Anonymous wrote:It's illegal and not worth the risk. However, I believe families can pay tuition to attend public schools in districts where they do not reside. Anything else would be ridiculous. Can you imagine the humiliation a child would feel if one day they were expelled from school for a parent's unwillingness to pay a small tuition fee. Or the attorney's fees, lost time from work, potential loss of a security clearance, plus fines accessed in court proceeding.
Totally not worth it.
Unless of course you're talking about DCPS where they practically encourage it just to keep enrollment numbers high enough to keep schools open and to justify adequate staffing. Everyone has an uncle with a mailing address in D.C.
Anonymous wrote:I was talking to a parent in my child's school. They just sold their house. They will be moving out of the school boundary, but still within the county. However, they are going to continue to keep their child in the current school, because they don't have child care at the new school. As you know SACC waiting lists are long and if you move, you go to the back of the line and lose your child care.
Has anyone ever done this or known someone who has? I see these news stories about people getting arrested for "stealing" an education in other parts of the country. I have never heard of such a prosecution in Fairfax.
What happens if they get caught???
It makes me wonder about a SACC system that makes people so desperate they sneak across boundary lines just to keep their child care.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also--SACC gives priority to transfers. They're basically at the top of the list at the new school.
This. We moved mid-year and kept our child at the original school. We spoke with both schools, and they agreed it was in our child's best interest to finish out the year at the school where he started. We made it into SACC at the original school, and wait listed the new school for the following year. Since we were considered a transfer, we got priority status on the new school list. We receive a SACC spot at the new school when we started the following year. Without the priority, we would still be on the waitlist!
Anonymous wrote:Also--SACC gives priority to transfers. They're basically at the top of the list at the new school.
Anonymous wrote:Also--SACC gives priority to transfers. They're basically at the top of the list at the new school.
Anonymous wrote:I was talking to a parent in my child's school. They just sold their house. They will be moving out of the school boundary, but still within the county. However, they are going to continue to keep their child in the current school, because they don't have child care at the new school. As you know SACC waiting lists are long and if you move, you go to the back of the line and lose your child care.
Has anyone ever done this or known someone who has? I see these news stories about people getting arrested for "stealing" an education in other parts of the country. I have never heard of such a prosecution in Fairfax.
What happens if they get caught???
It makes me wonder about a SACC system that makes people so desperate they sneak across boundary lines just to keep their child care.
Anonymous wrote:Why don't you tell on them and see what happens?