FBISD Rezoning: Baines Middle School & LOMS
Admin Feb 24, 2006 - 10:33 AM
This was passed along to me.
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Some of you may not be aware that as a result of tremendous communication from parents of Lake Olympia students, the FBISD board may be readdressing the zoning to Baines Middle School for this upcoming year.
The enclosed letter from Cyndi Hernandez, Sienna Crossing PTO President explains the situation. She sent this to the members of the board.
If you have an opinion on this matter, we encourage you to communicate with the FBISD board and the interim-Superintendent. Apparently they have heard from very few members of our community on this topic.
There is also a Board Meeting this Monday, February 27th at 7 PM at the FBISD building across from the mall. It is very likely that the subject of rezoning will be addressed. You are welcome to attend.
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Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2006 8:11 AM
Subject: FBISD Rezoning: Baines Middle School & LOMS
Dear Members of the Board and Superintendent Pedraza,
It is my understanding that the issue of zoning for Lake Olympia Middle School is again being raised. While I can understand the frustration that many Lake Olympia parents are feeling due to overcrowding, I must respectfully state that a 'knee-jerk' or immediate response is not what is needed here. What I hope that you will all consider is a much broader, long-term solution that will best suit all individuals throughout the district: parents, students, and administrators.
I was a participant on the ABC Committee that helped to determine the current zone, and I must tell you it was a difficult task; but it was one that we attempted to complete in the fairest manner possible, contrary to what you may have heard. With the numbers provided at the time -- approximately 1600 students, and capacity figures for Baines at 1200 and Lake Olympia near 1400 -- the proposed boundaries suggested opening enrol lment counts at/or near 75-80% for both schools,with virtually equal socio-economic numbers (31% & 33%). Of course, we now know that capacity figures for Baines will be closer to Lake Olympia (1329 vs. 1371). However, this does not mean that the boundaries should be changed rashly.
As a Sienna resident, I have been painted with a broad brush ranging from the devil incarnate (yes, I have heard the term to my face) to a person who does not understand the issues. I promise you, this is not the case. I am however, an individual who does not believe that the overcrowding at Lake Olympia can be solved by moving "a bunch of kids over to Baines." In fact, the only way to correctly resolve the problem is to reassess growth projections for our entire area, review the entire Fort Bend zone boundaries of nea rby middle schools (I can count 4 that are currently under capacity) as well as Baines, and move forward with an early bond referendum for another middle school in this high growth area. All of this may take a bit of time.
I ask that you recognize that the quote recently stated by a LOMS parent that Baines would open with only 700 students is incorrect. Even by the original ABC zone plan, that number is wrong. Current estimates project that Baines will open near 830+ students. I suspect this is a conservative projection. Sienna Crossing and Scanlan Oaks are both beyond capacity and will continue to be so, even with the exits of 5th and 6th grade classes. In addition, the current number of 6th grade students from Burton and Goodman (that are currently zoned for Baines) is higher than was originally estimated in late 2004.
Please also consider the following information when discussing any zone change in the immediate future: the metro study which was ultimately a key decision piece indicated that the entire zone area for Baines would reach 715+ single family homes during 2005. Sienna Plantation, on its own, surpassed this figure by over 75 homes. As a matter of fact, Sienna Plantation has outpaced its own sales projections by 25+% each year over the last two years. Conservatively, Sienna Plantation estimates that they will sell over 800 single family homes in 2006. While the northern neighborhood of Anderson Springs, in the front section of Sienna is rapidly growing (and is the only one visible from parts of Highway 6), so are the back sections of Shipman's Landing and Water's Lake, both which can not be seen without driving deep into Sienna. In addition, another new neighborhood, The Forest, in immediate proximity of Baines is rapidly building with homes scheduled to open before the end of April. These neighborhoods reflect a number of price point ranges, not just starter homes, and will likely yield even more middle school age students. In addition, two new neighborhoods are rapidly going up within the vicinity of Sienna-- one just north of Newpoint Estates along Highway 6 and one on 521 towards Sienna Point. Both are zoned to Baines and both are designed as high-density, single family homes.
I thank you for your time in considering the points I have enclosed. Zoning is difficult on everyone involved, most especially the students and their families. I only ask that you make the right decision for the entire district and our growing area, not just for one school.
Sincerely,
Cyndi H.
____________________
Comments posted to FBTalk.com on this thus far:
This was passed along to me.
==================================
Some of you may not be aware that as a result of tremendous communication from parents of Lake Olympia students, the FBISD board may be readdressing the zoning to Baines Middle School for this upcoming year.
The enclosed letter from Cyndi Hernandez, Sienna Crossing PTO President explains the situation. She sent this to the members of the board.
If you have an opinion on this matter, we encourage you to communicate with the FBISD board and the interim-Superintendent. Apparently they have heard from very few members of our community on this topic.
There is also a Board Meeting this Monday, February 27th at 7 PM at the FBISD building across from the mall. It is very likely that the subject of rezoning will be addressed. You are welcome to attend.
=============================================
==============
Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2006 8:11 AM
Subject: FBISD Rezoning: Baines Middle School & LOMS
Dear Members of the Board and Superintendent Pedraza,
It is my understanding that the issue of zoning for Lake Olympia Middle School is again being raised. While I can understand the frustration that many Lake Olympia parents are feeling due to overcrowding, I must respectfully state that a 'knee-jerk' or immediate response is not what is needed here. What I hope that you will all consider is a much broader, long-term solution that will best suit all individuals throughout the district: parents, students, and administrators.
I was a participant on the ABC Committee that helped to determine the current zone, and I must tell you it was a difficult task; but it was one that we attempted to complete in the fairest manner possible, contrary to what you may have heard. With the numbers provided at the time -- approximately 1600 students, and capacity figures for Baines at 1200 and Lake Olympia near 1400 -- the proposed boundaries suggested opening enrol lment counts at/or near 75-80% for both schools,with virtually equal socio-economic numbers (31% & 33%). Of course, we now know that capacity figures for Baines will be closer to Lake Olympia (1329 vs. 1371). However, this does not mean that the boundaries should be changed rashly.
As a Sienna resident, I have been painted with a broad brush ranging from the devil incarnate (yes, I have heard the term to my face) to a person who does not understand the issues. I promise you, this is not the case. I am however, an individual who does not believe that the overcrowding at Lake Olympia can be solved by moving "a bunch of kids over to Baines." In fact, the only way to correctly resolve the problem is to reassess growth projections for our entire area, review the entire Fort Bend zone boundaries of nea rby middle schools (I can count 4 that are currently under capacity) as well as Baines, and move forward with an early bond referendum for another middle school in this high growth area. All of this may take a bit of time.
I ask that you recognize that the quote recently stated by a LOMS parent that Baines would open with only 700 students is incorrect. Even by the original ABC zone plan, that number is wrong. Current estimates project that Baines will open near 830+ students. I suspect this is a conservative projection. Sienna Crossing and Scanlan Oaks are both beyond capacity and will continue to be so, even with the exits of 5th and 6th grade classes. In addition, the current number of 6th grade students from Burton and Goodman (that are currently zoned for Baines) is higher than was originally estimated in late 2004.
Please also consider the following information when discussing any zone change in the immediate future: the metro study which was ultimately a key decision piece indicated that the entire zone area for Baines would reach 715+ single family homes during 2005. Sienna Plantation, on its own, surpassed this figure by over 75 homes. As a matter of fact, Sienna Plantation has outpaced its own sales projections by 25+% each year over the last two years. Conservatively, Sienna Plantation estimates that they will sell over 800 single family homes in 2006. While the northern neighborhood of Anderson Springs, in the front section of Sienna is rapidly growing (and is the only one visible from parts of Highway 6), so are the back sections of Shipman's Landing and Water's Lake, both which can not be seen without driving deep into Sienna. In addition, another new neighborhood, The Forest, in immediate proximity of Baines is rapidly building with homes scheduled to open before the end of April. These neighborhoods reflect a number of price point ranges, not just starter homes, and will likely yield even more middle school age students. In addition, two new neighborhoods are rapidly going up within the vicinity of Sienna-- one just north of Newpoint Estates along Highway 6 and one on 521 towards Sienna Point. Both are zoned to Baines and both are designed as high-density, single family homes.
I thank you for your time in considering the points I have enclosed. Zoning is difficult on everyone involved, most especially the students and their families. I only ask that you make the right decision for the entire district and our growing area, not just for one school.
Sincerely,
Cyndi Hernandez
InvolvedParent
Post subject: RE: Letter From Sienna Crossing PTO President Posted: Feb 24, 2006 - 01:56 PM
Joined: Feb 18, 2006
Posts: 8
Status: Offline
Cyndi, I appreciate your apprehension about future growth in Sienna, but ask you to recognize that we all have the same concerns. The number of 700 students at BBMS came from Mr. Petros in FBISD; he has recently confirmed that, even with actual growth during the school year, the number today would be 754. In contrast, the number for LOMS would be 1150+. Given that we all now have accurate capacity data, I can't understand the justification for not levelling these numbers out. A 42-seat capacity difference can't be used to justify a gap of 400 students. By the way, I haven't heard any parents asking for a 'bunch of kids' to be moved to Baines.
InvolvedParent
Post subject: RE: Letter From Sienna Crossing PTO President Posted: Feb 24, 2006 - 01:56 PM
Joined: Feb 18, 2006
Posts: 8
Status: Offline
Cyndi, I appreciate your apprehension about future growth in Sienna, but ask you to recognize that we all have the same concerns. The number of 700 students at BBMS came from Mr. Petros in FBISD; he has recently confirmed that, even with actual growth during the school year, the number today would be 754. In contrast, the number for LOMS would be 1150+. Given that we all now have accurate capacity data, I can't understand the justification for not levelling these numbers out. A 42-seat capacity difference can't be used to justify a gap of 400 students. By the way, I haven't heard any parents asking for a 'bunch of kids' to be moved to Baines.
Admin
Post subject: Re: RE: Letter From Sienna Crossing PTO President Posted: Feb 24, 2006 - 03:43 PM
Site Admin
Joined: Jan 26, 2006
Posts: 12
Status: Offline
You have learned that the number today would be 754? Where did you learn that? Mr Petros does not even have accurate growth numbers for the area.
What about in 6 1/2 months from now when the school opens? What about in 1 year when Sienna has over 900 apartments built near by.
InvolvedParent wrote:
Cyndi, I appreciate your apprehension about future growth in Sienna, but ask you to recognize that we all have the same concerns. The number of 700 students at BBMS came from Mr. Petros in FBISD; he has recently confirmed that, even with actual growth during the school year, the number today would be 754. In contrast, the number for LOMS would be 1150+. Given that we all now have accurate capacity data, I can't understand the justification for not levelling these numbers out. A 42-seat capacity difference can't be used to justify a gap of 400 students. By the way, I haven't heard any parents asking for a 'bunch of kids' to be moved to Baines.
concerned
Post subject: Posted: Feb 24, 2006 - 03:45 PM
Joined: Feb 24, 2006
Posts: 2
Status: Offline
Cyndi, I would urge you to stop listening to rumors about numbers and verify your facts with FBISD. I wouldn't call waiting over 10 years (the amount of time LOMS has been overcrowded) to address the issue as "knee-jerk". I also participated in the original ABC zoning and my thoughts on that were that the best was done with the information provided, but unfortunately, the design capacity of both schools was misreported. When you make a zoning decision based on incorrect information, the result is bound to be less than optimal. I don't see the need for everyone to make personal attacks here - this is a situation where the district must do what is right for the children...all of the children. How you can sit there and say that a 42 seat capacity difference justifys a 400 student gap? It defies all logic. As for projected growth numbers, there is currently growth on BOTH sides of Hwy. 6 (when is the last time you drove through some of the new neighborhoods on this side of the street?). I can't believe that anyone would think leaving LOMS overcrowded and opening Baines with many open seats for children who may or may not move into your area at some time in the future is doing what is right for all of the children. The parents that are asking the board to re-visit the zoning are not trying to do something "bad" to Baines, we are just trying to level out the numbers so that both schools will have a chance to succeed - surely you can't oppose that. In fact, if you were at the final ABC meetings, you know that Dr. Baitland promised to re-visit the numbers on a quarterly basis and revise the plan if the numbers didn't pan out. Well, the numbers don't pan out any way you look at them, so the issue should be revisited. I agree with you that the entire district needs rezoning, but with the requirement of the demographic study (this time from a non-biased source), this can't happen in time to give some necessary relief to LOMS. This is a community school that is in serious trouble...it is my community school that is in serious trouble and I will not sit idly by and watch it happen - I have asked the board to look at the situation. The children that attend LOMS deserve a chance to succeed just as much as the children who are set to attend Baines. As communities, we should stop fighting and unite in an effort to address the long term overcrowding that both of our middle schools are projected to experience in the short term future.
concerned
Post subject: Posted: Feb 24, 2006 - 03:46 PM
Joined: Feb 24, 2006
Posts: 2
Status: Offline
Cyndi, I would urge you to stop listening to rumors about numbers and verify your facts with FBISD. I wouldn't call waiting over 10 years (the amount of time LOMS has been overcrowded) to address the issue as "knee-jerk". I also participated in the original ABC zoning and my thoughts on that were that the best was done with the information provided, but unfortunately, the design capacity of both schools was misreported. When you make a zoning decision based on incorrect information, the result is bound to be less than optimal. I don't see the need for everyone to make personal attacks here - this is a situation where the district must do what is right for the children...all of the children. How you can sit there and say that a 42 seat capacity difference justifys a 400 student gap? It defies all logic. As for projected growth numbers, there is currently growth on BOTH sides of Hwy. 6 (when is the last time you drove through some of the new neighborhoods on this side of the street?). I can't believe that anyone would think leaving LOMS overcrowded and opening Baines with many open seats for children who may or may not move into your area at some time in the future is doing what is right for all of the children. The parents that are asking the board to re-visit the zoning are not trying to do something "bad" to Baines, we are just trying to level out the numbers so that both schools will have a chance to succeed - surely you can't oppose that. In fact, if you were at the final ABC meetings, you know that Dr. Baitland promised to re-visit the numbers on a quarterly basis and revise the plan if the numbers didn't pan out. Well, the numbers don't pan out any way you look at them, so the issue should be revisited. I agree with you that the entire district needs rezoning, but with the requirement of the demographic study (this time from a non-biased source), this can't happen in time to give some necessary relief to LOMS. This is a community school that is in serious trouble...it is my community school that is in serious trouble and I will not sit idly by and watch it happen - I have asked the board to look at the situation. The children that attend LOMS deserve a chance to succeed just as much as the children who are set to attend Baines. As communities, we should stop fighting and unite in an effort to address the long term overcrowding that both of our middle schools are projected to experience in the short term future.
InvolvedParent
Post subject: Posted: Feb 24, 2006 - 03:53 PM
Joined: Feb 18, 2006
Posts: 8
Status: Offline
Admin: No one can agree on the growth numbers, which is why we can't base zoning decisions on them! 754 is the number in place today that will attend BBMS; same for the number for LOMS. You can lump a couple hundred more kiddos on top of both numbers, but the gap stays the same. Fear of future growth is a weak argument in an area where homes are popping up on both sides of Hwy 6. I am not asking Baines to take a disproportionate share - I just want it to take a fair share. If growth explodes on either side of 6, we rezone. There's no other option until a new middle school gets built.
InvolvedParent
Post subject: Posted: Feb 24, 2006 - 03:54 PM
Joined: Feb 18, 2006
Posts: 8
Status: Offline
Admin: No one can agree on the growth numbers, which is why we can't base zoning decisions on them! 754 is the number in place today that will attend BBMS; same for the number for LOMS. You can lump a couple hundred more kiddos on top of both numbers, but the gap stays the same. Fear of future growth is a weak argument in an area where homes are popping up on both sides of Hwy 6. I am not asking Baines to take a disproportionate share - I just want it to take a fair share. If growth explodes on either side of 6, we rezone. There's no other option until a new middle school gets built.
Admin
Post subject: Posted: Feb 24, 2006 - 04:19 PM
Site Admin
Joined: Jan 26, 2006
Posts: 12
Status: Offline
Cyndi does make a point that there are schools that are under utilized. If there is an adjustment to rezoning FBISD needs to look at the whole picture and rezone all the Middle schools to balance things out.
schoolwise
Post subject: Posted: Feb 24, 2006 - 04:31 PM
Joined: Feb 24, 2006
Posts: 1
Status: Online!
Long term planning is a band-aid approach, but one that should be part of the long range goal. The big picture is school finance and more specifically how new campuses are funded. It should not be just the locals supporting and funding the schools. The mega-developers can afford to kick in and become part of the longterm solution too since they directly benefit from what is left of the districts reputation. They are a stake-holder that have gotten a free ride far to long! I also think it's important to note that Cyndi, the PTO pres., who sent this letter also works for the SJD company and does the newsletter for them. Why haven't we as residents read about this on our resident funded website (SiennaNet.com) and/or the resident funded newsletter she coordinates? Can you really wear that many hats and claim no one has spoken up. I know several non-sanctioned area websites run by concerned residents who spoke up quite some time back---long before this letter! Come on SJD lead the way and kick-in on additional schools (out of your pocket, rather than someone elses).
-My opinion!
Admin wrote:
Cyndi does make a point that there are schools that are under utilized. If there is an adjustment to rezoning FBISD needs to look at the whole picture and rezone all the Middle schools to balance things out.