![]() She attended college at Indiana University where she earned a Bachelor’s Degree in Secondary Education with a focus in French. When she’s not working, Eileen can be found exercising, spending time outside, enjoying any beach she can get to, baking, crafting, reading, and spending time with her two sons, Owen and Eliot.Īssistant Lynch was born and raised in Woodbridge, VA. She was honored to be chosen as the principal at Nottingham in 2018. Since joining the Arlington Public Schools in 1999, Eileen has served as a special education teacher, autism coordinator, behavior specialist, and assistant principal at both the elementary and middle school levels. Eileen served as a special education teacher to students with disabilities, grades K-9, in Lynchburg, New Brunswick, NJ, Washington DC, and Arlington. Eileen later earned her Education Doctorate in Leadership and Supervision from the University of Virginia. She continued at Lynchburg and earned a master’s degree in Education. She attended Lynchburg College (now Lynchburg University) and earned a dual bachelor’s degree in Special Education and Psychology. ![]() Eileen was born and raised by the beach in New Jersey. Most of the current CB members will have moved on by the time the crap really hits the fan so they don't care.Dr. Expect more rationing of space or practice times late in the evening. If your kids play outdoor sports, too bad. So as the population goes up, the demand for park space will also go up, but the available space will go down. The county plans to put the schools on park sites. The county population was 207,000 in 2010 but at current growth rates we will top 300,000 sometime in the 2030s. I think you may be referring to the letter below. Also look for a permanent virtual option to relieve capacity. Idk where the recreation space would be in this scenario. I wouldn’t be surprised if APS also leased obsolete office space one day in order to operate a school. ![]() It’s my sense that Arlington can’t afford a large piece of land in its own County in order to build a school. Unfortunately, this means that the community is likely to lose a park or a community center or some other public space. ![]() Essentially, when APS determines we need a new school (and there is money for the construction), the County is going to offer up one if its sites. Ive also seen versions of this list as appendices to various school capacity or facilities reports. I can’t find the link now, but there was a County or APS memo a few years ago that listed potential elementary school sites. That doesn’t offend me if that’s the case.Īnonymous wrote:It’s time to invest in more land for schools, at the very least. Maybe they wanted to develop it to get the site cleaned up. As I recall being in the DCA flight path + there was some toxic waste?Īgree Lubber Run could have made sense as an option school site but only that since it's right next to an elementary school. There were environmental reasons that the Long Bridge site could not be a school. I don’t know if the site of the new Aquatics Center in South Arlington would have made a good school site, but they sure could have built one for the cost of it. I agree I can’t believe the County built out the Lubber Run Community Center over a school. Time to revert the community centers to schools. It’s easier to centralize community center functions - send them all to Barcroft. The new Lubber Run site would have made a great, central, option school site or a great school site for growing Ballston. Anonymous wrote:Years ago a few community centers WERE schools.
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