Anonymous wrote:I love Tom Sherwood's comment on this. He's 100 percent right. Too bad he's not on the council.
https://twitter.com/tomsherwood/status/986598935010643968
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Re: Maryland plates as evidence of cheating - I was surprised to learn that you can keep your plates registered elsewhere if you do not utilize street parking (driveway, garage, off-street). If you are off-street, you cannot be cited for ROSA violations.
I know that insurance rates are MUCH lower you can claim a suburban address. My rates doubled when I moved from Arlington to Chicago, and doubled AGAIN when I moved from Chicago to DC (same car, which was by then 8 years old). In DC you have the comprehensive risks for theft/break-in/hit and run, plus higher collision repair costs. Plus just being part of a worse/uninsured driver pool.
I have several neighbors who use their parents' address for car registration (though all send their kids to private MS and HS anyway). Not every MD-plated car may be a residency cheater. Though they are cheating their insurance companies and not paying DC for utilizing their (fine) roads.
Except in upper NW, very little off-street parking in DC, mainly street.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Re: Maryland plates as evidence of cheating - I was surprised to learn that you can keep your plates registered elsewhere if you do not utilize street parking (driveway, garage, off-street). If you are off-street, you cannot be cited for ROSA violations.
I know that insurance rates are MUCH lower you can claim a suburban address. My rates doubled when I moved from Arlington to Chicago, and doubled AGAIN when I moved from Chicago to DC (same car, which was by then 8 years old). In DC you have the comprehensive risks for theft/break-in/hit and run, plus higher collision repair costs. Plus just being part of a worse/uninsured driver pool.
I have several neighbors who use their parents' address for car registration (though all send their kids to private MS and HS anyway). Not every MD-plated car may be a residency cheater. Though they are cheating their insurance companies and not paying DC for utilizing their (fine) roads.
So they are defrauding the insurance company. How honourable.
Anonymous wrote:Re: Maryland plates as evidence of cheating - I was surprised to learn that you can keep your plates registered elsewhere if you do not utilize street parking (driveway, garage, off-street). If you are off-street, you cannot be cited for ROSA violations.
I know that insurance rates are MUCH lower you can claim a suburban address. My rates doubled when I moved from Arlington to Chicago, and doubled AGAIN when I moved from Chicago to DC (same car, which was by then 8 years old). In DC you have the comprehensive risks for theft/break-in/hit and run, plus higher collision repair costs. Plus just being part of a worse/uninsured driver pool.
I have several neighbors who use their parents' address for car registration (though all send their kids to private MS and HS anyway). Not every MD-plated car may be a residency cheater. Though they are cheating their insurance companies and not paying DC for utilizing their (fine) roads.
Anonymous wrote:Re: Maryland plates as evidence of cheating - I was surprised to learn that you can keep your plates registered elsewhere if you do not utilize street parking (driveway, garage, off-street). If you are off-street, you cannot be cited for ROSA violations.
I know that insurance rates are MUCH lower you can claim a suburban address. My rates doubled when I moved from Arlington to Chicago, and doubled AGAIN when I moved from Chicago to DC (same car, which was by then 8 years old). In DC you have the comprehensive risks for theft/break-in/hit and run, plus higher collision repair costs. Plus just being part of a worse/uninsured driver pool.
I have several neighbors who use their parents' address for car registration (though all send their kids to private MS and HS anyway). Not every MD-plated car may be a residency cheater. Though they are cheating their insurance companies and not paying DC for utilizing their (fine) roads.
Anonymous wrote:Re: Maryland plates as evidence of cheating - I was surprised to learn that you can keep your plates registered elsewhere if you do not utilize street parking (driveway, garage, off-street). If you are off-street, you cannot be cited for ROSA violations.
I know that insurance rates are MUCH lower you can claim a suburban address. My rates doubled when I moved from Arlington to Chicago, and doubled AGAIN when I moved from Chicago to DC (same car, which was by then 8 years old). In DC you have the comprehensive risks for theft/break-in/hit and run, plus higher collision repair costs. Plus just being part of a worse/uninsured driver pool.
I have several neighbors who use their parents' address for car registration (though all send their kids to private MS and HS anyway). Not every MD-plated car may be a residency cheater. Though they are cheating their insurance companies and not paying DC for utilizing their (fine) roads.
Anonymous wrote:Re: Maryland plates as evidence of cheating - I was surprised to learn that you can keep your plates registered elsewhere if you do not utilize street parking (driveway, garage, off-street). If you are off-street, you cannot be cited for ROSA violations.
I know that insurance rates are MUCH lower you can claim a suburban address. My rates doubled when I moved from Arlington to Chicago, and doubled AGAIN when I moved from Chicago to DC (same car, which was by then 8 years old). In DC you have the comprehensive risks for theft/break-in/hit and run, plus higher collision repair costs. Plus just being part of a worse/uninsured driver pool.
I have several neighbors who use their parents' address for car registration (though all send their kids to private MS and HS anyway). Not every MD-plated car may be a residency cheater. Though they are cheating their insurance companies and not paying DC for utilizing their (fine) roads.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:once again, "the legacy of racism" justifies the problem, the illegality, or the rule-breaking. Rather than being appalled at the rationalization, I think spending time to contemplate that perspective explains a lot.
It is just outrageous that they feel it’s a right because they were born here. That isn’t how life works for anybody! They likely moved out to the suburbs because they wanted a bigger house for less.
That entitlement is a problem and needs to be met head on. This sense of a "right" coupled with the apparent fact that a large proportion are DC government employees shows clearly why OSSE and even the Council are not rushing to hire a full team of fraud investigators.
A large percentage of the DC government workforce lives not in DC but in PG. DC schools provide free pre-K and favorable before and after school care, closer to mom or dad's workplace. Add to that the almost Communist Party-era sense of entitlement for government functionaries, and is it any wonder that such parents have no problem working the system (i.e., cheating the system) for a cheaper/better/more convenient school "option"?
Where has it been shown that a large proportion of residency cheaters are DC government employees? There's been no concrete data about this.
The non-DC families I know who are enrolled in DC schools aren't government employees and don't have jobs in DC at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Prince George’s has more affordable housing. More house for less money. But he schools aren’t great. And there is no PK3.
There are also some who feel a connection to the school they attended, and want their kids to graduate from their alma mater. But they can’t afford to buy a nice house IB for those schools.
If they wanted to keep their children in DC schools, they should have thought twice before moving out of DC lol!
Seriously Ihave a hard time believing that schools in Prince George's are worse than DC. I'm amazed at how bad the public schools are here and that people are lying to get in. I attended public school in the Midwest.My community there would never have stood for any of the bs that's happening here. We haven't lived here long, but have already decided to do private!
Look at the Prince George’s PARCC scores. They are about the same as DC and a number of DC schools are better.
Overall, just like DC there are pockets of generational poverty and struggling schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:once again, "the legacy of racism" justifies the problem, the illegality, or the rule-breaking. Rather than being appalled at the rationalization, I think spending time to contemplate that perspective explains a lot.
It is just outrageous that they feel it’s a right because they were born here. That isn’t how life works for anybody! They likely moved out to the suburbs because they wanted a bigger house for less.
That entitlement is a problem and needs to be met head on. This sense of a "right" coupled with the apparent fact that a large proportion are DC government employees shows clearly why OSSE and even the Council are not rushing to hire a full team of fraud investigators.
A large percentage of the DC government workforce lives not in DC but in PG. DC schools provide free pre-K and favorable before and after school care, closer to mom or dad's workplace. Add to that the almost Communist Party-era sense of entitlement for government functionaries, and is it any wonder that such parents have no problem working the system (i.e., cheating the system) for a cheaper/better/more convenient school "option"?
Where has it been shown that a large proportion of residency cheaters are DC government employees? There's been no concrete data about this.
The non-DC families I know who are enrolled in DC schools aren't government employees and don't have jobs in DC at all.
Most of those coming into the city everyday from the burbs are Feds, they are using the preK/K slots.