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LASD limits input on new campus

Original post made on Jan 26, 2018

The Los Altos School District is drafting a team of district residents and community members to weigh in on whether a new campus in the San Antonio area of Mountain View should be a neighborhood school or a permanent site for Bullis Charter School.

Read the full story here Web Link posted Friday, January 26, 2018, 9:55 AM

Comments (19)

Posted by in your face MC Council
a resident of Another Mountain View Neighborhood
on Jan 26, 2018 at 10:23 am

Need the LASD say more? So much MV Councilman Clark for having an open process, where the "preference" for a local neighborhood school may be transparently advanced by Mountain View parents/residents.


Posted by MVFlyer
a resident of Monta Loma
on Jan 26, 2018 at 2:37 pm

Bullis has been a thorn in LASD's side for years. They would love nothing more than to dump them off on MV. If the city of MV is shelling out any money and trading development rights, then a neighborhood school should be put on this land.


Posted by Stop wasting our money!
a resident of Another Mountain View Neighborhood
on Jan 26, 2018 at 2:50 pm

We all live in this community and a strong public school system benefits everyone. Like all parents, we want to see Measure N funding distributed throughout all the schools in the district, instead of just one site. By reconfiguring an existing school site, we will be able to save money we would otherwise spend purchasing land, so that we can make much needed improvements at every school in the district. The majority of LASD voters don’t even want to purchase new land. It’s even less desirable when you realize LASD will have to spend upwards of a million dollars and an additional 3-5 years to go through the eminent domain process because the landowners at the Old Mill/ Safeway don’t want to sell. LASD trustees can continue to explore new land purchase options, but we want the district to provide the best possible existing land option as a benchmark, so we can compare the two and find the best solution for all our students.


Posted by LASD property owner
a resident of another community
on Jan 26, 2018 at 5:30 pm

Per usual, LASD sets the wrong premise.... and any "committee" appointed by them is really just a shill to later point to the entire premise laid out-- for a 10th site. LASD completely ignores the taxpayers' demand that bond money be spent on existing schools (particularly with LASD's declining enrollment, but BCS' expanding enrollment.) Remember the "enrollment growth task force" where the premise was enrollment growth in LASD schools? The premise was faulty. There was and is no enrollment growth in LASD schools-- in fact it's a huge decline in K-5, and LASD saw that coming, but they set up these "citizen committees" with a faulty premise as a propaganda tool. It's a total waste of money and is a delay tactic. Jeff Baier and Randy Kenyon should be fired for their complete failure in designing a solution.
BCS at 900 students is too big for the site, so BCS will have to exist on another LASD campus too, anyway. Proposition 39, that LASD must comply with at the end of 5 years, calls for over 22 acres for BCS students given LASD's declining enrollment and BCS' expanding enrollment. NEC may need and be long overdue for a neighborhood or charter school, but LASD's desire to delay and waste taxpayer monies does nothing to serve the students of LASD. LASD cannot use bond money on eminent domain litigation, so OTHER operating resources will have to be used to file that litigation--more waste-- do I hear taxpayer waste action agains LASD to stop this nonsense?


Posted by SC Parent
a resident of Cuesta Park
on Jan 26, 2018 at 7:52 pm

We believe that our decision must be firmly rooted in all of the feedback, data and analysis that we have received since 2012, while (also) honoring our new partnership with the city of Mountain View," Baier said.

What specific feedback, data, and analysis is Baier referring to? And, what value does 6-year old data provide? All of the kids in Kindergarten back then will be out of High School by the time any school is built.

I must give a hat tip to the ultra-generic "honoring our new partnership." Did they not have a partnership before? What is this new partnership? What does honoring it look like?

Between MV City Council placing no restrictions on this effort despite providing the majority of the funding, Baier's vague comments, and this so-called Task Force responsible for nothing but keeping the LASD elected officials from having to deal with concerned citizens face-to-face, I can pretty much guarantee they will decide to not place a neighborhood school there. (Even though it's the only logical answer).


Posted by Oust LASD BOD
a resident of another community
on Jan 26, 2018 at 8:24 pm

Isn't it time to recall the LASD Board? Their ongoing poor(non-transparent) decisions have made it more than clear that the do NOT have the best interests of Los Altos residents nor Mountain View residents at heart. They are a self-serving group that seem to delight in fueling the LASD/BCS feud. As a taxpayer, I'm tired of funding the feud. This whole plan is absolutely ridiculous starting with the lack of need for a new site at all and continuing through the plans to poorly place a school on a very busy intersection to house students, not from the neighborhood, but from households miles away. Just so that the LASD BOD can stick it to BCS. Which will of course, only bring on more litigation w BCS that the LA residents will pay for. Let's oust the LASD BOD. They're worse than worseless!


Posted by Oust LASD BOD
a resident of another community
on Jan 26, 2018 at 8:27 pm

Typo- I meant they are worse than worthless!


Posted by citizen seventeen
a resident of Another Mountain View Neighborhood
on Jan 27, 2018 at 7:52 am

It makes no practical sense in starting a "recall" campaign, which almost never succeeds. However - there is a General Election coming for the Los Altos School Board, and concentrating early effort on one new good candidate, can start to turn things. Last election, there seemed to be a concerted effort "to slate" the election to preclude, again, a candidate from the North of El Camino fraction of the LASD. Or did I, as a MV citizen, misread that political situation?


Posted by Alice
a resident of St. Francis Acres
on Jan 27, 2018 at 9:35 am

The superintendent must be removed. He has spent years deceiving the parents.


Posted by Gary
a resident of Sylvan Park
on Jan 27, 2018 at 10:10 am

Gary is a registered user.

The action taken by the Mountain View City Cpuncil on January 16 was to move forward. No final decision has been made. It is still possible that a majority of the Council will vote to halt or condition the deal so that the new school is not BULLIS CHARTER.


Posted by Bart
a resident of another community
on Jan 27, 2018 at 4:12 pm

I have been watching this debacle for many years, including many years closely involved on behalf of LAH. It’s been almost 15 years now fighting this battle, and what incredible waste of time and money along the way. The problem would have been solved in year 1 if the LASD Board had more common sense, and less self interest—and simply sited BCS on some of the overabundant acres already controlled by the district.

Years and years later, after $Millions in legal fees and $150M toward inexplicable bonds, we are really no closer to a solution than we were on day 1.

Shame on LASD Boards over the last 15 years for creating this problem then letting it linger and linger, all the while with a solution under their noses.
Shame on the voters of LA, LAH, and MV for voting in nearly identical board members election after election, and so far wasting $150M on bonds, which were never tied to an actual plan anyway. What did we expect?
Shame on the LA City Council for never stepping up to be part of a solution for our whole community (eg Hillview or other). Our schools are our greatest community asset, but the LA City Council has been looking the other way for years.
Kudos to the MV City Council for potentially stepping up in a big way toward a solution. They just should realize that for all their effort and money, they better require a new school in MV that MV children can actually attend—ie a neighborhood public school (or maybe an attendance area preference for BCS—we have heard of that concept before...).

LASD is gearing up to place BCS at a new site in MV, which would certainly be ironic, since the priority for neighborhood public education is what got us into this mess in the first place (think founding of BCS after closing of Bullis-Purrisima in LAH) and what has kept us in this mess for almost 15 years (LASD Board unwilling to close or share any neighborhood schools to house BCS...).


Posted by Oust LASD BOD
a resident of another community
on Jan 27, 2018 at 5:25 pm

@Bart -I agree with most everything you've said except your suggestion that LA City Council should be donating Hillview to the LASD cause. Hillview is an important community asset- for ALL LA residents, not just those that reside within the LASD and should not be sacrificed to the LASD debacle when they have plenty of their own land. LASD has many solutions to their problems none of which require extra land. When considering a new school for NEC we must realize that we have neither the funds nor the enrollment to administrate an 11th elementary school. So if a new school NEC is opened, Covington MUST be closed. Which actually makes sense because that school could be given to BCS in its entirety and that campus has room for the 1000 kids enrolled.
And lets not forget that moving the 6th graders to Blach & Egan solves any overcrowding issue that might arise in the future.


Posted by Bart
a resident of another community
on Jan 27, 2018 at 5:35 pm

Thank you for reading my comments. You make all good points, whether we differ a little here or there.


Posted by Gary
a resident of Sylvan Park
on Jan 28, 2018 at 7:09 am

Gary is a registered user.

It is revealing and alarming that most Los Altos residents who have paid attention know darn well that the plan of the LASD administration and trustees is to move BULLIS CHARTER to Mountain View but no one on the Mountain View City Council knows or admits knowing anything of the sort.


Posted by Bullis Parent
a resident of another community
on Jan 28, 2018 at 7:23 am

It would be EXTREMELY inconvenient for us if we had to deal with the traffic in that area. Please do not put Bullis there. It's also on the East side of ECR, so...


Posted by Keep in Mind
a resident of another community
on Jan 28, 2018 at 7:10 pm

I don't think Bullis parents see much difference at all in Traffic in driving to school. They already have to cross most of LASD to reach the current main site. It's already inconvenient. This is nothing new. They also get caught currently in a mess of traffic directed at Egan, which serves 60% of the Junior High students in LASD traditional programs. Bullis staggers arrivals at multiple times and encourages carpooling. It's more practical for Bullis parents to carpool than it is for Egan students. This location is NOT MUCH OF A CHANGE for Bullis Charter--being only 1/3 of a mile further down San Antonio Road.

But what we need to keep in mind is that there are a large and growing number of students doing the opposite travel. They live on the North side of El Camino Real in Mountain View or Palo Alto, and they must travel to 4 different schools in Los Altos with no bus service being provided.

The least LASD could do is to provide bus service if it is not going to open a nearby school for these children. That's a reason to be concerned, not some mythical non-change for Bullis.


Posted by Covington Parent
a resident of another community
on Jan 29, 2018 at 4:21 pm

[Post removed due to disrespectful comment or offensive language]


Posted by ResidentSince1982
a resident of another community
on Feb 1, 2018 at 8:21 pm

ResidentSince1982 is a registered user.

Here's the thing. LASD has been futzing around with the kids North of El Camino for 20 years now. Back in 2007, they came up with this then-new split to send 1/3 of them to Covington, instead of just splitting them between Almond and Santa Rita. Here's a Voice article that documents this deliberation at the time: Web Link

So, after 10 years, they are still planning to go on with this split, because it's not time yet to open a neighborhood school there. For how much longer? It's hard to understand how they got the city council to bless this continued mistreatment. Of course it will be 3 years or more before this new school can open. At that point the split will be 14 years old. Isn't that time where there should finally be a local neighborhood school serving those closest to it? LASD is kind of contemplating its navel to be fantasizing otherwise. It really DOES NOT MAKE SENSE. There's a lot more wrong with their process. It surely has not been open and transparent. It has been anything but. But just the reality of how long this has gone on is enough to motivate a NO to the idea of the city blessing the continuation!


Posted by ResidentSince1982
a resident of another community
on Feb 2, 2018 at 2:11 pm

ResidentSince1982 is a registered user.

From the 2007 article, one quote is very interesting.

"All Los Altos School District children deserve a neighborhood school," parent Nancy Morimoto said. "If you lived where we live, how would you feel about taking your kids to the fourth-closest school?"


Again, 11 years ago.


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