Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The rule is absolutely clear: students must attend the school for which they are zoned.
Question is:
- why should the OP follow the rules?
For over 100 years white families have been using fake addresses to attend better schools. Black and brown students didn’t have this option until desegregation. They weren’t allowed to live in better neighborhoods and as a result could never acquire as much wealth through buying property as white families. This lack of inherited wealth continues to marginalize many families of color because the schools in poorer areas are worse.
How can people not understand school boundaries in this country are really a form of continued segregation that continues to benefit upper middle class children.
Restorative justice and closing continuation schools affects schools in poorer areas because poor minority students who want to learn and get ahead have their education continually disrupted by 10 to 20% of students who wreak havoc at poor schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, its already incredibly easy to transfer into Langley. There are two ways and Langley loves having them
1) If you are zoned for a nearby IB school, its very straight forward. Submit the paperwork and you are accepted.
2) Transfer for Russian. This is the way that most of the top students transfer in through if they do not get into TJ.
There is no need to break the law.
1) A. Don't you need to be enrolled in an AP to do this? That will be hard for 9/10 graders.
B. This only work if the school is not at capacity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You would be responsible for repaying the $20,000 tuition when the fraud is uncovered and there are plenty of other parents or employees of the school system eager to turn you in. And, by the way, you would be the one committing the fraud.
Did you miss that the other family lives in Fairfax? Almost all of your analysis is wrong.
I don’t really care either way, but it bothers me when posters confidently proclaim that x or y will happen, when you have no basis for that claim.
Va. Code
§ 22.1-264.1. Misdemeanor to make false statements as to school division or attendance zone residency; penalty.
Any person who knowingly makes a false statement concerning the residency of a child, as determined by § 22.1-3, in a particular school division or school attendance zone, for the purposes of (i) avoiding the tuition charges authorized by § 22.1-5 or (ii) enrollment in a school outside the attendance zone in which the student resides, shall be guilty of a Class 4 misdemeanor and shall be liable to the school division in which the child was enrolled as a result of such false statements for tuition charges, pursuant to § 22.1-5, for the time the student was enrolled in such school division.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You would be responsible for repaying the $20,000 tuition when the fraud is uncovered and there are plenty of other parents or employees of the school system eager to turn you in. And, by the way, you would be the one committing the fraud.
Did you miss that the other family lives in Fairfax? Almost all of your analysis is wrong.
I don’t really care either way, but it bothers me when posters confidently proclaim that x or y will happen, when you have no basis for that claim.
Anonymous wrote:You would be responsible for repaying the $20,000 tuition when the fraud is uncovered and there are plenty of other parents or employees of the school system eager to turn you in. And, by the way, you would be the one committing the fraud.
Anonymous wrote:OP, its already incredibly easy to transfer into Langley. There are two ways and Langley loves having them
1) If you are zoned for a nearby IB school, its very straight forward. Submit the paperwork and you are accepted.
2) Transfer for Russian. This is the way that most of the top students transfer in through if they do not get into TJ.
There is no need to break the law.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The rule is absolutely clear: students must attend the school for which they are zoned.
Question is:
- why should the OP follow the rules?
For over 100 years white families have been using fake addresses to attend better schools. Black and brown students didn’t have this option until desegregation. They weren’t allowed to live in better neighborhoods and as a result could never acquire as much wealth through buying property as white families. This lack of inherited wealth continues to marginalize many families of color because the schools in poorer areas are worse.
How can people not understand school boundaries in this country are really a form of continued segregation that continues to benefit upper middle class children.
Restorative justice and closing continuation schools affects schools in poorer areas because poor minority students who want to learn and get ahead have their education continually disrupted by 10 to 20% of students who wreak havoc at poor schools.
That’s a pretty racist take, wouldn’t expect anything less from the equity warriors.
If you go after UMC families as you’d like, you destroy the system. That’s just the reality of the situation.
NP. Agree
DEI was and is racism. It’s bigotry, disguised as virtue.
+1
At its core, DEI seeks to treat people differently based on the color of their skin.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The rule is absolutely clear: students must attend the school for which they are zoned.
Question is:
- why should the OP follow the rules?
For over 100 years white families have been using fake addresses to attend better schools. Black and brown students didn’t have this option until desegregation. They weren’t allowed to live in better neighborhoods and as a result could never acquire as much wealth through buying property as white families. This lack of inherited wealth continues to marginalize many families of color because the schools in poorer areas are worse.
How can people not understand school boundaries in this country are really a form of continued segregation that continues to benefit upper middle class children.
Restorative justice and closing continuation schools affects schools in poorer areas because poor minority students who want to learn and get ahead have their education continually disrupted by 10 to 20% of students who wreak havoc at poor schools.
That’s a pretty racist take, wouldn’t expect anything less from the equity warriors.
If you go after UMC families as you’d like, you destroy the system. That’s just the reality of the situation.
NP. Agree
DEI was and is racism. It’s bigotry, disguised as virtue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The rule is absolutely clear: students must attend the school for which they are zoned.
Question is:
- why should the OP follow the rules?
For over 100 years white families have been using fake addresses to attend better schools. Black and brown students didn’t have this option until desegregation. They weren’t allowed to live in better neighborhoods and as a result could never acquire as much wealth through buying property as white families. This lack of inherited wealth continues to marginalize many families of color because the schools in poorer areas are worse.
How can people not understand school boundaries in this country are really a form of continued segregation that continues to benefit upper middle class children.
Restorative justice and closing continuation schools affects schools in poorer areas because poor minority students who want to learn and get ahead have their education continually disrupted by 10 to 20% of students who wreak havoc at poor schools.
That’s a pretty racist take, wouldn’t expect anything less from the equity warriors.
If you go after UMC families as you’d like, you destroy the system. That’s just the reality of the situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder how school districts across the county, in hundreds of school boundary fraud cases, prove the elements of fraud?
Hmmm.
Please point us to the docket for any of those cases. Like literally just one of the supposed “hundreds” of cases.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The rule is absolutely clear: students must attend the school for which they are zoned.
Question is:
- why should the OP follow the rules?
For over 100 years white families have been using fake addresses to attend better schools. Black and brown students didn’t have this option until desegregation. They weren’t allowed to live in better neighborhoods and as a result could never acquire as much wealth through buying property as white families. This lack of inherited wealth continues to marginalize many families of color because the schools in poorer areas are worse.
How can people not understand school boundaries in this country are really a form of continued segregation that continues to benefit upper middle class children.
Restorative justice and closing continuation schools affects schools in poorer areas because poor minority students who want to learn and get ahead have their education continually disrupted by 10 to 20% of students who wreak havoc at poor schools.