Anonymous wrote:It’s fraud and if you get caught, you’ll be fined and forced to pay each years tuition for each child...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCPS is supported by the DC tax base. When high SES parents flee the city, as they did en masse in the 80s and 90s, the tax base contracts. Parents who "work the system" generally can't afford privates, at least not easily, and aren't going to leave the Metro area.
Once overcrowded DCPS schools like Janney, Lafayette and Murch, and now Maury on Cap Hill, have seen their capacity increase substantially through building additions in recent years, financed with tax payers dollars.
My vote is for everybody high SES who elects to stay using an IB address for a DCPS school they're willing to use, whatever the hassle and risk involved in securing one, to continue to pay into city coffers, rather than running off to the burbs.
A low or middle-income SES earner who's renting can't expand the tax base like a parent investing in DC real estate and paying property tax, preferably on multiple properties. The larger the tax base, the more funds available for services to the poor. The more high SES families who stay, the more high SES classmates for low SES kids who benefit from having high SES classmates, and high SES parent watchdogs and fundraisers in DCPS schools. We gain nothing as a city when high SES parents hit the road for lack of schools they're comfortable with.
No. How about -- if you're so high SES and so valuable to the city, just figure out a freakin' way to buy real estate zoned for a school you're willing to send your child to, instead of thinking you have the right to cheat because you're white and well-off.
You're the troll here, mate. The PP ADVOCATED FOR BUYING real estate. I don't have time for apartment cheaters, but have no problem with parents who buy real estate partly for zoning purposes, no matter where they sleep.
Everybody I know who gets hot under the collar about multiple property owners in our neighborhood "cheating" lives in rental housing and longs to afford to buy IB for JKLM, Ross, Oyster etc.
But wealthier folks buying extra housing to get their kids into schools in other neighborhoods (and if you can afford to buy a rental property for this purpose it also means you can afford to buy the property to live in it) are driving up housing prices and making it harder for people who would otherwise live in the neighborhood in what I guess is subpar housing since I can't otherwise understand why someone wouldn't choose to live in a house they own in the district where there kid attends school? It's hard for me to understand in what way the city benefits from people doing this and I can see all sorts of negatives to this practice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCPS is supported by the DC tax base. When high SES parents flee the city, as they did en masse in the 80s and 90s, the tax base contracts. Parents who "work the system" generally can't afford privates, at least not easily, and aren't going to leave the Metro area.
Once overcrowded DCPS schools like Janney, Lafayette and Murch, and now Maury on Cap Hill, have seen their capacity increase substantially through building additions in recent years, financed with tax payers dollars.
My vote is for everybody high SES who elects to stay using an IB address for a DCPS school they're willing to use, whatever the hassle and risk involved in securing one, to continue to pay into city coffers, rather than running off to the burbs.
A low or middle-income SES earner who's renting can't expand the tax base like a parent investing in DC real estate and paying property tax, preferably on multiple properties. The larger the tax base, the more funds available for services to the poor. The more high SES families who stay, the more high SES classmates for low SES kids who benefit from having high SES classmates, and high SES parent watchdogs and fundraisers in DCPS schools. We gain nothing as a city when high SES parents hit the road for lack of schools they're comfortable with.
No. How about -- if you're so high SES and so valuable to the city, just figure out a freakin' way to buy real estate zoned for a school you're willing to send your child to, instead of thinking you have the right to cheat because you're white and well-off.
You're the troll here, mate. The PP ADVOCATED FOR BUYING real estate. I don't have time for apartment cheaters, but have no problem with parents who buy real estate partly for zoning purposes, no matter where they sleep.
Everybody I know who gets hot under the collar about multiple property owners in our neighborhood "cheating" lives in rental housing and longs to afford to buy IB for JKLM, Ross, Oyster etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCPS is supported by the DC tax base. When high SES parents flee the city, as they did en masse in the 80s and 90s, the tax base contracts. Parents who "work the system" generally can't afford privates, at least not easily, and aren't going to leave the Metro area.
Once overcrowded DCPS schools like Janney, Lafayette and Murch, and now Maury on Cap Hill, have seen their capacity increase substantially through building additions in recent years, financed with tax payers dollars.
My vote is for everybody high SES who elects to stay using an IB address for a DCPS school they're willing to use, whatever the hassle and risk involved in securing one, to continue to pay into city coffers, rather than running off to the burbs.
A low or middle-income SES earner who's renting can't expand the tax base like a parent investing in DC real estate and paying property tax, preferably on multiple properties. The larger the tax base, the more funds available for services to the poor. The more high SES families who stay, the more high SES classmates for low SES kids who benefit from having high SES classmates, and high SES parent watchdogs and fundraisers in DCPS schools. We gain nothing as a city when high SES parents hit the road for lack of schools they're comfortable with.
No. How about -- if you're so high SES and so valuable to the city, just figure out a freakin' way to buy real estate zoned for a school you're willing to send your child to, instead of thinking you have the right to cheat because you're white and well-off.
You're the troll here, mate. The PP ADVOCATED FOR BUYING real estate. I don't have time for apartment cheaters, but have no problem with parents who buy real estate partly for zoning purposes, no matter where they sleep.
Everybody I know who gets hot under the collar about multiple property owners in our neighborhood "cheating" lives in rental housing and longs to afford to buy IB for JKLM, Ross, Oyster etc.
What's your problem with renting? There's nothing morally superior about owning vs. renting; it's a financial choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCPS is supported by the DC tax base. When high SES parents flee the city, as they did en masse in the 80s and 90s, the tax base contracts. Parents who "work the system" generally can't afford privates, at least not easily, and aren't going to leave the Metro area.
Once overcrowded DCPS schools like Janney, Lafayette and Murch, and now Maury on Cap Hill, have seen their capacity increase substantially through building additions in recent years, financed with tax payers dollars.
My vote is for everybody high SES who elects to stay using an IB address for a DCPS school they're willing to use, whatever the hassle and risk involved in securing one, to continue to pay into city coffers, rather than running off to the burbs.
A low or middle-income SES earner who's renting can't expand the tax base like a parent investing in DC real estate and paying property tax, preferably on multiple properties. The larger the tax base, the more funds available for services to the poor. The more high SES families who stay, the more high SES classmates for low SES kids who benefit from having high SES classmates, and high SES parent watchdogs and fundraisers in DCPS schools. We gain nothing as a city when high SES parents hit the road for lack of schools they're comfortable with.
No. How about -- if you're so high SES and so valuable to the city, just figure out a freakin' way to buy real estate zoned for a school you're willing to send your child to, instead of thinking you have the right to cheat because you're white and well-off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t care as much if you’re a bona fide DC paying for another DC residence and paying income taxes in DC. That’s still better than the cheater scumbags who in fact live in Pee-Gee but sneak their kids into DCPS and charters for the free child care, among other reasons. And what’s more, many of the cheating parent are scamming DC government employees.
Ah, I see. So it's okay if high SES families who own multiple properties cheat the system since they're more desirable, more likely to blend in at their school of choice--but not low SES families from "Pee-Gee."
PG County families DO NOT PAY DC taxes. Ultimate cheats!
Doesn’t PG have special privileges as Ward 9?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t care as much if you’re a bona fide DC paying for another DC residence and paying income taxes in DC. That’s still better than the cheater scumbags who in fact live in Pee-Gee but sneak their kids into DCPS and charters for the free child care, among other reasons. And what’s more, many of the cheating parent are scamming DC government employees.
Ah, I see. So it's okay if high SES families who own multiple properties cheat the system since they're more desirable, more likely to blend in at their school of choice--but not low SES families from "Pee-Gee."
PG County families DO NOT PAY DC taxes. Ultimate cheats!
Doesn’t PG have special privileges as Ward 9?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
A low or middle-income SES earner who's renting can't expand the tax base like a parent investing in DC real estate and paying property tax, preferably on multiple properties. The larger the tax base, the more funds available for services to the poor. The more high SES families who stay, the more high SES classmates for low SES kids who benefit from having high SES classmates, and high SES parent watchdogs and fundraisers in DCPS schools. We gain nothing as a city when high SES parents hit the road for lack of schools they're comfortable with.
Not necessarily true.
Low and middle-income earner who rents is paying more proportionally in taxes (income, sales and indirect property tax) than a wealthy family who itemizes and takes advantage of tax-deferred savings vehicles.
The "best" taxpayers, from the city's perspective, are professional, childless 20- and 30-somethings who use very few city services and spend their disposable income on entertainment and restaurants. Families of all income levels, demand and consume a lot more city services, as do seniors.
Anonymous wrote:DCPS is supported by the DC tax base. When high SES parents flee the city, as they did en masse in the 80s and 90s, the tax base contracts. Parents who "work the system" generally can't afford privates, at least not easily, and aren't going to leave the Metro area.
Once overcrowded DCPS schools like Janney, Lafayette and Murch, and now Maury on Cap Hill, have seen their capacity increase substantially through building additions in recent years, financed with tax payers dollars.
My vote is for everybody high SES who elects to stay using an IB address for a DCPS school they're willing to use, whatever the hassle and risk involved in securing one, to continue to pay into city coffers, rather than running off to the burbs.
A low or middle-income SES earner who's renting can't expand the tax base like a parent investing in DC real estate and paying property tax, preferably on multiple properties. The larger the tax base, the more funds available for services to the poor. The more high SES families who stay, the more high SES classmates for low SES kids who benefit from having high SES classmates, and high SES parent watchdogs and fundraisers in DCPS schools. We gain nothing as a city when high SES parents hit the road for lack of schools they're comfortable with.
No. How about -- if you're so high SES and so valuable to the city, just figure out a freakin' way to buy real estate zoned for a school you're willing to send your child to, instead of thinking you have the right to cheat because you're white and well-off. Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t care as much if you’re a bona fide DC paying for another DC residence and paying income taxes in DC. That’s still better than the cheater scumbags who in fact live in Pee-Gee but sneak their kids into DCPS and charters for the free child care, among other reasons. And what’s more, many of the cheating parent are scamming DC government employees.
Ah, I see. So it's okay if high SES families who own multiple properties cheat the system since they're more desirable, more likely to blend in at their school of choice--but not low SES families from "Pee-Gee."
PG County families DO NOT PAY DC taxes. Ultimate cheats!