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New York Districts?
I was wondering, I heard the plan is for most places to be district by 2017. Has anyone heard more about New York? The slight challenge may be that it's almost split into three major sections where there are teams. Western/Nortern New York, NYC/Long Island and then the Capital district. But the leaves central New York out somewhat as they aren't as rapidly grown. Also where would the best place to hold District champs be?
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This is actually a really important subject that the state needs to discuss sometime soon.
New York as a district is complicated in a number of ways. As Dominick said, New York's FRC teams can be split into three major regions: Western NY, NY and Long Island, and Central NY and the Capital District. NY currently hosts four regionals: The Finger Lakes Regional, The New York Tech Valley Regional, The New York City Regional, and the SBPLI Long Island Regional. FLR is often visited by teams from Ontario, TVR this year was visited by teams from Ontario, NE, and MAR, NYC is traditionally visited by numerous international teams due to NYC's history as a hub for tourism, and SBPLI additionally hosted international teams recently. New York not only faces a problem of teams having to travel distances for events, but also the problem of having teams often visit these events from other areas. Proposal 1: New York as one district The basic proposal is to make New York into one giant district. This is not impossible. A district championship could be located in either Syracuse, Albany, or NYC fairly well. This proposal hurts FIRST's growth abroad, as teams from other countries who traditionally travel to any of the events in NY will have to find new regionals to attend. It is also difficult to travel to district Champs for many teams regardless of where you locate the DCMP. Proposal 2:The Upstate New York District Upstate NY becomes it's own district, with a District Champs located in Syracuse. This leaves NYC and SBPLI as an area with Regionals, and forces teams that had been attending TVR or FLR from Long Island to go elsewhere. Upstate New York also has a much smaller amount of teams without the City. Proposal 3:New York joins nearby districts A few proposals I've seen merge Western New York with either Ohio or Ontario for districts. The capital Region could then merge with New England. This leaves many central New York teams in a state of limbo, having to either join one of the two districts, or stuck in-between. This also leaves NYC/LI without districts. EDIT: Or with NYC/LI as a part of MAR. I don't know which is best for the state or for FIRST, and I don't know what other proposals exist. |
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One interesting thought is the idea of expanding MAR to include New York City/Long Island once everywhere is switching over to districts.
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There is also a possibility of incorporating Pennsylvania.and/or making the whole northeast one big district.
Incorporate MAR, New England,New York, Penn. into s super district which would incorporate Roughly 525 teams. |
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That being said, I'd be happy with MAR absorbing NYC and LI. It would force MAR to move the district championship closer to the geographic center than out in the middle of NOWHERE in Pennsylvania. |
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I'm not seeing any challenges, the 152 teams in the PNW district are spread out across 170,000 sq mi compared to the 147 team in NY spread out across 55,000 sq mi. We have three areas where the majority of teams are concentrated though one of those has a really high concentration. We hold a number of events in the area with the highest concentration, a few less in the area with lower concentration, one in the area with a good concentration and a couple in more outlying areas. Additionally FIRST is likely to eventually move to a system where district points are portable, so going to an event outside of your district will allow you to bring your points home assuming that it is your 1st or 2nd event chronologically. Personally I'd say that the 150 ish team district is just about perfect. It allows for growth and the ability to hold the necessary events in 5 weeks and a DCMP in week 6 to allow teams sufficient time to prepare for CMP. Once growth exceeds that 10 event limit then it can switch to a 4 week district season with a week to prepare for DCMP or a RCMP. |
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The NYC FIRST community is awesome the way they support each other to allow some of the teams to even attend just the NYC event. However if they had to travel to Albany for a district championship, many would be unable to. |
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Many NYC student families do not have cars, nor mentors to drive them.
Many are limited to where the subway can take them. Every area has it's own challenges. |
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Can someone run some stats?
How many teams are there in NY as a whole? How many teams (roughly) are in each of the three areas? (Western, Capitol, and NYC) |
Putting ny in one district is crazy. To go from Eastern long island to the top of the state takes about 10 hours not to mention there is close to 60 teams in nyc and 45 in long island even though geographically we are on top of each other.
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The NYC area poses a lot of unique problems to the district transition, which need some innovative solutions before they start thinking seriously about transitioning. |
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How clustered do you think teams are around Detroit? |
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It would indeed be crazy to put a district championship at one corner of a region, instead of making it more centrally located. |
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There's also the fact that the downstate teams are geographically much closer to most of MAR and most of NE than the upstate teams. I believe that the most likely scenario is for Western/upstate New York to form it's own district system soon, and leave the city and the island in regional limbo for another year or two. |
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Venues arent hard. We have cable vision as a sponsor and sbpli has them as a sponsor along. James dolan is in direct contact with us so I'm sure they are also in contact with him. He owns multiple venues including Madison square garden but that's kinds far off. There's also stony brook and Queens college that have huge easy to get to venues along with Brooklyn tech hs (team 334 i believe) I've been to their school and they have huge facilities. Again all of this id far off as I'm not sure if any of these places or teams would be willing but believe me 5 venues is possible. The Nassau coliseum is losing the ny islanders this year also and I'm sure they need events to fill the stadium up. Back to the other discussion. When we do nyc we take the train and a district van to move our stuff. It costs us for the van but the train is payed for by students. That costs us 500ish. When we do sbpli we pay nothing as we get a school bus with a wheel chair lift. However if we were out of nyc it would cost us upwards of 3k just for transportation. I lived in nyc for 12 years and currently live in long island. Expecting teams around here especially the manhatten brooklyn and Queens teams to go out of train distance is a bigger deal then you think. |
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The reason the majority of district events are held in high schools is not lack of availability of colleges - it's cost. The college events you see are funded in part by massive donations. It's a pretty tall order to rely on them entirely. I'm not saying venue selection is impossible, but it'll definitely be harder than you seem to think it is. |
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Townsend haris Stuyvesent Brooklyn tech Are a bunch of high schools with huge facilities with big teams along with being in 3 different bouroughs. In long island most schools could host an event but 329 (patchouge medford) comes to mind immediately. I've been to their school multiple times and with 2 giant adjacent gyms im sure they could manage something. Half hollow hills also hosts an off season event every year although i don't know if it is quite big enough for a district event. I believe 358 has a large school along with long wood most likely being a spot (the superintendent is a huge supporter of first and runs something with sbpli) With the hundreds of teams in the area comes hundreds of schools and many of them are quite giant. |
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According to Google Maps, it takes about 5 hours to drive from the top of Long Island to Albany. That would be the longest drive any team would have to take to get to a centrally located state championship.
Montauk to Albany: 5 Hours Manhattan to Albany: 3 Hours Rochester to Albany: 3 Hours Buffalo to Albany: 4 Hours, 30 Minutes This doesn't seem that bad, and with some help from sponsors and other teams, I'm sure most teams that qualify for NYCMP that want to attend NYCMP would be able to. As the NYFIRST community, we could figure out a solution to that problem. Quote:
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Man I feel bad for that one team far up north... ![]() |
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I was on mobile earlier, but I finally have the time to type up something a little more thorough. There are a few options currently available to New York.
1. The entire state forms one district. As discussed in this thread, if DCMP is not in NYC, it puts a huge strain on the city teams. If DCMP is in the city, upstate teams have a bit of a travel issue, but it's certainly possible. Another possible issue is finding enough places to put district competitions. You would have Rochester, Troy, maybe Buffalo or Syracuse, and then 4 or 5 events in the city/on the island. 2. Upstate New York forms one, Indiana-sized district. District events in Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse, and Troy, with DCMP basically taking the place of the current FLR. In this case, downstate would be left in a bit of a pickle. 3. Western New York joins with Ohio, West Virginia, and Western Pennsylvania. Again, this only solves the problem for the upstate teams. |
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Personally I prefer the whole state become one district. Most NYC/Long Island Teams won't need to come to DCMP, and the ones that do can be accommodated for or decline the invitation. Teams aren't required to attend DCMP, after all. Regardless of whether they attend DCMP, teams will be getting double the competition for the same amount of money.
I think the only three locations that could be considered for a district championship are Syracuse, Albany, and New York City. All three have their share of issues. I think Albany would make the most sense due to its central location for all teams in the state. With the great support from local companies like GE and GlobalFoundries, as well as maybe support from FIRST HQ, its possible we might be able to subsidize or at least help the teams with less resources be able to travel to the district championship if they qualify. If this one isn't possible, either of the other two discussed options are fine as well. New York could really use districts as soon as possible. Some fantastic teams are missing out on a championship because they didn't win, and some others are struggling, barely able to attend one event. Districts would help solve both of these problems, as well as make the state mor competitive on a global scale. |
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While Albany has a nice regional it is a little cramped as it is at RPI. Possibly having district champs in Syracuse at the dome? I'm not to fully sure about the venue but it could be big enough. Or on long island you could use Nassau Coliseum possibly since I know there is an underground tunnel connecting to the Marriott and possibly another center.
Also i just noticed on the map either were not represented,misrepresented or I don't know where Utica is on the map. But it does show just how spread out upper New York is and something that can be fixed in the future. |
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I stay in albany often for gymnastics and my dad is up there extremely often (hes the president of his union) A standard 3 star hotel room is 120 dollars per night. One room fits 4 people 2 over nights plus 2 ways on the train Thats $140 dollars per student plus meals. You have a moderately sized team with 20 students and 2 mentors thats $3,080 and thats without renting a U-Haul add $400 ish (for a 10 foot truck). So for a single event a low budget team needs to drop $3,500 dollars just to go back and forth to a single event. To some teams that may not seem like too much but speaking for some nyc teams thats their budget. I hear the talk about having it in albany yes geographically that makes sense However if you look at density ny long island blows everywhere else out of the park. Also teams upsate have no issues with parents not driving (for the most part) Yes it sucks for those wierd out of area teams but the harder audience and the ones with bigger issues are the nyc teams. Not to mention that NYC is a cool place to go to a competition. |
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Money isn't easy to come by for most teams outside of Western Seattle and some locations in Portland. Further, we have a much bigger geographic region than NY AND our DCMP was located at an extreme in Chaney Washington this year. We drove 8 hours for the District Championship and we are located in the northern(ish) part of Oregon (though we are one of the southern most teams in the region), In the end, districts allows you and your team to get more play for the same amount of money. Plus the potential for an event of much higher quality than a regional AND a somewhat easier way to make it to worlds. So before you say something else along the lines of "you couldn't travel to Rochester because of a 5 hour daily commute" please put some thought into it. For that to work, you would have to leave at 4:30am, and would return to NYC at 10:30pm (if you leave at 8)... 5-6 hours before you have to leave again.... hardly logical. Quote:
Please get educated on districts before telling those of us in them to "think about" why they don't work for poorer teams. |
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To clarify Im not saying the model wouldnt work. Im simply stating that the dcmp should most definitely be in nyc. New york needs the district model but its a complicated area. NYCFirst and SBPLI would probably work together to do a lower state dcmp and that is a power team of hardworking volunteers. The Javits center would be perfect for a dcmp. First of all its right in the middle of nyc. Penn station is in walking distance which means all the long island and nyc would be set for transportation right away. Theres also much more press attention in NYC. getting first on things like the today show while dcmps are there or good morning america are very viable things. I understand the district model to an extent. Im just stating the challenges with ny a place I have lived my whole life. I have lived up state I have lived in nyc and I live in Long island I know this state the people, the teams, and the challenges that come with it. Im sorry for saying think about it (when reading it sounds harsh didnt mean it to be) |
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1) The argument of distance if it were in Rochester you could always fly there.
2) NYC while yes it does hold a big regional each year, it has also been highly known to have field issues. 3) If a lot of teams from upstate came for district champs in the city hotel prices would be astronomical. 4) Syracuse can end up being only a 4 hour drive from the island.(if your leaving from around Nassau Suffolk border.) For champs we would need a big place to hold it. Currently New York makes up about 5% of all first team. (its very close in size to PWN) So that means about 60 teams would go to champs. |
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NYC would be the place imo to host a dcmp as I have said maybe not the javits center. Places in queens are much more afordable. St.Johns University comes to mind in queens they have huge sports facilities and could comfortably host a 60 team regional. Even hoftstra (sbpli) hosted a 51 team event complete with full 10x10 pits, a practice field, and media areas. What im wondering now is if first is really looking into this or if this is pure speculation |
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Because of such a dense population of teams in NYC i would propose NYC being their own district, or maybe even combine with New Jersey. This solves many issues for the NYC Long Island teams like travel cost, distance etc. For venues though im not quite sure how well that would work out but im sure it could be figured out.
As for upstate teams, why not have them join with a smaller state/state with less teams to create a district. For example i don't believe upstate alone has enough teams to be a district and neither do many of the surrounding team. If upstate combined with Pennsylvania, Ohio, or west Virginia that would be enough for a district. |
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Maybe I'm out of touch, but spending $140 (plus food) to attend a three-day out of town competition seems fine to me. Your students should be able to do that much fundraising for their own benefit. |
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If the students don't want to raise the money to go to the District Championships, they don't have to. That being said, something like 2/3 of all teams in New York are located in the city or on Long Island, so an NYC district championships makes a lot of sense in some ways. Quote:
It's also a mile away from an Amtrak station. Regardless of what plan we choose to take, planning committees and regional FIRST advocates should come together to discuss a plan for the state's transition to districts- sooner rather than later. |
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Money When a region goes to districts, they need to make their own organizational entity (for example, NEFIRST is part of ingenuityNE, a 501(c)(3) created for the purpose of operating New England districts). This organization is responsible for planning and paying for everything a district does (it'll own full field(s), other assets, and pay for the competitions). Think of it as a regional planning committee on steroids. Third event registration fees go entirely to the district, but the organization has to fundraise everything else (support from HQ is minimal, especially after the first year). Events are recommended to have a total budget of ~25,000 (as compared to ~150,000 for a regional (see Regional Planning Guide, budget section). This is a substantial decrease in costs - especially compared to the NYC Regional, which I've heard costs upwards of $500,000 to put on. There's a reason that (I'd say) the majority of district venues are donated or heavily subsidized - budgets are much tighter and FIRST HQ provides much less assistance. One of the most important parts here is having a strong sponsor/team base who can secure and help plan venue costs. The district championship is planned like a regional, with a corresponding budget. For a district with 8 events and a championship, you're looking at over $300,000 in event costs (not even factoring in the fact that NYC events will inevitably be more expensive than average). Then factor in other asset investments - a 10 event district needs to own, store, and transport two full fields, a new set of carpet for each event (and transportation of each new set of carpet to the venue), plus the many other little things you need. A field costs ~20,000 for the perimeter, ~2,500 for the plastics, plus all the electronics (can't find data for that, but I'd guess ~10,000). Point is, it all adds up and gets very expensive very quickly. Events You need to have enough events spots to ensure that every team can register for 2 (with each event small enough to guarantee 12 matches/team). The sweet spot is typically around 40 teams per event. They should occur in venues with reasonable cost (see above) and be close to as many teams as possible. This is the major problem for NY because it has pockets of high team density, and these pockets are pretty spread out. That means there needs to be smart planning when deciding the size of the districts and location of events. A full state district would probably need 10 events, split evenly between the pockets of teams. Volunteers This is probably the most overlooked part. It takes a lot of manpower to run one event, let alone 10. There are a number of key roles that require training beforehand and there's a limit on the number of experienced people to fill those roles. If there aren't enough people to staff events, you can't do districts (this is the current issue facing Minnesota). tl;dr - There's a lot of components that go into making the transition to districts that you probably haven't thought about. It's a massive logistical and financial problem that requires significant effort to undertake. The people in charge of making the decisions are definitely aware of the desire to switch and are trying to make it happen (and I've talked to some of them about it), but the fact no public announcements have been made means they haven't had real progress with these issues. super tl;dr - Just read the district planning guide |
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Interesting thread. One thing that I didn't see a response to is:
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Townsend - 1100 Stuyvesant - 3000 Brooklyn tech - 5400 By contrast, these are non-selective (but still excellent) public schools in Queens, New York City. Both have FRC teams - one rookie; one established. Francis Lewis - 4000 Cardozo - 4000 While Stuyvesant is a large school, it isn't conducive to a FRC event because you need to take an escalator or elevator to get everywhere. There aren't even rooms to have the pits and field on the same floor. By contrast, Francis Lewis is a flat school. They've been running a FTC qualifier which has gone well. |
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Fl and cardoza have less established teams therefore in my head less likely yo host an event but fl id huge I've been there multiple times (it was my zoned school) ive actually been to all the schools i listed and all the ones you listed so i know my way around them all. I see the issues with brooklyn tech it being so reliant on multi levels. |
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My point still stands :). That it's not the # of students that determines suitability for an event. Part of that is layout. Part of it is that these schools were never designed for so many students so the facilities aren't the size one expect. Or rather, someone from outside the area might expect. My worry is that it will be cramped and/or not enough room for teams to sit and watch. I went to a district event in NJ (just to watch.) It was beautiful. The "small" gym was about the size of the Francis Lewis gym. The "large" gym where the matches were held was huge! |
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I am pretty sure I could get an event hosted here. Conveniently located for NYC and Long Island teams, even a decent amount of parking. In fact, if I had the time and energy, I would be pushing to host an off-season here in the fall. |
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I love the notion that Albany is "centrally located." To most of NYC, anything outside of NYC might as well not exist...and to most of WNY, Albany is pretty much NYC in terms of getting there.
Three hours from Rochester works if you're already in Rochester, but the geography of WNY is such that you often can't "get there from here" in anything approaching a straight line. ------------- I like the idea of districts for NY, but only if it will decrease our expenses per play, not increase them. We can afford FLR because we don't have to stay overnight. (And before people say, "well just raise more funds," we are limited to exactly two (2) fundraisers a year by our school, and run the most successful fundraisers of any school group, pulling in about $3K a year. I don't think most people have a good appreciation for just how tiny many of the towns in WNY are--we're not terribly atypical with 650 kids K-12 in a district five times larger (geographically) than Manhattan.) So, I like the idea. But it concerns me. |
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I don't get it. A lot of what I'm seeing from people on NYC teams seems to be along the lines of "we have unique limitations" without much willingness expressed to either address the limitations or consider alternative approaches. Am I just not "hearing" it right? Is it a "New York" way of saying things that I'm not picking up on?
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Most of the big NYC teams concerns 1.money 2.transportation(parents dont have cars) Most of the big Long island Teams concerns 1.money 2.travel time Most of the upstate teams issues 1.travel distance to nyc 2. I don't know what they are doing up there but i haven't heard anyone from upstate say they didn't have enough money to travel Some of what you are hearing about nyc problems in this thread are broader issues. Any championships should be where the highest concentration of teams are, not the "central location" of the state. Side note Traveling to long island for nyc teams is also very easy with a hop on the subway to the LIRR. Having a dcmp in long island would work too but also give another 45- 1 hour of travel time to upstate people. |
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A championship in NYC would be 6 hours away from teams in Buffalo and Potsdam, while an Albany championship is 5 hours away from the tip of Long Island. I won't say which is better, but either one is hurting quite a few teams. And remember, only the top 60 teams or so would travel to the district championship, and they additionally have the choice to decline. Additionally, public transit connects Rochester to Albany, as well as NYC to Albany in a straight line, whereas going via public transit from Rochester to NYC takes seven hours. Regardless of the DCMP location, a discussion about this subject in a formal setting needs to occur ASAP. |
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The fact that a portion of team will end up spending more money on travel when they compete in three events than they do currently competing in one event shouldn't be as controversial as it is.
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And regarding NY DCMP, if FiM can get 102 teams to work in Grand Rapids (NOT Metro-Detroit), surely 40-60 teams in anywhere is doable. (That said, NYC is expensive!) |
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As someone who grew up in Rochester, lives on Long Island and mentored a Long Island team, and now teaches in NYC and coach a NYC team, I can say that the logistics of each are so vastly different. But not overwhelming.
NYC is very hard to travel out of. Virtually none of my students have parents who have cars. Most of the parents don't speak English. In fact, on my team of 20+ students, I've only met the parents of 2. Many would not LET their child travel outside of NYC even on a school trip. A trip to Long Island would be fine, but upstate I might lose a third of my team to parents not wanting their children to travel. If it was overnight, I would lose over half. And NYC teachers are forbidden from transporting students in their own vehicles. I think some of the selected or prestigious schools like Stuyvesant and Townsend Harris have a bit more leeway with things though, as far as money/resources for travel. Schools like John Bowne often can feel a bit of a 'sour grapes' attitude towards those schools, justified or not. If the competition migrates out of NYC, it would hurt the less established teams a lot more and be a barrier to new teams. I admit, I don't know the logistics of Districts compared to regionals. Long Islanders are used to traveling. Almost all parents have cars, and in fact many students have cars. There are a few exceptions, Central Islip CI-borgs come to mind. These are the de facto segregated minority districts on Long Island. Growing up in Rochester, we are used to overnight trips. I went to East High School in the city of Rochester. But we would sell candy, car washes, whatever we had to. We would raise money and go on overnight trips to NYC or DC. And my friends who went to suburban schools went on even more trips. As for centrally located, what about Binghamton? It's actually somewhat easier to get to than Albany for a lot of places |
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--- Personally, I just wish we could get rid of district borders entirely and teams would go to DCMP events located geographically closest to them. Make most regionals into "district" events. Get your points at any event you want. Advance to one of a dozen or so Super-Regionals geographically located around the country. This would take some work, of course, but I'm tired of trying to draw perfect lines on a map that make everyone happy but wall off areas from outsiders completely. If teams traveling to "easy" districts really is an issue, then require one of the two events to be one of the five events closest to their team location. Can't we just play wherever is best for each individual team's needs... |
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There's only one team here though - everyone else is at least an hour away. I assume most other teams will have a district event where they don't have to travel and stay overnight: (Buffalo, Rochester, Albany, NYC, LI); I assume we will travel and do overnights at all district events. Quote:
From my understanding of the differences between regionals and districts, the shorter events keep travel costs down, and we could probably afford two district events at about the same burden of a single regional. That still leaves paying for the championship event outstanding. (And paying for Worlds! Or pseudo half-worlds as the case may be...). With all that said, I'm not at all sold on districts being the right thing. As noted above, I think people in more team-dense areas will make out better in saving money and getting more game-play. More importantly, from what I've seen (which is a few regionals and never a district in person - but some video), I'm highly underwhelmed with what I've seen and read about districts, I don't think it's as engaging/inspiring an atmosphere for the students. The story that you can still attend a extra-regional events by choice doesn't hold water when FIRST has forced us to spend all of our budget on attending the district events we would belong in. Not that anyone would ask me or that it isn't inevitable anyway, but I adamantly don't want districts in NY. |
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I would like to try to clear some things up about NY here as many people I see aren't from NY and seem to have some things messed up. (Personally I feel that NYC and Long Island would be able to make their own state quite successfully)
1.) Rochester and NYC are in no way close. Whatever Google maps says, add a significant amount of time to get in and out of the city. I know several people that park outside of the city and then take the train in because they feel that it is faster than simply trying to drive in. 2.)Albany, geographically, is in the middle (roughly). Albany is geographically as close as it comes to the center of NY while still being in a city. Also would like to point out that Albany is the capital of NY, not NYC as some new college friends seem to have thought. This is a 4 hour drive away from teams in Rochester. Add an hour for Buffalo area, subtract one for Syracuse. 1 highway the entire way, easy drive. Easy to do with parents/bus. I don't know what the NYC mindset is about sending their children to the upstate farmland but as it has been shown before it would be less than $150 to send 1 student up to Albany just based off of transportation and hotel. I don't know why a team would consider commuting from the city up to Albany and back in a day, hotels are the way to go. This cost is more than anyone wants but definitely doable. There are enough businesses in NYC that would be willing to sponsor teams if you ask. 3.)It is much harder for upstate teams to go to the city than for the city teams to go upstate. Yes, upstate teams have more parent support in terms of transportation as well as high budgets (cannot confirm, never actually worked with a NYC team. Just going off what people have said). A trip to Albany though is significantly cheaper than a trip down to the city. 8-9 hour bus ride, city hotels, transportation once your there, and general cost of being in the city all adds up. Relying on parents for driving also adds the cost of parking. I live in Boston now, I imagine that NYC parking costs are similar. I can say that parking on campus here can get up to $45/day. Albany or Troy would be much cheaper. I understand that parents in NYC don't have cars but honestly for moving an entire team a bus is honestly easier anyways. Not sure about the cost but between thruway tolls in NY, and gas money, I don't think that a bus would even cost that much more per person. TL;DR, I think NY should be one district, championships should be in/around Albany, upstate teams have problems too. |
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From this thread what I'm seeing is that it's going to be very hard to include NYC with the rest of NY in a district. There's just to many issues for it to happen. Someone mentioned this earlier and i feel it is a very valid idea to incorporate districts in NY as well as surrounding states.
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Referencing the PNW district, the Seattle area has about 3 district events, Maybe NYC can have a couple, then have some in the upstate area for the other teams, then have the DCMP in a central area (Albany?) or have it switch every year, from NYC to Albany (and i think PNW is doing that, Portland to Cheney, or is that just random?)
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We also are based in Flushing, Queens. So the businesses in our area tend to be very different than Manhattan or Brooklyn. And the businesses in Manhattan and Brooklyn seem to only sponsor teams in their Burroughs. Quote:
So after NYC Regional fee, we had about $3000 to work with. Pershing Square sponsored us again this year, so we can bank that for next year's regional. Quote:
But the NYC regional has a lot of international teams and it would be a shame to lose them. |
Just figured i would add going to Pennsylvania and new Jersey is easier for a nyc team to do then going upstate sometimes.
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Re: New York Districts?
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If NY State was in districts, NE was in districts, and MAR was in districts, (and oh why not, the Ohio Valley was also in districts) and (the important part) nobody cared which two district events any given team went to as long as they went to two, where would NYC, Upstate, and Albany area teams tend to go, given current team distribution and current/theoretically proposed event locations? Now, just to add more factors: Assume that each District system had its own championship, no combining. Where do you put the DCMP? Conversely, assume that NY State, NE, and MAR combined for one DCMP (or whatever you want to call it). Where do you put that one? Just a fun, semirandom thought experiment. |
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Not saying its possible though, i don't know the east coast. |
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See, just another minor wrinkle in "how to set up a district system"... |
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Personally, I just wish we could get rid of district borders entirely and teams would go to DCMP events located geographically closest to them. Make most regionals into "district" events. Get your points at any event you want. Advance to one of a dozen or so Super-Regionals geographically located around the country. /QUOTE] I agree 1000% with this.... |
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Ideally, you would try to find an area that is around the same drive time for all teams, or most at least. The geographic center would be a good place to start, then find the best area. |
Re: New York Districts?
There has been no movement towards a NY State championship in the off season.
So why not just split upstate and NYC+LI, into 2 separate districts? If upstate breaks away into districts they win, southern state teams already are too far to travel, it will step up pressure for them to find a way. |
Re: New York Districts?
The whole idea behind the District system is to have more events closer to where the teams are. In the PNW district we had 4 events in the greater Seattle area so that teams in that area could attend two w/o the need for overnight accommodations. There were 2 events in the greater Portland area that has lower team density so again places for many teams from that area to play their two events without the need to stay in a Hotel.
Now for the other areas it is not as easy that is for certain. We had one event in Central Wa, Eastern Wa, and Central Western Or. That means that the bulk of the other teams have 1 event that they can go to w/o the need to stay in a hotel, but many of those teams would have been staying 2 or 3 nights in a hotel when we were in the Regional system However both of those situations do not account for all the teams in the district there are those that have significant travel just to get to their closest event. Again those teams would have been traveling under the Regional system but now have to travel twice to attend both events. The can however get away with typically staying only 1 or 2 nights for each event. So yes the affects are not uniform and those in low density areas do not get the benefits that those teams in the high density areas do. I see no reason to believe that there would not be enough suitable venues in the NYC area so that teams in that area would not have to travel to their district events. For those teams outside of NYC or Long Island it is likely that they will have at least one event that is as close or closer than the Regionals they have gone to in the past. The teams in the outlying areas of the PNW district have benefited from having one of their events closer to home and the other not any further than the long standing events in our area. Having been through our second season in the district system I have spent a lot of time talking to students and mentors getting their thoughts on the transition. For the students the response has overwhelming been that they prefer the District system. Some said they feared that playing in a HS or college gym would not be as special as playing in an arena but after experiencing it said that they liked the more intimate setting where they were closer to the action and got to know a higher percentage of the teams at each event. They also overwhelmingly preferred more playing time. Not only more matches but not having the 1 hour between matches. Teams that had typically only attended a single regional were particularly happy about attending a second event where they could apply what they learned at their first event either by fixing/improving their robot or their strategy. For the mentors the response was more varied. Many appreciated the greater value it brought to the students. In the past many mentors have told me that they wished they could go to a second event so that the students could apply the knowledge they gained at the first event and they now saw their students grow significantly because of the second event. On the other hand there were a few who two events more burdensome even though they were shorter and didn't express satisfaction with seeing the students apply the knowledge gained at the first event. As far as the location of the DCMP we have moved ours around and hope to continue to do so in the future so that the same teams are not stuck making a long trip to DCMP every year. As far as those low resource teams that earn as spot at DCMP goes, yes some do have to decline and some of the students just can't make it which is unfortunate. On the other hand when a team does earn that spot there are many cases where the school and community rally around the team's success and step up to the challenge. In one case there was a rookie team that was caught off guard by their invitation to DCMP and like many did not learn that they had qualified until 4 days before they had to be at the DCMP. They went into fundraising overdrive, supported by their school and superintendent. They did fall short of raising the funds but the school who was impressed by their progress agreed to loan the team funds from the ASB account with the agreement that they would continue to raise funds after the event to cover the shortfall. I know another rookie team that was in a similar situation and again found a way to go to DCMP, though I do not know as much about their fundraising efforts. I do know that I told them after their first event that they had a good shot at DCMP and that it would be a good idea to start looking for funding sooner rather than later. TL;DR the benefits of the District System far outweigh the negatives. It is the way that first is going and in my opinion it is better to join now and work on overcoming the problems than to sit on the sidelines and say it will never work. Like anything in life if you say it won't work then you will almost certainly be right. If you say this is going to be hard but we can do it you will likely to be able to do it. |
Re: New York Districts?
[quote=mistersands;1472545]No love for John Bowne High School?
[quote] I limited my examples to schools I’ve physically been in. Nothing against Bowne (or any number of schools I’ve omitted) |
Re: New York Districts?
The possible solution has been touched upon by several posters above and it seems that it is not unrealistic- except potentially, the DCMP (what ever they'll call it). LI contains enough teams locally to easily have a local district event, so too does NYC. If you made them just a bit smaller there could be one in Suffolk County (East end for you out of staters), one in Nassau County (Middle of LI) and one in the city (Manhattan, again for you out of staters).
That would enable teams to select two districts that were within a daily commuting distance for all of the Island and NYC teams. The up state teams could have one to replace the Tech Valley and another for the Finger Lakes region and a third elsewhere in the state. This gives most teams a choice of 2 out of three events to choose from within commuting distance. This eliminates hotels and other associated costs. Having the DCMP in Albany would be somewhat equidistant for all teams. Those parents in NYC who forbade their children to go would also forbid them to go to St. Louis, I presume. There will have to be compromises no matter how you look at it. At the SBPLI regional for the past two years we have been in dire straights financially. FIRST had to directly bail us out last year and who knows how we're paying for it this year. The district model IS cheaper and we have to be realistic about moving towards it--at least on LI. The School to Business Partnership of Long Island (SBPLI) was one of, if not the only outside entity to completely pay for it's own regional for all the years that we had one on LI and it was thought for a while that that was the model that most if not all regionals would move to. --Until the district model emerged. I know that the discussions in this thread have all been had by the "powers that be" and I'm sure that we'll start hearing about those conversations soon. Another problem is that this isn't just a "Let's do it next year" kind of thing. From speaking to several who have helped run districts, it takes years to organize. If that is the direction that we're going to go in, then we'll need to know soon. But for now...Let's have fun in St. Louis!!!!!! |
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My this metric, NYC would be much better than Albany (for a NY DCMP) because fewer teams would need hotels. NYC would also probably be the best spot for Eric's entire Northeast district (which, I might add, is a colossally horrible idea). |
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What about the cost of getting a hotel in NYC... That is almost 2-3 times the cost of anywhere else in the state
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What I'm hearing a lot of in this thread is that a NYC DCMP would be extremely difficult for upstate teams, and an upstate DCMP would be extremely difficult for NYC teams, almost impossible for most. I'm not sure how to resolve this. Also for what it's worth, I'm pretty sure that at least some of the New York RDs are meeting with FRC staff in St Louis to discuss the plan for New York districts. |
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Personally I still think the geographic center is the best option (Albany/Binghamton) for a DCMP, but I'm willing to be proven wrong. Binghamton does seem to be more centrally located than Albany for many teams: Buffalo to Binghamton: 3.5 hours Montauk to Binghamton: 5 hours NYC to Binghamton: 3 hours Clarkson to Binghamton: 3.5 hours Albany to Binghamton: 2.5 hours Buffalo to Albany: 4.5 hours Rochester to Albany: 3.5 hours Montauk to Albany: 4.5 hours NYC to Albany: 3 hours Clarkson to Albany: 3.5 hours Buffalo to NYC: 6 hours Rochester to NYC: 5 hours Albany to NYC: 3 hours Clarkson to NYC: 6 hours Montauk to NYC: 3 hours These numbers are all based on driving distances, rather than public transit, which may make them unrepresentative for some teams who rely on public transit to attend events. |
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My main point was that 'cost' is a better indicator of where to place the DCMP than 'travel time'. This includes how many teams would need hotels and how much those hotels would cost. Quote:
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And I agree about the cost/travel time point for the most part. I guess I didn't understand what you meant at first. Meaning we'd need to consider how many teams would need hotels, how much each hotel would cost, how will those teams get there (for some teams that means "is there public transit that connects that DCMP location"), and a number of other factors. |
This thread is becoming a repeated argument but whatever.
It Comes down to does everyone suffer or do 1/3 of the teams suffer. I admit upstate teams get screwed but they are only 1/3 of the teams and as a minority that's someone that has to be done. If dcmp was in the geographic center Albany (binghamton is a 4 and a half hour drive from li i don't care what Google maps says) Only about 5 teams would actually benefit from it being in Albany. So the rest of the 150ish would have to all travel. Yea it's a little cheaper for upstate teams but that doesn't account for saved money by not having to have cars or buses accessible.. In a place like Albany you need a bus or a car to go to eat back to the hotel and to and from the venue. In nyc everything is so close that you can usually walk through all those if not taking the the subway which is affordable. With that in mind it will most likely cost the same for upstate teams to come down to the city regardless of the added hotel costs. |
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I was concerned when the PNW went to the district model two years ago... I had all the same questions and concerns that NY teams have been raising in this thread.... Two years later, it is confirmed: the district model isn't perfect. However, the positives seem to outweigh the negatives.
Positives: * Lower income teams that tended not to qualify for advancement, now have two events and more than double the number of matches - for $4K instead if $5K. * Smaller events make it easier for lesser known teams to get noticed - and helped if needed. * Nearly every team has at least one event close enough to home that hotels are not necessary. Most teams (those in more densely populated areas) have two- though some choose to do an overnight trip anyhow. * A higher percentage of teams are able to play in an "advanced" event with a higher level of play. (Previously, it was only Champsionships after a regional.) This event has the same ambiance as a regional and costs the same amount as a regional. Moreover, a good handful of teams don't need to travel to attend. * There is a lot of opportunity to "fix," "upgrade," and repair a robot before the next event. Allowing for an increase in student learning and robot performance. * Overall, a stronger cross section of robots from the geographic area attend champs. Negatives: * Let's face it, high school gyms do not have the same "pop" as the locations used for regionals. Teams that do not make the district champs miss out on this completely. * Teams that qualify for champs, do have additional entry fees to pay if they are to to attend over the teams that typically play in one regional, then attend champs. However, for teams that would play in two regionals anyhow, it's a wash. * The additional one or two weekends of competition (not to mention days between!) can be taxing on mentors....and students' grades. * Some teams believe that it lowers their chances of getting to Champs... This is true for some: Weaker robots that rely on being that last pick of the #1 alliance in a regional event will struggle to accumulate enough district points to advance past district champs. However, I don't think this is a bad thing. Overall, I do think it has been a very good move for the PNW - and I was a skeptic at first. I would encourage all NY teams to take a good, fair, look at it. Yes, each geographic area is different, but there are many ways to account for theses regional differences in the institution of a district model for FRC. |
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This is only discussing DCMP, and only the teams that qualify for DCMP have to worry about these travel times and costs. Quote:
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With a quick google search, I found the cheapest hotel I could find was $135/night, while the cheapest hotels in Albany are about $45/night. That's a substantial difference. I understand that NY as one district has some difficulties, especially in locating a suitable place for a district championship, but I'd ask you consider the effects on every team that would qualify, and understand that there are teams with monetary and logistical problems everywhere in the state. Quote:
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Re: New York Districts?
In my opinion, the only neat way to resolve the DCMP difference is to split New York into two districts. It solves almost every issue with very limited downside.
- Each region is big enough to have its own district - Downstate can have a NYC DCMP, upstate can have one in Rochester (or another upstate city) - Even if we made one big district, the downstate teams would play downstate districts, and vice versa for upstate, essentially splitting the region already |
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*$6K for Rookies. |
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When driving up what takes the longest is getting through the city and the LIE, when on the thruway it's not bad. To avoid problems in the city you just need to leave during non rush hour times. |
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I cannot speak for the inner workings of FIRST. I can tell you that when we were in regionals, we spent $5K to get going and it covered the KoP and our first regional. This year, I paid $4K to start and it covered the KoP and two district competitions... It could be that rookie teams still pay the extra $1,000 - so $5K for both events. I believe that the main reason for this is that renting a venue large enough for a regional competition is quite expensive, but HS gymnasiums are relatively cheap - sometimes free if the event is "hosted" by that high school's FRC team... That savings is passed on to the teams. |
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I know it changes year to year but how many of these teams in the top 60 are from downstate and how many are in areas other then downstate??
http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...ork+ranking s |
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I really think that two districts, or one district and one region merged into the other, is the way to go here. I would even be fine if NYC / LI teams could opt to get real district points from events in the surrounding 3 districts. |
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Just trying to prevent mis-information about the fees from getting out there. |
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