Anonymous wrote:Do what you want OP, just make sure you create all the residency docs DCPS wants to verify residency. We started on gf in a small house in Ward 6 during the ECE years. We continued to use that address for six years after we’d moved out, living in a much bigger house nearby. We rented the small house to young single people month to month during the 6 years. People at our DCPS didn’t necessarily know if we’d lotteried in or had an IB address. No great stress involved in staying at the same DCPS ES for 8 years. You pay taxes and own real estate. Use the IB address you want for school of the residential properties you own. Just be careful who you tell.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have to actually live there, at least at the time of enrollment. Owning property isn't enough. They might not check, but if you want to know the rule, it's that you have to live there.
Consider how you would explain it to other parents if you want to have any playdates at your house. There's a lot of social shade thrown at boundary cheaters.
I think it’s actually ambiguous if you have multiple houses that no one lives in, especially if you could legitimately meet the residency documentation requirements at multiple of them. Then for most legal purposes, you could claim any as your residence. If what you mean is you own a house you rent out to someone else, then legally they can claim that as their residence and you cannot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have to actually live there, at least at the time of enrollment. Owning property isn't enough. They might not check, but if you want to know the rule, it's that you have to live there.
Consider how you would explain it to other parents if you want to have any playdates at your house. There's a lot of social shade thrown at boundary cheaters.
I think it’s actually ambiguous if you have multiple houses that no one lives in, especially if you could legitimately meet the residency documentation requirements at multiple of them. Then for most legal purposes, you could claim any as your residence. If what you mean is you own a house you rent out to someone else, then legally they can claim that as their residence and you cannot.
Anonymous wrote:You have to actually live there, at least at the time of enrollment. Owning property isn't enough. They might not check, but if you want to know the rule, it's that you have to live there.
Consider how you would explain it to other parents if you want to have any playdates at your house. There's a lot of social shade thrown at boundary cheaters.