what do middle income households who have kiddos with SN do in the DMV?

Anonymous
Private school is not a realistic option. Moving to a 1M neighborhood and doing public is not a realistic option. What to do/where to live with half-way decent public options?
Anonymous
Supplement at home, use the free tutoring the school system offers, go to sliding fee private therapies at universities, and insurance pay therapies.
Anonymous
Go broke. At least that's what I'm doing.
Anonymous
Schools in rich neighborhoods don’t have the market on good services for kids with special needs. We’re in MoCo and live in what people here consider an u desirable area. My two kids with special needs have gotten excellent services. I worked very hard with the IEP teams and school counselors to make sure services and accommodations were in place and being delivered.
Anonymous
Do you live in the District? You can get a waiver pretty easily.

Anyway, we used to live in the District. We considered the suburbs but ultimately packed it in and moved to a LOC area. Husband went back to school to get a better paying job so I could be a SAHM.
Anonymous
You don’t need a $1 m home to access the public system, as the school district will bus your child to a school with appropriate services.
Anonymous
Special needs is a broad category. We made very different choices for two very different kids.
Anonymous
What to do? Restructure your life around the situation, then work from there. We were lucky to already be living in Montgomery County but know another family that moved here to take advantage of the services available through the school system. Buy less house than you'd like (or just rent) because there will never be enough money. Job choice is driven by the need for stability and gold-plated health benefits. Get hooked up with a support community of other families in similar boats because there's always that one parent who can help you through a tough spot.
Anonymous
I'm in the same boat as 7:09 although we bought our house before we thought about having kids. We thought we'd trade up at some point but even though this house is smaller than what I really wanted, it's bigger than the house I grew up in, it's conveniently located and we can't get better for the price.

Our local school is a Title 1 school and, honestly, I think it probably better served us than a public school in a richer area. The student/teacher ratios were lower and the school had additional resources available to it. It served our NT kids as well as our kids with SN. The school applied for grants and several summers were able to offer a type of summer school. Teachers were awesome and while the PTA was under-resourced, there was still enough involvement to feel like there was a community

As far as jobs, my DH and I both changed jobs a different times to accommodate our need for flexibility. I've always been the primary breadwinner so I couldn't take a reduction in salary but I did get off the career track. I took a job that I'd done 10 years earlier because the pay was the same and I was a LOT closer to home. My boss had kids with SN and allowed me a lot more flexibility than my other jobs to work around kids' appointments/needs. I put in 110% for that job because I really appreciated the flexibility and wanted to ensure she never regretted it.

We took no vacations (other than to visit family members) for over 10 years, we didn't outsource any household work, no date nights, rarely ate out and went to just about every free event in the DMV. We did continue to contribute to retirement and contributed $50 each month to each kids' 529 (even though we knew at least 1 kid would not go to college). I stopped getting my hair colored/highlighted, no more fancy beauty products and I packed lunch/coffee for work every day. Oh, and we never bought a new car. We even got our van used and are still driving it 16 years later.
Anonymous
1. Bought a 625K house in Bethesda in 2010 on an 80K HHI. We lived extremely frugally to save for a downpayment for the 10 years before that and received loans from our parents to meet a 40% downpayment. This put us in bounds for a cluster that is reputed for its care of special needs kids (and DS was place in the neighboring cluster after that, in a special program). We never had to fight for the IEP in Kindergarten, or any additional service or accommodation in all his years in MCPS.

2. I was forced to quit my job to care for our oldest, born with special needs. Since it was at a critical time in my career, I can't go back to work in that field or associated fields. However this also eliminated daycare, aftercare and camp costs for our children. We were able to have other kids thanks to this set-up.

Anonymous
We bought a much smaller house than what we can actually afford.

We drive basic cars which are sturdy.

We live frugally. Not counting every dollar and cents but the lens we use is want vs need.

We don't have any credit card debt.

And we're blessed to have jobs that offer some flexibility in terms of hours so we are able to drop off and pick up our child from a SN school ourselves.
Anonymous
One stay at home parent if possible - I realize that's unrealistic for many but certainly workable if willing to economize on housing, neighborhood, lifestyle.
Anonymous
We bought a fixer-upper twice. One thing I can say based on our experience moving from east to west in Moco is that I don't necessarily think the W school cluster is the best place for kids with needs. Even in elementary school there are high pressure parents who accelerate with at home lessons/tutoring. My typical kid, who is bright, is middle of the pack here. Having a SN kid seemed more normal in the east of the county because there were more of them. And private therapies were less expensive too. It wasn't odd that you wanted insurance coverage. At one point my kid who had some physical needs was at Stephen Knolls and I was sad to leave because there are no facilities like that in West Moco.
Anonymous
We moved to a lower COL area that has good public schools and cheaper private schools. We sent the SN DS to a SN school for a year and a half and then transferred him to the public school system.

I love the DMV. None of this would be possible, though, if we still lived there and we would be extremely stressed.
Anonymous
OP, you’re not alone. The long-term financial realities of caring for a special-needs child are daunting. Without knowing your details, hard to provide specific advice. The money stresses on a single parent are, obviously, way more acute than on a two-parent household. A stable job with health insurance and paid vacation is frankly, a must. (Bonus points for understanding colleagues!) I’m the budgeter/investment banker for our middle-income household. Here’s a few things we have done/are trying to do in order to manage:

- bought a 1200-ft house in Montgomery County ($500K), just off Sligo Creek near Holy Cross Hospital) with immediate access to parks, bike paths, and other free outdoor spaces
- maintain one modest car that we bought used 5 years ago
- ride public transit to work as much as possible
- work at home as much as bosses allow to keep transportation costs as low as possible
- grocery shop at Aldi and Costco
- cook at home, pack coffee and lunches for work
- cut hair at home
- recreate and socialize at parks, libraries, friends’ houses, our own backyard
- broadcast to neighbors and friends that we LOVE hand-me-down clothes, toys
- make use of our Facebook Buy Nothing Group for clothes, toys, household goods
- maximize all services available to our child via health insurance (ST, OT etc.)
- maximize all services available to our child through Montgomery County Public Schools (includes daily busing to special-ed class, ST, OT)
- seek out cheap/free activities and supports via relevant nonprofits (in our case, XMinds)
- listen to tons of free podcasts specific to child’s disability so I can continue to try and be the best parent possible
- “vacation” to the homes of supportive family and friends
- save slowly but steadily into emergency fund + retirement account
- try to DIY home and car repairs using YouTube (within reason!)

Things we do not do:
- buy clothes or toys new/retail
- buy new cell phones or other electronics
- eat in restaurants
- vacation to hotels or resorts
- hire babysitters, cleaners, gardeners
- pay to go to movies, concerts, shows
- try to keep up with wealthier friends

This stuff is hard. I stress money all the time. The setbacks are like one bite of humble pie after another. My life is not Instagram-able. And I can’t take my kids to Disneyworld. But we are housed, clothed, fed, and together, and we do have a bit of a financial floor underneath for when the poop hits the fan, as it inevitably will.

Best of luck to you.
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