Think of this from a housing and job access equity situation. We can't functionally afford to have good transit service into the suburbs but increasingly this is where it's needed the most. Free and reduced lunch numbers is a good proxy to show economics of an area.smh wrote: ↑Wed Sep 12, 2018 8:53 amWe're seeing increased evidence of people of means moving into urban areas and pricing out existing residents who are then forced to seek housing in the burbs...basically.TrolliKC wrote: ↑Wed Sep 12, 2018 8:48 amNot sure I follow this?normalthings wrote: ↑Tue Sep 11, 2018 10:14 pm
They also talked about how rich / poor flu flopping to/from the suburbs is a hugeeee problem no one sees coming.
Belton has every school between 40-60%. Olathe Schools has three that's 80% FRL. NKC schools has 18 over 50% and 12 under 50%. Shawnee Mission schools range from 3 to 80%.
MO data by year, by school
https://mcds.dese.mo.gov/quickfacts/pag ... 0C54B515E8}
For Kansas pick K-12 reports, it's under there
https://datacentral.ksde.org/
The requirements may not be exactly the same across state but that Olathe has schools economically similar to one in old Overland Park and Belton is similar to places like Center Schools shows you that it's not just rich people moving outwards.