Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know if that policy was in effect when the lab was built? It doesn’t seem like policy was followed since the school board didn’t vote on it. It seems like the principle didn’t follow protocol since she was aware of and assisted the fund raising efforts.
The policy was adopted on October 4, 2007, and the lab was built in honor of Noah Simon's wife, who died in 2013.
No, it was not. Some donations were made in her honor but the lab was not built in her honor.
Yes it was - you people are unbearable
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know if that policy was in effect when the lab was built? It doesn’t seem like policy was followed since the school board didn’t vote on it. It seems like the principle didn’t follow protocol since she was aware of and assisted the fund raising efforts.
The policy was adopted on October 4, 2007, and the lab was built in honor of Noah Simon's wife, who died in 2013.
No, it was not. Some donations were made in her honor but the lab was not built in her honor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know if that policy was in effect when the lab was built? It doesn’t seem like policy was followed since the school board didn’t vote on it. It seems like the principle didn’t follow protocol since she was aware of and assisted the fund raising efforts.
The policy was adopted on October 4, 2007, and the lab was built in honor of Noah Simon's wife, who died in 2013.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know if that policy was in effect when the lab was built? It doesn’t seem like policy was followed since the school board didn’t vote on it. It seems like the principle didn’t follow protocol since she was aware of and assisted the fund raising efforts.
The policy was adopted on October 4, 2007, and the lab was built in honor of Noah Simon's wife, who died in 2013.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know if that policy was in effect when the lab was built? It doesn’t seem like policy was followed since the school board didn’t vote on it. It seems like the principle didn’t follow protocol since she was aware of and assisted the fund raising efforts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i don’t think anyone is “whining” about the lab. I think there’s just a general outrage at the private wealth on display in one public school within a district where there are some pretty big pockets of poverty. And to see comments about how any school could get a corporate sponsor to fund a $200,000 project if only they would put in the effort shows an amazing lack of awareness of the economic realities in other communities, especially when seeing that many of the donations at ASFS came from parents. Now that the lab has become somewhat of a lightning rod within the larger conversation about the swap, it’s fair to start asking whether the magnitude of that privately funded improvement project was improper. This is a public school system. If you want your child to have the best that money can buy, private schools offer just that. Public schools, however, are constrained when it comes to accepting private funding that is being dedicated to only one school rather than the school system at large. There are laws and stuff.
What “laws and stuff”?
Anonymous wrote:i don’t think anyone is “whining” about the lab. I think there’s just a general outrage at the private wealth on display in one public school within a district where there are some pretty big pockets of poverty. And to see comments about how any school could get a corporate sponsor to fund a $200,000 project if only they would put in the effort shows an amazing lack of awareness of the economic realities in other communities, especially when seeing that many of the donations at ASFS came from parents. Now that the lab has become somewhat of a lightning rod within the larger conversation about the swap, it’s fair to start asking whether the magnitude of that privately funded improvement project was improper. This is a public school system. If you want your child to have the best that money can buy, private schools offer just that. Public schools, however, are constrained when it comes to accepting private funding that is being dedicated to only one school rather than the school system at large. There are laws and stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t Key have an irreplaceable tile mural that was built by their community?
And a lovely reminder of the school's history it will be for whomever attends it in years to come.