I was on Track 1, not Track 2(fo real)
10/3/2006 5:18:37 PM
10/3/2006 6:38:08 PM
10/3/2006 7:30:29 PM
I liked year round school.However, for lower-income people, it will be hard(if not impossible) to pay for a babysitter or daycare when their kids are out of school random times of the year and they have to work. Also, some kids in a family were staying in regular school(if they were in high school), while other kids in the same family were being put in year-round school(elem/middle school), therefore completley fucking up vacations, family time, daycare, etc. It may work for some, but not for all..unless companies can offer "year round work" schedules.
10/3/2006 7:35:00 PM
10/3/2006 7:53:14 PM
^^ They have government subsidies for these types of issues.
10/3/2006 8:34:45 PM
10/3/2006 9:02:00 PM
10/3/2006 9:26:31 PM
I went year round from 3rd grade till I graduated from 8th grade. Honestly, one of the best things I did. In the days, it was magnet where parents elected for their children to go there, so it was a better environment for learning where children were backed by furthering their education by their parents. The whole debate about students not matching up vacations with non year round students is bullshit, my brother was in a regular school, at the time, Raleigh had only one or two year round high schools and he wasn't in one. We still had our week long family vacation, and everything was ok. The weeks breaks after 9 weeks of school is great, I miss it, gave me a break when it was needed.
10/3/2006 10:38:08 PM
Track 1 was the shit. Durant representing.
10/3/2006 10:38:42 PM
it wasn't poor planning. i doubt you could build schools fast enough to keep up with the +60% growth rate in wake county school system. and then, WAKE COUNTY SCHOOLS (one of the best in the country) TOLD them what they needed to continue to do their job (that they do VERY well). either pass the referendum or your kids go to school year round. the fact that it was a referendum PUT the decision in their hands. they'd not want to pay anymore money. they made their bed now they can sleep in it.
10/4/2006 12:12:57 PM
How is not poor planning to not levy impact fees to builders? It's pretty much what every other growing city in the country does to soften the hit to taxpayers.]
10/4/2006 12:18:42 PM
i'm of the bait and tax philosophy.
10/4/2006 12:33:41 PM
10/4/2006 12:53:26 PM
10/4/2006 12:54:48 PM
how am I talking out of my ass?Just because there is no current legislation to levy such fees does not mean there shouldn't be any, which is my point.]
10/4/2006 1:22:33 PM
So you're blaming the county/city planners because they can't legally do what's necessary? Try blaming the people who make the laws.
10/4/2006 1:33:14 PM
Who do you think effects change?Do you think that lawmakers proactively change laws and fix inefficiencies without prompt?
10/4/2006 1:39:38 PM
10/4/2006 1:43:22 PM
And also, I'm inspired by your faith in civic participation.
10/4/2006 1:46:52 PM
West Lake Middle, '94-'95, 8th grade, Track 3 what what
10/4/2006 1:53:35 PM
Either you had track 1, track 4, or you were in one of those summerless tracks.
10/4/2006 1:56:29 PM
^^^ now you're just splitting cunt hairs.
10/4/2006 1:56:31 PM
Wow, excellent retort. No, I really do doubt people understand exactly how schools are paid for. Just admit you were talking out of your ass and move on.
10/4/2006 1:57:17 PM
what i have always wondered is why they dont build schools more than 2-3 stories. Is is not cheaper to build more stories than to keep buying land and starting over? Kids can walk up stairs why not make them. why not just put each grade on its own level or something?
10/4/2006 2:39:24 PM
i went to a school that was 8 stories for 4th-6th grades. Of course it was originally an office building not a school.
10/4/2006 3:06:05 PM
Ugh. I'm strongly feeling like this bond isn't going to get passed. This might be the beginning of the end for the Triangle's competitiveness.
10/30/2006 12:11:06 PM
OMG now i have to pay for daycare 4 times a year for 3 weeks each instead of 1 time a year for 12 weeks HOW CAN RALEIGH SCREW US LIKE THIS
10/30/2006 12:40:26 PM
10/30/2006 12:46:59 PM
10/30/2006 12:47:21 PM
i would just like to point out that page 1 of this thread features OmarBadu being stupid
10/30/2006 12:54:38 PM
Not enough schools, region becomes less attractive. My boss put it aptly: "With growth, you're either rising or falling. There is no stagnation." Guess where we are about to be if we start dropping the ball with mandatory services.
10/30/2006 12:56:33 PM
10/30/2006 1:02:04 PM
I think it's more of a supply issue. Lots of summer camps... only a few camps that specialize in year round schools. A wise man would charge more for the camps in low supply.
10/30/2006 1:03:48 PM
How does year round school help the massive amount of black people and Mexicans spewing out kids into our school system??
10/30/2006 1:05:12 PM
It's really not like that though the YMCA as well as a bunch of private day cares that are close to year round schools cater to them. In a year round school one track is always out school at any given time so it actually allows them to stay in service year round.
10/30/2006 1:05:46 PM
I worked at an after school YMCA camp and occasionally filled in at the track out center. I can attest to the fact that YMCA's "camp" is pretty shitty and full of kids whose parents 1) didn't really care 2) had their kids there because of subsidies 3) only used it temporarily, "just in case". Basically, there was a lot of room for improvement. They didn't have to improve the quality since there's not a hell of a lot of competition. Yuppie parents are probably not big fans of this type of situation looming on the horizon, though I'm sure with more demand perhaps a better "supply" could emerge in track out camps.
10/30/2006 1:09:36 PM
10/30/2006 1:11:13 PM
everyone moves here because it is "great" but then they whine because we have to do things differently because of population growth
10/30/2006 1:25:23 PM
^^I'm on heavy meds and worded that REALLY weird. Anywho, what I meant was how does year round school help schools meet the demand of a growing community? I just don't get that.
10/30/2006 1:28:14 PM
You can fit more kids in a school when that school is year round. When a community grows, schools tend to overcrowd because unlike roads or other local services schools take a lot more time to build (hence trailer classrooms on tennis courts to temporarily compensate). The fact that counties carry the brunt of responsibilities when municipalities get off scot-free is another issue, altogether. It's difficult to responsively generate additional funds to pay for large projects like schools, so bonds allow a local government to pay for things over time. Converting traditional schools to year round schools is a short-term solution that is easily implemented. It will ease some of the overcrowding, at least while more schools are built. Of course, this problem is compounded by the fact that schools are already overcrowded and our region is expected to gain an additional 7000-8000 students a year. It's a clusterfuck and soccer moms complaining about their annual summer vacations being ruined just makes you feel like we're screwed.[Edited on October 30, 2006 at 1:54 PM. Reason : .]
10/30/2006 1:31:04 PM
^My roommate just explained it to me, I didn't understand the whole tracking out thing. We don't have year round where I'm from. Or didn't
10/30/2006 1:41:09 PM
well i'm voting YES!
10/30/2006 1:41:59 PM
i'm voting yes too.
10/30/2006 2:06:56 PM
^^^
10/30/2006 2:46:24 PM
If they spend less money on sports they might have enough money for school.
10/30/2006 3:39:47 PM
^Reminds me of the days back at Athens Drive when the football team was bought new uniforms eventhough they NEVER won while the band(which was pretty good) paid out of pocket for everything.
10/30/2006 3:51:49 PM
I'll always be against year round schools.I got the luxury of spending three months a year being dumb and enjoying the sun and I think my kids should be able to do the same. I could take the time to prepare a better argument, but I don't think I need to.
10/30/2006 4:02:55 PM
10/30/2006 4:50:37 PM
Year round schools are not a good idea. Just think how great it would be to be in school during the middle of summer?? Not every state has gone to this why do we need to be the first. I think its funny that only large school systems are trying to start this process. Imagine if we were forced during college to convert to a year round system? How many people up here would complain.
10/31/2006 9:24:46 AM