Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s fraud. I work in MCPS and we’ve caught people doing this and kicked the kid out of the school mid year. Do you want to run that risk?
How often do you catch people? Very very rare to get caught. Families have done this for years without consequence.
MCPS does not have the resources or the ability to enforce residency requirements.
Actually if you read today's WaPo-we have a whole lot of people working on this.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/dc-politics/stop-enrollment-fraud-dc-school-officials-are-often-the-ones-committing-it/2018/04/16/03b816c0-3ce7-11e8-8d53-eba0ed2371cc_story.html?noredirect=on&utm_term=.31ab34d29013
In neighboring Montgomery County, Md., where the public school system has almost twice as many students as the District, a spokesman said 52 employees spend at least part of their time on residency investigations. Last fiscal year, the system investigated 225 residency claims and found 135 of those families lived outside the county.
In Virginia’s Fairfax County, the school district’s central office employs 15 attendance officers whose duties include investigating residency fraud. A spokesman said fewer than 100 students were found to be living outside Fairfax County each year for the past eight years.
The District currently has a single investigator responsible for all residency fraud cases.
52 people devoted to residency cheating with 225 cases a year? Would be nice to have some of those central office staff dedicated to actually working directly with our students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s fraud. I work in MCPS and we’ve caught people doing this and kicked the kid out of the school mid year. Do you want to run that risk?
How often do you catch people? Very very rare to get caught. Families have done this for years without consequence.
MCPS does not have the resources or the ability to enforce residency requirements.
Actually if you read today's WaPo-we have a whole lot of people working on this.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/dc-politics/stop-enrollment-fraud-dc-school-officials-are-often-the-ones-committing-it/2018/04/16/03b816c0-3ce7-11e8-8d53-eba0ed2371cc_story.html?noredirect=on&utm_term=.31ab34d29013
In neighboring Montgomery County, Md., where the public school system has almost twice as many students as the District, a spokesman said 52 employees spend at least part of their time on residency investigations. Last fiscal year, the system investigated 225 residency claims and found 135 of those families lived outside the county.
In Virginia’s Fairfax County, the school district’s central office employs 15 attendance officers whose duties include investigating residency fraud. A spokesman said fewer than 100 students were found to be living outside Fairfax County each year for the past eight years.
The District currently has a single investigator responsible for all residency fraud cases.
Anonymous wrote:“The only non-resident students who will be considered for admission to Montgomery County Schools are children of year-long contracted employees of MCPS.”
http://www.mcps.org/parents/transfer_requests
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s fraud. I work in MCPS and we’ve caught people doing this and kicked the kid out of the school mid year. Do you want to run that risk?
How often do you catch people? Very very rare to get caught. Families have done this for years without consequence.
MCPS does not have the resources or the ability to enforce residency requirements.
In neighboring Montgomery County, Md., where the public school system has almost twice as many students as the District, a spokesman said 52 employees spend at least part of their time on residency investigations. Last fiscal year, the system investigated 225 residency claims and found 135 of those families lived outside the county.
In Virginia’s Fairfax County, the school district’s central office employs 15 attendance officers whose duties include investigating residency fraud. A spokesman said fewer than 100 students were found to be living outside Fairfax County each year for the past eight years.
The District currently has a single investigator responsible for all residency fraud cases.
Anonymous wrote:It’s fraud. I work in MCPS and we’ve caught people doing this and kicked the kid out of the school mid year. Do you want to run that risk?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You do not need to pay! Find someone who lives in MCPS that you can trust and ask to use their address. We have so many people who do this at our ES and MS. Much easier.
You know people go to jail for this, right? Why go through a bunch of drama to find the wrong to do it when you can just as easily do it the right way?
Anonymous wrote:Can a DC resident pay for their child(ren) to attend a MD public school?
Anonymous wrote:You do not need to pay! Find someone who lives in MCPS that you can trust and ask to use their address. We have so many people who do this at our ES and MS. Much easier.
Anonymous wrote:You do not need to pay! Find someone who lives in MCPS that you can trust and ask to use their address. We have so many people who do this at our ES and MS. Much easier.