There is another factor at work. Some countries require their families with children rent only in two school districts. Neither is DCPS. |
| I thought this was going to be about very tactful kids. . . |
Require? Which countries are those? |
Diplomat here - we do not pay income taxes and most of us do not pay sales taxes either (depends on the country though). This is based on reciprocity (US diplomats do not pay taxes abroad either, and US Embassies usually have much more personnel overseas than we do here!) Having said that, most of my colleagues and friends’ children attend DC public schools (some go to Maryland or Virginia’s schools) and my son will hopefully get a spot in pk3 for the next academic year (yes, we also have to suffer from DC lottery stress even though in my country of origin I would have an excellent PK spot guaranteed, along with very affordable health care! ). Most people send their kids to the school close to the Embassy because that is usually our official address.
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Thanks for chiming in! |
| All the NW elementary schools seem to have decent number of diplomatic officer kids. Our neighborhood has quite a few that go to Stoddert. |
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We live in Bethesda, and lots of diplomatic children in our ES. The schools get reimbursed by the Federal government for any student where the parents are working on federal property or in active duty military, and for _some_ foreign diplomats if they are military officers. Here's the form they send out each year:
https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/forms/pdf/280-4.pdf |
| Diplomats do not pay taxes, neither do non-US citizen World Bank/ IMF/ IADB Staff. Not only that, I remember going shopping with an Embassy friend, long time ago. They do not have to pay sales taxes on their purchases. But kids can attend public school, just like any kid. Not only that, what amazed me was that we had a diplomatic family who just moved to DC (this was a few years back), and the kid got into PK-4 with the lottery, without speaking a word of English. While several long-time, tax-paying, DC residents did not get in. |
My husband is not a US citizen and he pays plenty of taxes. Even undocumented workers pay taxes. They just can’t do a tax return and get anything back—a gift to the US treasury. |
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Maybe those diplomat plates at times are drivers who drop their kids off at school (and not necessarily the diplomat).
Would a driver get diplomatic immunity if a non-dc resident, but non-diplomat? |
meaning diplomatic immunity for residency fraud? |
If the kid got in through the lottery, it was a legitimate entry. Ability to speak English is not a prerequisite for public education. |
In this area lots of kids who are not kids of diplomats come from abroad and also don’t speak English at the start. And whether from abroad, Wyoming, or N. Va, a new resident to DC has as much right to a lottery spot as someone here for years or generations. If you don’t like that rule, lobby the DC government to create a longer residency requirement. |
+1. My kid’s friend didn’t speak a word of English starting PK3, as she spoke a different language at home (not Spanish or French). She picked up English quickly and was speaking it well after a few months. |
+1. |