Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are paying for two homes in DC, each one entities them to its IB school. Double the taxes, double the options. Nobody's business where they choose to spend the night.
Er, "residency" does encompass where you sleep. The IRS certainly cares, and so does DCPS.
Not really,"domicile" laws vary from state to state. As long as you comply with state law on residency, and file and pay both state and federal taxes, the IRS doesn't in fact care where you sleep.
DCPS doesn't care where you sleep either, at least for now. They care where you get mail, pay utilities, and pay taxes.
I'm not arguing in favor of breaking OSSE or DCPS rules on residency, only pointing out that the rules on in-boundary residence simply don't read like those protesting "address cheating by DC taxpayers" dearly wish they did.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are paying for two homes in DC, each one entities them to its IB school. Double the taxes, double the options. Nobody's business where they choose to spend the night.
That is not what OP is doing. Perhaps a course in reading comprehension would benefit you. And yes, it matters where they live even if that were the case.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are paying for two homes in DC, each one entities them to its IB school. Double the taxes, double the options. Nobody's business where they choose to spend the night.
Er, "residency" does encompass where you sleep. The IRS certainly cares, and so does DCPS.
Anonymous wrote:They are paying for two homes in DC, each one entities them to its IB school. Double the taxes, double the options. Nobody's business where they choose to spend the night.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you cheater-haters want the OSSE rules on residency to read "the student gets thrown out of his or her public school immediately if it's determined that s/he hasn't slept at the address provided at least 50% of the nights in the last calendar year," why not campaign for that, make it happen?
I don't see a rule anything like that in any of the OSSE docs on residency, at least the ones on their web pages. Slamming parents who aren't breaking the current rules on thread after thread seems like a waste of time.
Here are the full regulations as updated in March 2017 - they are lengthier than what OSSE puts on its website.
They set forth how residency is established in all sorts of scenarios including divorced, separated parents or never married parents, wards of the state, undocumented students and homeless students.
They are silent on the DC boundary rules -- only about proving DC residency.
http://dcregs.dc.gov/Gateway/RuleHome.aspx?RuleNumber=5-A5004
Thanks for sharing. Since OSSE is in fact silent on the DC boundary rules, what leg do you residency vigilantes have to stand on legally?
You can bitch and moan about cheaters paying DC taxes and using rental units and relatives' addresses to enroll as violations of the spirit of the law without that getting you anywhere in particular. I'd give it a rest.
So then there are no real boundaries? What is the point of the in boundary preference in the PK lottery?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here's a concrete example of why this is not a good idea. I live in the Ross ES school zone, which is a super-highly rated school with PK3. They have home visits for pre-K kids. In the past, teachers have scheduled home visits right before the school year started, realized the parents in fact, did not live within the boundary, and the kids were not allowed to take those PK slots and I would guess, had to scramble to find a new option in August.
And also agree with other people that OP's conscience should not be "clean."
This is 100% urban myth. We opted out of our home visit and still attend.
So how many people do you think are cheating like you? Is is a lot?
Is it possible that all of the money and time being spent trying to solve the overcrowding issues in Ward 3 are actually not needed and simple enforcement of living in boundary will solve the problem?
Relax. We live IB. But there is zero truth to you skipping a home visit and kids not allowed to take PK spots. What person who cheats does a home visit?
Anonymous wrote:They are paying for two homes in DC, each one entities them to its IB school. Double the taxes, double the options. Nobody's business where they choose to spend the night.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you cheater-haters want the OSSE rules on residency to read "the student gets thrown out of his or her public school immediately if it's determined that s/he hasn't slept at the address provided at least 50% of the nights in the last calendar year," why not campaign for that, make it happen?
I don't see a rule anything like that in any of the OSSE docs on residency, at least the ones on their web pages. Slamming parents who aren't breaking the current rules on thread after thread seems like a waste of time.
Here are the full regulations as updated in March 2017 - they are lengthier than what OSSE puts on its website.
They set forth how residency is established in all sorts of scenarios including divorced, separated parents or never married parents, wards of the state, undocumented students and homeless students.
They are silent on the DC boundary rules -- only about proving DC residency.
http://dcregs.dc.gov/Gateway/RuleHome.aspx?RuleNumber=5-A5004
Thanks for sharing. Since OSSE is in fact silent on the DC boundary rules, what leg do you residency vigilantes have to stand on legally?
You can bitch and moan about cheaters paying DC taxes and using rental units and relatives' addresses to enroll as violations of the spirit of the law without that getting you anywhere in particular. I'd give it a rest.
So then there are no real boundaries? What is the point of the in boundary preference in the PK lottery?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you cheater-haters want the OSSE rules on residency to read "the student gets thrown out of his or her public school immediately if it's determined that s/he hasn't slept at the address provided at least 50% of the nights in the last calendar year," why not campaign for that, make it happen?
I don't see a rule anything like that in any of the OSSE docs on residency, at least the ones on their web pages. Slamming parents who aren't breaking the current rules on thread after thread seems like a waste of time.
Here are the full regulations as updated in March 2017 - they are lengthier than what OSSE puts on its website.
They set forth how residency is established in all sorts of scenarios including divorced, separated parents or never married parents, wards of the state, undocumented students and homeless students.
They are silent on the DC boundary rules -- only about proving DC residency.
http://dcregs.dc.gov/Gateway/RuleHome.aspx?RuleNumber=5-A5004
Thanks for sharing. Since OSSE is in fact silent on the DC boundary rules, what leg do you residency vigilantes have to stand on legally?
You can bitch and moan about cheaters paying DC taxes and using rental units and relatives' addresses to enroll as violations of the spirit of the law without that getting you anywhere in particular. I'd give it a rest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here's a concrete example of why this is not a good idea. I live in the Ross ES school zone, which is a super-highly rated school with PK3. They have home visits for pre-K kids. In the past, teachers have scheduled home visits right before the school year started, realized the parents in fact, did not live within the boundary, and the kids were not allowed to take those PK slots and I would guess, had to scramble to find a new option in August.
And also agree with other people that OP's conscience should not be "clean."
This is 100% urban myth. We opted out of our home visit and still attend.
So how many people do you think are cheating like you? Is is a lot?
Is it possible that all of the money and time being spent trying to solve the overcrowding issues in Ward 3 are actually not needed and simple enforcement of living in boundary will solve the problem?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you cheater-haters want the OSSE rules on residency to read "the student gets thrown out of his or her public school immediately if it's determined that s/he hasn't slept at the address provided at least 50% of the nights in the last calendar year," why not campaign for that, make it happen?
I don't see a rule anything like that in any of the OSSE docs on residency, at least the ones on their web pages. Slamming parents who aren't breaking the current rules on thread after thread seems like a waste of time.
Here are the full regulations as updated in March 2017 - they are lengthier than what OSSE puts on its website.
They set forth how residency is established in all sorts of scenarios including divorced, separated parents or never married parents, wards of the state, undocumented students and homeless students.
They are silent on the DC boundary rules -- only about proving DC residency.
http://dcregs.dc.gov/Gateway/RuleHome.aspx?RuleNumber=5-A5004