Thread: Heathrow CC
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Old October 11th 19, 11:31 AM posted to uk.transport.london
Roland Perry Roland Perry is offline
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First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Aug 2003
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Default Heathrow CC

In message , at 11:51:36 on Tue, 8 Oct 2019,
tim... remarked:


"Roland Perry" wrote in message
...
In message , at
11:55:53 on Mon, 7 Oct 2019, David Cantrell
remarked:
On Fri, Oct 04, 2019 at 11:32:28AM +0100, Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 10:47:38
on Fri, 4 Oct 2019, David Cantrell remarked:
I repeat, it's something that lots of people have done, and lots of
people do do, so is clearly not completely unreasonable.
First you have to finds a school with places, and the good ones are
likely to be full. Even if you are turning up for the first year of
Secondary because the allocations will have been done 9mths earlier.

The children will lose their friends, places on sports teams, have a new
set of teachers, strange classmates, quite likely a different syllabus
with some subjects not available, and in the run-up to public exams this
can be very seriously disrupting.

And yet people do it. No matter how many reasons you can think of for
not doing it, people do it anyway, thus proving that for at least some
families it's a sensible thing to do.


The most common reason for moving (and children being forced to go to
a different school, or have a very long commute) is divorce.

I expect the second most common reason is some financial disaster


which "losing your job and having to get a new one, some miles away"
falls into


It's the *having* to move which is the disaster. Sometimes it's possible
to get a job locally, or rely on a joint breadwinner, or have a longer
daily commute, or even a weekly commute.
--
Roland Perry