Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've been living in the DC area for decades and know DC, MoCo, Howard and Fairfax public schools.
DCPS is an academic disaster compared to MCPS and FCPS (and some smaller, more homogeneous public school systems further out). Some charter schools are just OK, but none of them hold a candle to the best MCPS and FCPS school clusters.
Very few families are in such logistical straights as to want to place their kids in DCPS if they live in MD or VA.
If you've lived in DC for decades you know that residency fraud has been an issue. Lots of MD folks wanting to take advantage of free PK3 & PK4. Also convenience and being able to use grandma (who still lives in DC) for childcare. Close-in PG County schools are just okay.
PP you replied to. I'm not saying it doesn't exist. I'm saying it's not as dire as some would make it out to be.
I also have a theory on the marked decrease in residency fraud threads on DCUM: the average age of posters have gone up with time, so maybe in the past, there was a perfect storm of more posters with younger kids, who were noticing potential residential fraud at their DCPS schools, by families with preschool aged kids who then continued on to DCPS elementaries. But since DCPS gets worse the higher you go, middle school is a time of attrition to private or better suburban schools (and parents start to realize that MD or VA residency guarantees in-state tuition at UMD, UVA, etc), and kids become self-sufficient enough to not need adult supervision after school. So now that a plurality of DCUM posters are older, their kids have passed the age where they would notice such residential fraud.
All of this.
I have no special knowledge, but I think the city did a big data match a few years ago and that's why so many city employees were caught doing residency fraud. And that may have made people more cautious about doing it.
I also think that, aside from preschool, there are certainly DC residents sneaking into Maryland schools too. If we had to pay Maryland for that, and Maryland had to pay us for their residents, I'm not sure which state would come out ahead. This isn't necessarily the cost savings people think it is.
What you may fail to understand it that if Marylanders cheat DC schools, then that stops the poorer DC residents from any legal opportunity to go to a higher performing school. It’s not just money, it’s a moral failing on those families parts. And I can only imagine what it does to raise a child who knows they are cheating and is taught the rules don’t apply to them. It’s so gross.
No, I understand, but I think in actuality the number of MD residents at higher-performing schools and schools that don't take all applicants isn't that big. It's amazing how people will sneak into low performing schools but I suppose it's for logistical or family reasons. And again, the same logic applies to DC folks sneaking into MD schools.
Anonymous wrote:Context - I have 2 kids at different EOTP schools and live near a third school. At all of these schools, probably a third to half of the license plates every day are from MD and some VA.
I certainly know families who have one parent in MD and one in DC (and I'm sure there are all sorts of different guardianship arrangements), so that's obviously not residency fraud. But is that THIS common? Wouldn't it be difficult to register without showing this proof of residency? I'm just genuinely curious; I know this was a big issue a few years ago but haven't heard as much about it lately.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our family attends a desirable ES with PK3 + PK4. The school has a sizable OOB contingent starting in K.
What I've noticed:
A handful of white families doing boundary cheating in PK years. They will have an in-bounds rental for the PK3 or PK4 lottery for the oldest kid and then be in a nice big house in Upper NW or EOTP after that.
The school is about 40%-50% OOB so living outside the boundary is pretty normalized, especially after K. It's a good community and people willing to drive across the city are obviously committed to their kids' education. But there is definitely shady stuff happening in the PreK years.
Also, I don't think folks here in the US on diplomatic visas should qualify for Pre-K, even if they live in bounds. It's a ridiculous giveaway to well-off foreigners.
Are you proposing to start discriminating according to people’s employment? As long as they are legally residing in DC, whether they are diplomats or PhD students or in any legal capacity and visa, they deserve and qualify for public schooling opportunities.
Anonymous wrote:Our family attends a desirable ES with PK3 + PK4. The school has a sizable OOB contingent starting in K.
What I've noticed:
A handful of white families doing boundary cheating in PK years. They will have an in-bounds rental for the PK3 or PK4 lottery for the oldest kid and then be in a nice big house in Upper NW or EOTP after that.
The school is about 40%-50% OOB so living outside the boundary is pretty normalized, especially after K. It's a good community and people willing to drive across the city are obviously committed to their kids' education. But there is definitely shady stuff happening in the PreK years.
Also, I don't think folks here in the US on diplomatic visas should qualify for Pre-K, even if they live in bounds. It's a ridiculous giveaway to well-off foreigners.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone has been using my home address to commit residency fraud for nine years. Their once 3rd grader is now an 11th grader at an application high school. I have reported it twice a year for nine years. No one has followed up once. I get this kid's report cards, truancy notices, forms, etc etc etc in the mail.
You reported it here?: https://osse.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/osse/publication/attachments/ResidencyInvestigation_18x24_posters.pdf
Anonymous wrote:True story. I was asked by a colleague if she could use my address to enroll her 2 young kids in the JKLMM down the block from me.
She and her spouse live in PG and they already send these kids to a -different- JKLM, fraudulently.
However, her eyes lit up when she learned I am IB for a JKLMM that is more convenient to her work commute. She was exploring whether she could use my DC address to switch from one fraudulent DCPS situation to a different fraudulent DCPS situation. This conversation occurred recently.
Anonymous wrote:I can think of a bunch!
-At my kid's school in NE DC, the parents live in MD and work in DC
-My neighbor's 2 grandkids live in MD and go to KIPP. Grandma picks them up after school, and mom picks them up after work in DC
-my coworker's grandkids use his address to go to Watkins
-a friend moved to MD from DC and kept kids at the same school in DC because they still work in DC
I raise my eyebrows... and then I MYOB.
Anonymous wrote:Context - I have 2 kids at different EOTP schools and live near a third school. At all of these schools, probably a third to half of the license plates every day are from MD and some VA.
I certainly know families who have one parent in MD and one in DC (and I'm sure there are all sorts of different guardianship arrangements), so that's obviously not residency fraud. But is that THIS common? Wouldn't it be difficult to register without showing this proof of residency? I'm just genuinely curious; I know this was a big issue a few years ago but haven't heard as much about it lately.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've been living in the DC area for decades and know DC, MoCo, Howard and Fairfax public schools.
DCPS is an academic disaster compared to MCPS and FCPS (and some smaller, more homogeneous public school systems further out). Some charter schools are just OK, but none of them hold a candle to the best MCPS and FCPS school clusters.
Very few families are in such logistical straights as to want to place their kids in DCPS if they live in MD or VA.
I agree with this 100. I worked in DC schools but would NEVER send my kids there if I lived in Maryland or Virginia. I mean, why risk residency fraud for a lower quality school?
Anonymous wrote:Someone has been using my home address to commit residency fraud for nine years. Their once 3rd grader is now an 11th grader at an application high school. I have reported it twice a year for nine years. No one has followed up once. I get this kid's report cards, truancy notices, forms, etc etc etc in the mail.