Reports

Wake schools conversion from multi-track to single-track calendar

Click link below to read Great Schools' report on the WCPSS conversion of 14 year-round programs to single-track:

Click link below to read Great Schools' April 25, 2011 press release:

Redistricting in a Nutshell

Why does redistricting occur? Read our Questions and Answers

What did we learn from the 2010 Census?
Wake County's population is now 900,990! Therefore, we must redistrict to have a population of 100,110 (+/- 5 percent) in each school board district.

 
How did we come up with our proposed redistricting alternatives?

We took the correction numbers and looked at the demographic data to ensure that the proposed districts represented all ethnic and racial groups fairly.  This is a constitutional mandate.

The Tedesco Scheme

Read The CAROLINIAN real story by Cash Michaels about the Tedesco/Margiotta scheme to get over 6,000 SouthEast Raleigh students re-assigned back to their neighborhoods. The school system's own documents prove it:

THE TEDESCO SCHEME
By Cash Michaels, Editor
...

Summary of Falls Lake Rules – approved by EMC Nov. 18, 2010

Falls Lake Rules - approved by Environmental Management Commission Nov. 18, 2010
Go into temporary effect Jan. 15, 2011 (until approved permanently)
Stage I: (worse) 10 years to implement (instead of 7)

Stage II: (good) Stage II still in and is not halted because of re-modeling; analysis of performance of St I and feasibility of St II is in 2025 - though anyone can come in with new data at any time

Raleigh/Cary 5th LONGEST commute in the nation!

The Triangle Region continues to grow and, as of July 2010, Wake County is the LARGEST COUNTY in North and South Carolina!  As growth continues to reshape our region and transportation needs, we must work to improve regional transit services!

Driven Apart, a recent transportation report, ranks how long residents in the nation's largest 51 metropolitan areas spend in peak hour traffic.  Raleigh/Cary ranks 5th on the list of cities with the LONGEST COMMUTES.  According to the report, Triangle residents spend more time traveling to work each day than regional commuters in most other major metropolitan areas including Los Angeles, New York, and Chicago.  Read the full report here.

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