bowser and the Council that is published in the Post and online that is signed by 10 thousand families with students enrolled in that says - You must start prioritizing schools and education. Stop fooling around with bars and indoor dining and concerts. Do the work necessary and dedicate the funding necessary to meet the needs of our students.
I wish the editorial board of the Post would do that on their own.
I would not include a list of demands like the WTU keeps putting out there because it's very divisive and not productive.
The WTU's list of demands is designed to be impossible to meet so schools will stay closed. The last thing WTU wants is for schools to reopen.
They don’t need WTU’s permission to reopen. They may want their support but schools can open with or without union support. Teachers legally can’t strike so they would have to come back, take leave, or quit. So again, there’s the problem—staff entitled to make their own decisions using their legal provided leave.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is filing a lawsuit our only option? Looking for options, ideas.
At this rate, DC is going to be the last place in America to reopen schools even as we have among the smallest coronavirus caseloads in the country.
Back to OPs original question, I too would like to know what realistic options are. I feel so helpless. Voting Bowser out
is not a solution for the immediate future. What are the options for parents to make their voices heard in a unified manner?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is filing a lawsuit our only option? Looking for options, ideas.
At this rate, DC is going to be the last place in America to reopen schools even as we have among the smallest coronavirus caseloads in the country.
Back to OPs original question, I too would like to know what realistic options are. I feel so helpless. Voting Bowser out
is not a solution for the immediate future. What are the options for parents to make their voices heard in a unified manner?
Anonymous wrote:Is filing a lawsuit our only option? Looking for options, ideas.
At this rate, DC is going to be the last place in America to reopen schools even as we have among the smallest coronavirus caseloads in the country.
Anonymous wrote:What I find maddening is that the Mayor and the DCPS administrators can be so slack and so incompetent and so seemingly unconcerned, and we’re just stuck with the pathetic results.
We are considering moving out of DC for the first time ever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it is teachers union politics why are almost all charters closed?
Charters were some of the first to dip their toes into reopening. Some charters (Sojourner) are open. My guess is that charters will reopen starting in November.
Charters aren't leading the way on this. I am hopeful that adjacent districts will open hybrid in January and then DC will feel a lot of pressure to as well and perhaps we'll go back in February. Charters will follow dcps as they always do.
Anonymous wrote:Wow. This is going to break the public schools for the upper middle class.
Anonymous wrote:If you travel around the country, you realize how anomalous DC is. In most of the country, in red states and in blue states, school is back in session at least part time. The number of places where schools are completely closed like in DC is rapidly shrinking. It's just some big cities where teachers unions are powerful where schools are still closed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you travel around the country, you realize how anomalous DC is. In most of the country, in red states and in blue states, school is back in session at least part time. The number of places where schools are completely closed like in DC is rapidly shrinking. It's just some big cities where teachers unions are powerful where schools are still closed.
As far as I know, the entire state of CA is closed. We have family and friends in Northern and Southern CA and not one of them is doing anything but virtual.
Nope. Many school districts in California and open and many more are getting ready to open. Even LA is starting to open.
https://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/2020/10/06/dr-mark-ghaly-california-school-openings-covid-19-no-link-so-far/