Anonymous wrote:As somebody who was investigated for residency/boundary fraud by DCPS a few years ago (and cleared on the spot) after a divorce I can offer insight. In my experience, if you have the correct residency docs and pay DC income tax, DCPS looks no further. If you're investigated, you need to show your most recent DC tax return and other docs linking you to the in-boundary address. Not a bad idea to have a DC drivers license with your in-boundary address on it. That's it, that's the investigation. DCPS home visits to investigate residency on the part of schools are an urban myth, nothing more. But you shouldn't be dumb enough to claim the DC homeowners exemption on a residential property where you live but aren't using as in-boundary address for a school. And you want to pick up DC official mail from the in-boundary address on a regular basis. If you can't swing both things, don't use that address in-boundary if you aren't living there year-round. The risk is too great.
That may have been the case a few years ago. Now, they're doing home visits for EVERY incoming 9th grader whose kid didn't go to one of the feeder schools. We've lived zoned for JR for 11 years, and we're going to have to have a home visit.