Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A coworker uses her grandmother’s address, changed her license to DC, and changed her taxes to DC. Why? So her kid could go to a charter school in DC. She lives with her husband and daughter in a house they own in PG County. The school actually coached her on what to do. I’d report her but unless they follow her home every day, how can her fraud be proven?
If she pays taxes, not sure I have an issue with it.
what if she pays less than the $19,000+ DC pays per child each year? What if she gets a refund of everything she put in (and more, because of EITC and other credits)? Also she's presumably cheating MD of taxes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A coworker uses her grandmother’s address, changed her license to DC, and changed her taxes to DC. Why? So her kid could go to a charter school in DC. She lives with her husband and daughter in a house they own in PG County. The school actually coached her on what to do. I’d report her but unless they follow her home every day, how can her fraud be proven?
When there is a credible report, they look at things like voter registration, social media history, interview the family, and yes, sometimes follow them home or at least visit the address they are claiming. They will also ask for more documentation than what you must produce when you register your child -- and look at when they 'moved' to DC.
You should report this and let OSSE take it from there. They may not catch her, but hopefully the school would get greater scrutiny.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A coworker uses her grandmother’s address, changed her license to DC, and changed her taxes to DC. Why? So her kid could go to a charter school in DC. She lives with her husband and daughter in a house they own in PG County. The school actually coached her on what to do. I’d report her but unless they follow her home every day, how can her fraud be proven?
If she pays taxes, not sure I have an issue with it.
Anonymous wrote:A coworker uses her grandmother’s address, changed her license to DC, and changed her taxes to DC. Why? So her kid could go to a charter school in DC. She lives with her husband and daughter in a house they own in PG County. The school actually coached her on what to do. I’d report her but unless they follow her home every day, how can her fraud be proven?
Anonymous wrote:A coworker uses her grandmother’s address, changed her license to DC, and changed her taxes to DC. Why? So her kid could go to a charter school in DC. She lives with her husband and daughter in a house they own in PG County. The school actually coached her on what to do. I’d report her but unless they follow her home every day, how can her fraud be proven?
Anonymous wrote:Problem is that people think because they feel dc or big mama lives there that they can escape the nightmare that are PG schools and drop off on their way to legacy DC gov jobs that they aren’t really classically qualified for. The DC gov turns a blind eye because they don’t want to have a crack down mostly effect black people and appear to be bowing down to the recent white residents. As if enforcing rules and financial compliance are white people things![]()
Anonymous wrote:Common problem everywhere that I don't think school officials want to address. Federal funds are tied to the number of enrolled students. It's not difficult to use technology and perform cross checks for enrollment eligibility. Citizens have to hold the powers that be accountable before anything happens. To my knowledge DCPS, doesn't have a CIO. However, they could leverage the the DC's CIO for assistance or hire their own. Maybe some turf wars but it can be done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've said this before and I'll say it again, the problem is not the paper work. Parents are turning in the paper work that shows they are residents when they aren't. The problem is how easy it is to fool the system
+1
I'm hoping that they start to do more to cross-check information with other governments offices--the address you give for your school enrollment application should match the address on your tax returns, your driver's license, the address that the local benefits office has on file for you, etc. A discrepancy = an automatic audit. If there's a good reason why things don't match up--fine. If not, you're out.
Anonymous wrote:I've said this before and I'll say it again, the problem is not the paper work. Parents are turning in the paper work that shows they are residents when they aren't. The problem is how easy it is to fool the system