Sometimes (not often) I hate being right. Several years ago, our school system had a bond referendum on the ballot for $600 million dollars to help build new schools throughout the county to help with the overcrowding problem. Thanks to a massive disinformation campaign by local Republicans and misguided Libertarians, the referendum was defeated. As a result, every year the county reassigns several thousand students from local schools to schools several miles away. This obviously pisses off the parents whose children are being reassigned, and yet the school system's typical response seems to be "Quit whining. It could be worse." Which is true, but even so... And the local news doesn't help the matter by mostly interviewing people whose kids AREN'T being reassigned, minimizing the apparent impact. Quit whining, you whiners. As long as my taxes don't go up, I don't give a damn about your bratty kids...
Anyway.
My kids' school is somewhere around 120% capacity, so last year the county proposed converting it to a year-round schedule. They made no provision to convert a local middle school to year-round, though, and when challenged on this, they responded "You're free to apply to the year-round magnet middle school in the next town up the road." This left the very real possibility of having children in both traditional and year-round schools, within the same family. I predicted the proposal would fail, and the county would "reward" us by reassigning our children to some crappy old school down the road a few miles.
And that's exactly what happened. The original section of our neighborhood, which was developed in 1998-1999, has been reassigned to an older school 7 miles down a very busy road (the kids who were going to the old school have been reassigned to a brand new school 5 blocks away). Newer sections of our neighborhood, including houses currently being built, will continue to be assigned to our local neighborhood school.
Even better is the fact that there has never been a proposal to cap enrollment in any away at the local school, which would allow our children to continue to attend. Even now, as part of the reassignment, the county has no plans to cap enrollment. If they cap enrollment, the county has to provide transportation to new residents whose children are assigned to a distant school. Instead, they put the burden of transportation on existing residents, and allow new residents to attend the neighborhood school. Brilliant!
Posted by jbuie at January 10, 2003 10:14 AMWe have the same problems here with our school system. The school board doesn't give a care about kids and they just don't think things through. Then you have these people that complain about everything, even things that are good. So in the end everybody loses, but mainly the kids.
Posted by: Blaine at February 3, 2003 05:15 PM