Anonymous wrote: I know this topic has been brought up before, but this is just one thing that continues to irk me. Don’t DC privates have some responsibility to the city and its residents especially since most (if not all) are tax exempt entities. I remember Anthony Williams wasn’t too happy about this, and now I can totally see his point. Why isn’t there a tier system that will allow for qualified city children to get in first before taking in suburban kids (I’d feel better about this if we had a commuter tax but that is a different issue all together). This about scarce resources being given to people who don’t even live here. Don’t get me wrong, most of the kids and families are great but I’m tired of seeing qualified DC children losing out on their first or second choice schools that seem to be filled with suburban kids that come from areas with already good public schools. That’s not fair.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I completely agree with pp. We wanted our kid to go to Visitation. But no, all of the suburban girls had to prove how "cool" they were by going to school in "G'town". I thought the Catholics should behave better...guess not...given the priest scandal and lack of women leaders.
DC people don't have a choice with the publics...people in MD and VA have good choices.
My kid was just as smart or smarter than any other kid...at an Ivy now. Every time I see those cars driving into the city schools from MD and VA -- it really irks me.
so you're saying that the parents who were -- yes, I'll say it -- smart enough to move out of the disctrict so they had a real choice about where their kids would go to school shouldn't be able to choose YOUR school? The DC privates should be reserved for the children of parents too stupid or selfish to move to a place where the public schools are actually an option? DC people DO have a choice -- MOVE. You don't have a right to the private school spots.
Wow -- this post made me really angry.
The DC privates should be reserved for the children of parents too stupid or selfish to move to a place where the public schools are actually an option? DC people DO have a choice -- MOVE.
Anonymous wrote:I completely agree with pp. We wanted our kid to go to Visitation. But no, all of the suburban girls had to prove how "cool" they were by going to school in "G'town". I thought the Catholics should behave better...guess not...given the priest scandal and lack of women leaders.
DC people don't have a choice with the publics...people in MD and VA have good choices.
My kid was just as smart or smarter than any other kid...at an Ivy now. Every time I see those cars driving into the city schools from MD and VA -- it really irks me.
Anonymous wrote:I can assure you I am not interested in your privates.
Anonymous wrote:Wow! This is such a frustrating thread.
So you live in DC and you think the school suck? Why did you move there then, moron? Sure, I'd rather live in the District than the suburbs, but I took a hit for the team and moved to the suburbs so the kids could go to good schools. If you decided not to do that, but chose DC (knowing the public schools were not acceptable to you), then suck it up, Frances!
Anonymous wrote:DC resident here . . .
Should we apply this thinking to all the tax exempt institutions in DC? A close friend of mine works for a nonprofit that provides family planning advocacy for third world countries -- should they be 0% tax exempt because they only help people outside the country?
What about other organizations that serve children and families. If BCC rescue squad comes to my house in DC, should they lose a portion of their tax exempt funding? What about Imagination Stage -- my (DC) kid took a class there, should they lose a portion of their funding?
There are children in DC who are desperately in need of help, and who we have a duty as citizens to advocate for. They are not the same children applying to Sidwell. Every family that argues that every MD or VA child has options that their snowflake doesn't have, can move to PG -- plenty of affordable housing there.