Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Will they move anyone to Lewis?
They should, right? Wasn't part of this exercise adding to underpopulated schools?
Nothing in the scenarios really helps Lewis or it's students in any meaningful way. Ridiculous.
Agree. I hope scenario 4 makes some attempt to help Lewis students (if they won’t just close the school outright).
Help them how? By zoning in other kids who will never go there? Like the 300 or so kids zoned there now who go elsewhere?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Will they move anyone to Lewis?
They should, right? Wasn't part of this exercise adding to underpopulated schools?
Nothing in the scenarios really helps Lewis or it's students in any meaningful way. Ridiculous.
Agree. I hope scenario 4 makes some attempt to help Lewis students (if they won’t just close the school outright).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Will they move anyone to Lewis?
They should, right? Wasn't part of this exercise adding to underpopulated schools?
Nothing in the scenarios really helps Lewis or it's students in any meaningful way. Ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Has BRAC seen the scenario four map?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No maps and no mention of boundary review at all in Reid’s flowery, detailed email to “team fcps”.
Unbelievable. Is team FCPS an internal email to staff? Where the heck is the public email addressing the delay?
Anonymous wrote:Has anyone written to their school board member and received an email back about the delay and how they are going to address it for the meeting tonight?
Anonymous wrote:We’re now less than 12 hours from the first community meeting, and most non-government workers don’t have today off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No maps and no mention of boundary review at all in Reid’s flowery, detailed email to “team fcps”.
Unbelievable. Is team FCPS an internal email to staff? Where the heck is the public email addressing the delay?
Anonymous wrote:No maps and no mention of boundary review at all in Reid’s flowery, detailed email to “team fcps”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Will they move anyone to Lewis?
They should, right? Wasn't part of this exercise adding to underpopulated schools?
Nothing in the scenarios really helps Lewis or it's students in any meaningful way. Ridiculous.
I was the +1. I didn't feel your comment was mis
But there wasn’t a stated goal of moving kids to under utilized schools. Just “balancing enrollment” by moving kids out of the over capacity schools. FCPS is very constrained by transportation (see also, the middle school start times issue) and can’t be bussing kids any further than they currently are just so that they can use up a few hundred seats at Lewis or Herndon or wherever.
Wouldn't sending kids who live close to Herndon, many of whom have Herndon addresses, rather than bussing them all the way across the county help with that transportation issue then?
Even in the middle of the disaster of the map rollout, you still can’t drop your Langley obsession.
Don’t ever change, lady. You provide much comic relief to us on this board with your crusade. Your obsession makes me think your mom had a lot of Tylenol when you were in utero. 😉
Yes, the rollout is awful, and yes, the lady could drop her concerns and concentrate on the rollout instead of just the impacts on her kids.
What is worse though, is your comment because it demeans all women and blames mothers for the worlds ills, Drop the misogyny.
In these times it’s worth getting a little less performative pc as a political party. Gotta get some thicker skin and understand satire rather than taking umbrage at everything and claiming that the post was misogyny.
I was the +1 and didn't feel your comment was misogynistic per say. Just that it made you sound like a d*ck.