Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do parents get one of the coveted Janney garage parking passes? A few parents have them. Are they the "queen bee" volunteers?
They buy them at the auction. $3-4k for a spot.
This being a Janney thread, I actually cannot tell if you are serious or this is a joke, people paying ("donating") for these privileges at a public school.
This is not a joke!
Back in the days before the construction, it was possible to buy a reserved parking spot in the teacher parking lot at the annual Mann auction. I don't remember what it would usually fetch. I do remember that one year it was won by a family whose kids were always late to school. It allowed them to pull in at 8:44 and drop their kids off before the second bell without having to waste time circling the block looking for parking.
It is still possible to buy prime reserved seating for the school play, principal for the day, sleepover birthday parties at school hosted by the principal, etc. at the Mann auction.
This seems wildly inappropriate, and possibly illegal.
Janney has sleepovers sold at the school auction too. About 4 to 5 grand a night. Buying these definitely helps you with popularity.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It was like this when my DD attended, but some Charters are like this as well. We are a AA family, so maybe that's why.
This is the situation at many DCPS and charter schools, both EOTP and WOTP, for all demographics. There are usually a few "tight" families in an in-group or clique and the rest (the majority of parents, BTW) are out. This is the wrong way to fake building a school community.
The pervasiveness and the complexity of this dynamic is unique to Janney.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It was like this when my DD attended, but some Charters are like this as well. We are a AA family, so maybe that's why.
This is the situation at many DCPS and charter schools, both EOTP and WOTP, for all demographics. There are usually a few "tight" families in an in-group or clique and the rest (the majority of parents, BTW) are out. This is the wrong way to fake building a school community.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ladies, Janney shm here who needs a gigolo please advise. Hubbie just isn't putting out anymore. Please give me some suggestions!
They have an auction for that.
Winning post of the thread.
ha ha ha ha ha
Joke aside. I cannot believe some of the stuff said in this thread. Crazy and disgusting that at a public school, things like these are happening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do parents get one of the coveted Janney garage parking passes? A few parents have them. Are they the "queen bee" volunteers?
They buy them at the auction. $3-4k for a spot.
This being a Janney thread, I actually cannot tell if you are serious or this is a joke, people paying ("donating") for these privileges at a public school.
This is not a joke!
Back in the days before the construction, it was possible to buy a reserved parking spot in the teacher parking lot at the annual Mann auction. I don't remember what it would usually fetch. I do remember that one year it was won by a family whose kids were always late to school. It allowed them to pull in at 8:44 and drop their kids off before the second bell without having to waste time circling the block looking for parking.
It is still possible to buy prime reserved seating for the school play, principal for the day, sleepover birthday parties at school hosted by the principal, etc. at the Mann auction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Having the principal host a sleepover at the school allows preferential access to a public good (and a public resource) by the wealthy. It also sends a terrible message to the kids: rich families can curry favor and get extra social access to the principal, receive perks etc. Parking spaces , even in the teachers' lot, are still public property. If you auction off public property, there are rules governing how that is done, and the auction generally must be open to the general public, not just school parents.
You sound like a frustrated former law associate turned SAHM. This is school auction 101, not a civil rights suit. Get perspective, or perhaps a hobby for your energies. There's always the garden club.
Well said.
Not well said. The way it was said was just plain rude, ad hominem vitriol that undermined the point she was trying to make.
School auctions all over the country auction off the resources they have to raise money to support the school. Whether it is a sleepover in the the school, principal for a day, a parking space or a case of wine donated by families, none of this was invented at WOTP schools. There is a ridiculous outrage that this is somehow evidence of an inhospitable social climate with a school or unlawful. As the PP noted, this is school auctions 101.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Having the principal host a sleepover at the school allows preferential access to a public good (and a public resource) by the wealthy. It also sends a terrible message to the kids: rich families can curry favor and get extra social access to the principal, receive perks etc. Parking spaces , even in the teachers' lot, are still public property. If you auction off public property, there are rules governing how that is done, and the auction generally must be open to the general public, not just school parents.
You sound like a frustrated former law associate turned SAHM. This is school auction 101, not a civil rights suit. Get perspective, or perhaps a hobby for your energies. There's always the garden club.
Well said.
Not well said. The way it was said was just plain rude, ad hominem vitriol that undermined the point she was trying to make.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Having the principal host a sleepover at the school allows preferential access to a public good (and a public resource) by the wealthy. It also sends a terrible message to the kids: rich families can curry favor and get extra social access to the principal, receive perks etc. Parking spaces , even in the teachers' lot, are still public property. If you auction off public property, there are rules governing how that is done, and the auction generally must be open to the general public, not just school parents.
You sound like a frustrated former law associate turned SAHM. This is school auction 101, not a civil rights suit. Get perspective, or perhaps a hobby for your energies. There's always the garden club.
Well said.