Anonymous wrote:Yea, I don’t see how OP is going to pull this together and have appropriate documentation because she doesn’t even live in the city.
Anonymous wrote:"I don’t think we will find a home we like in the in-boundary school neighborhood, so we would prefer to stay OOB"
^ umm if you matched because of in-bound preference, you'll lose that spot if you can't prove you actually reside not just in DC but in that school's boundary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I suspect you'll need to (quickly!) find any rental you can in the district, sign a year lease, move in for a few weeks (adventure!), and then when you find your permanent location, move their and sublet your old place. You're also going to have to get your drivers license updated to your new address before 5/1 (just a lease isn't enough for enrollment).
It's important to note: You can't just rent the apartment and let it sit empty while you keep living in MD or VA or wherever. You have to MOVE THERE. Which may, technically, make your child ineligible to continue at their suburban school.
I mean, whether you can get away with it or not is a different question, but the letter and spirit of the law are quite clear: To enroll, you need to be a DC resident, and right now... you're not.
In addition to DC drivers license and registration, I recall 2 months worth of utilities bill too no?
Anonymous wrote:I suspect you'll need to (quickly!) find any rental you can in the district, sign a year lease, move in for a few weeks (adventure!), and then when you find your permanent location, move their and sublet your old place. You're also going to have to get your drivers license updated to your new address before 5/1 (just a lease isn't enough for enrollment).
It's important to note: You can't just rent the apartment and let it sit empty while you keep living in MD or VA or wherever. You have to MOVE THERE. Which may, technically, make your child ineligible to continue at their suburban school.
I mean, whether you can get away with it or not is a different question, but the letter and spirit of the law are quite clear: To enroll, you need to be a DC resident, and right now... you're not.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand how OP could even enter the lottery without putting in a DC address?
Anonymous wrote:Help!
Our DC received a great lottery match but we haven’t found a home in DC to move into in the two weeks since decisions were released and fear we won’t by the lottery acceptance deadline of 5/1. We would be moving into DC from the suburbs.
What are my options in order to keep the match? I don’t think we will find a home we like in the in-boundary school neighborhood, so we would prefer to stay OOB — at least for the first year, to confirm it is a fit. We have multiple kids.
If we had another 4-6 weeks we could find a suitable rental, I am sure of it.
Should we rent a place in DC just for a month, in order to use the address to reserve our DC’s spot for now, and then replace it with a more permanent DC address before school starts?