Columbia Heights Civic Association Annual Meeting

Columbia Heights Civic Association

ANNUAL MEETING 
Monday, December 10, 2018
Walter Reed Community Center
7:00 – 9:00 p.m.

Please join us for the annual meeting of the Columbia Heights Civic Association.  At this meeting we will be making decisions about board membership, representation of our civic association at the Arlington Civic Federation, and our representation on the Neighborhood Conservation Advisory Committee (NCAC).

Our current board consists of:  Sarah McKinley, Ron Haddox, Takis Karantonis, Josh Folb, and Ed Miltenberger.  These members are willing to serve again.  In addition, we currently have two unfilled seats on the board, which we hope to fill at this meeting.  If you wish to nominate yourself, please let us know.  It would be helpful to have a one-paragraph statement about yourself and why you wish to serve.

Our current Civic Federation delegates are: Ron Haddox, Juliet Hiznay, Sarah McKinley and Takis Karantonis. Our alternates are Megan Caposell, Eric Brescia, Ed Miltenberger, and Josh Folb.

Our current representative to the Neighborhood Conservation Advisory Committee is Sarah McKinley.

Agenda:

President’s Report – Sarah McKinley

Treasurer Report – Josh Folb

Nomination and Election of Officers – Ron Haddox

Selection of Civic Federation Delegates and Alternates – Ron Haddox

Selection of Representative to NCAC – Ron Haddox

New Business

  •        Continuation of work on the updated Neighborhood Conservation Plan for              CHCA – Sarah McKinley
  •        Report on recent developments on Columbia Pike – Takis Karantonis
  •        Elementary School Boundaries

Adjourn meeting

Fleet Elementary Redistricting

Letter for Fleet redistricting 11-19-18

November 19, 2018
To: Arlington School Board
Superintendent of Schools

Re: Fleet Elementary Redistricting

I have had the honor of serving the Columbia Heights Civic Association on the South Arlington Working Group, the planning group for the new Fleet Elementary School as well as the Career Center Working Group. Today I am writing to you in support of the parents in my civic association, and other neighborhoods on the south side of Columbia Pike, who wish to remain with the Patrick Henry community that is moving to Fleet.

Throughout this process, we were given the understanding that Patrick Henry
the community would stay together and move together to the new school at Fleet. This is not imaginary. These assurances were given during the planning of Fleet and were written by APS in subsequent community hangouts. More importantly, the children in our neighborhood were given this understanding by their current teachers and administrators at Patrick Henry. Those children have been emotionally devastated by the changing the story from APS.

The parents in my neighborhood have also demonstrated with painstaking care the differences in walkability between Fleet and the only other alternatives—Drew and Hoffman-Boston. It is clear to them that Fleet, while farther away than Patrick Henry, is still walkable. Drew is not.

The current plan that is being considered deviates significantly from the goals
originally stated by APS. First, it eliminates diversity at Fleet by moving Barcroft kids in and leaving our kids out. The irony is that the entire Patrick Henry community has argued to maintain diversity. Second, moving our students to Drew will NOT relieve the percentage of free and reduced lunch kids at that school.

The process that APS has used to make these decisions has been capricious and
unrealistic. The basic problem is that redefining Drew as a neighborhood school, while admirable and beneficial for the children in the surrounding Nauck neighborhood, leave Drew with a lot of empty seats.

Fortunately, there is a logical solution to this issue, which is to keep Drew as a
neighborhood school with a strong STEAM program, but allow other kids in Arlington to opt in. Drew could become a feeder school into the new tech program at the Career Center, which I continue to believe will be developed as an outstanding high school program.

I urge you not to rush into boundary decisions that will have long-term negative impacts on our neighborhoods.

Sincerely,

Sarah McKinley
President of CHCA