Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Needs to be shut down. The city can not justify spending so much on so few.
The city spends the same on Ellington per pupil as every other high school. The extra money spent there for the arts faculty and curriculum is raised from private sources.
The capital budget is a whole separate thing.
You're ignoring the main point: that well over 1/5 of the students at Ellington may be going there on the taxpayers' EXTRA dime. If those kids are not D.C. residents, the effect is DCPS paying twice, three times, as much per (real) D.C. student at Ellington than for D.C. students at other DCPS schools, where hopefully all of the students are actually D.C. residents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Needs to be shut down. The city can not justify spending so much on so few.
The city spends the same on Ellington per pupil as every other high school. The extra money spent there for the arts faculty and curriculum is raised from private sources.
The capital budget is a whole separate thing.
Anonymous wrote:Needs to be shut down. The city can not justify spending so much on so few.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really don’t understand the assertion that the school has incorrect addresses on file. Every year you have to verify residency and fill out forms where you have to write your address umpteen times (which I’ve always found ridiculous, why can’t there be a check box for “address same as student” for both guardian spaces instead of having to rewrite 3x on each form). So unless you move during the school year, your correct address would be on a half dozen forms. I’d be shocked if 160+ families from the school moved within DC within the year.
Maybe they never updated the records? Or updated one set of records and not those that were transferred from wherever the student did 8th grade?
Why are you so confident that DCPS staff (and the administrative people at Ellington are DCPS employees, not foundation employees) did their jobs?
Anonymous wrote:I really don’t understand the assertion that the school has incorrect addresses on file. Every year you have to verify residency and fill out forms where you have to write your address umpteen times (which I’ve always found ridiculous, why can’t there be a check box for “address same as student” for both guardian spaces instead of having to rewrite 3x on each form). So unless you move during the school year, your correct address would be on a half dozen forms. I’d be shocked if 160+ families from the school moved within DC within the year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not shocking but still disconcerting that the school has incorrect addresses on file for some of the families accused of residency fraud. Those families might not have received notification of contested residency thus may not be asserting their rights to due process if that charge is inaccurate. The article also interviews a family accused of residency fraud despite 27 years residency at the same DC address. At least that case was dismissed.
What a mess
The only ones who should be surprised are those who don't actually live in D.C.! Like, have y'all ever had to deal with DC public services? It's like you don't know we're the worst-run major city in the United States. Must live in P.G., all I gotta say.
Anonymous wrote:Not shocking but still disconcerting that the school has incorrect addresses on file for some of the families accused of residency fraud. Those families might not have received notification of contested residency thus may not be asserting their rights to due process if that charge is inaccurate. The article also interviews a family accused of residency fraud despite 27 years residency at the same DC address. At least that case was dismissed.
What a mess