Since my oldest started kindy last aug, I drop him off and leave, so I'm not on the road until almost 9. I pretty much drive posted speed limit every morning all the way on i25 from ridgegate to i70. It's 22 miles, 20 minutes.
Aggie_Boomin 21 said:
Yeah I'll be working out of Lone Tree and she's an RN so a more central location will most likely have the most job prospects for her, that's the reason for the those two being singled out.
NASAg03 said:Aggie_Boomin 21 said:
Yeah I'll be working out of Lone Tree and she's an RN so a more central location will most likely have the most job prospects for her, that's the reason for the those two being singled out.
Arvada near Olde Town. 12min from everything, easy access to the mountains. I got to Vail in 1hr 20min last weekend Fri morning.
Other option is Highlands near Tennyson. Great food and shops and nice neighborhood.
This is quality intel. Thanks for posting this and everyone else too!proudaggie02 said:I'd also look at Denver Tech Center, as it's in between Lone Tree and downtown. It depends on what you're lookingfor: near the action and want to go out/party all the time vs. live further out and prefer a more laid back atmosphere. Downtown Denver was amazing when I moved here in 2009. It's gone downhill a decent amount, but it's still nicer than any large city downtown in Texas.Aggie_Boomin 21 said:
Yeah I'll be working out of Lone Tree and she's an RN so a more central location will most likely have the most job prospects for her, that's the reason for the those two being singled out.
Glendale is close to Cherry Creek, which is a great area. I've lived in Lone Tree for almost 10 years, and I love it. I lived in DTC for the first 2 years I lived in Colorado, and I liked it also. There are many great places to live around Denver, but I don't plan to leave Lone Tree.
I'd definitely do lunch or early dinner at Sierra in Lone Tree; the view is amazing and food is good. Snooze is great for breakfast.
Thanks for the info. Potentially leaving upstream engineering for a data scientist role so not necessarily lateral move but compensation difference is about 5-10% based on my research.agdaddy04 said:
Unfortunately a lot of lateral jobs pay less in Denver than they do in Houston. We're making it work on essentially 10% more in salary than what I had in Texas.
Thanks for the advice, I've started to look at housing and there's definitely a price difference for a 2000 sqft relative to houston costs lol....this should be funec2004 said:
In terms of income comparison, I would focus on housing.
If you can figure that out you'll be fine no matter the income change.
Housing prices since we moved here from DFW in 2015 have shot up.
This is a huge fail IMO.Schall 02 said:
And there is more flexibility: you don't have to attend the public school you're zoned to because you can apply elsewhere to be admitted.
There's some good schools, but as a whole if you look at grading system of schools (this may be a flawed way to look at it) - Texas is much better. However, we open enrolled at a charter school and absolutely love it.ec2004 said:
I can only say that our kids attend a charter school in Douglas County and it is amazing. I would pay private school tuition dollars for the education they are getting.
They were in our neighborhood elementary school until last year which was also good. Better than our neighborhood school in DFW.
That's what weird, and frustrating about these charter schools. They are public (free to attend) schools, but don't have the same rules or capital budgetsa of the actual public schools, as you experienced with yours.agdaddy04 said:
Oh and thank goodness we did choose charter school route because the "regular" public schools were shut down for covid for most of the fall but our daughters school has been in-person the entire year.
Thank you for sharing your thoughts, the political/social aspects are part of the reason we are heavily considering private school. Are there any Jesuit private schools in denver?Thriller said:
I'm biased because my kids attend (and I teach in) private schools, but that was true before we moved from Texas as well.
I'm not a huge fan of some of the required curriculum from a political/social perspective because it doesn't match our values. I think those trends are here to stay so our kids will continue in private school. We have a 1st grader, a middle-schooler, and a sophomore and senior in high school. We'd be comfortable sending them to the public schools we are zoned to herein Douglas County if not for the piece I mentioned above.
The charter schools aren't completely immune from those same concerns, but there are some phenomenal charter schools in this area.
this was american academy. They are all run independently, so yeh different rules.agdaddy04 said:
Very weird. I'm up in Erie so we straddle St Vrain and Boulder Valley school districts. They've both been building a lot of new public schools.
Regarding reapplication to the charter school, we don't have to do that. Once you're in, you're in - so maybe that's school to school decision? We're at Aspen Ridge Prep School.
Charter Schools receive the same per pupil funding as any other school in their district (or the "sponsor district" its sometimes called). There are also many different grants for charter school startup and capital construction. Charters will also fundraise and solicit donations for gaps in capital funding. At least this is how it went when I worked in public school finance 10 years ago.62strat said:agdaddy04 said:
Oh and thank goodness we did choose charter school route because the "regular" public schools were shut down for covid for most of the fall but our daughters school has been in-person the entire year.
But of course a new charter school opens up every year. I don't know who funds them or how they get operating funding, but it's not douglas county, so it's just weird (state funded though). Every parent wants to send their kids to the nice new shiny school, and the existing ones are neglected with no money to upgrade or build new because of overcapacity.