Anonymous wrote:Two or three years ago parents living in Maryland were forced to come pick up their child in the middle of the school day. She was taken out of class in front of her friends and left the school without the opportunity to say goodbye or explain. Don't be those parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Okay I know there are some eagle eyed, Maryland license plate following parents out there so I'm sure you are very well-versed on all of the laws regarding this. We currently live in DC and our daughter is in a DC Charter School but we really want to move to Maryland. If you move once the school year starts then how does that work? Or another possibility is moving now but renting out the house. In other words isn't it really about paying taxes in DC? As long as we don't sell the house it doesn't really matter where we live, correct?
Wrong. If you use the address of a house you are renting out, while actually living in Maryland, you are committing residency fraud. Period.
Anonymous wrote:Okay I know there are some eagle eyed, Maryland license plate following parents out there so I'm sure you are very well-versed on all of the laws regarding this. We currently live in DC and our daughter is in a DC Charter School but we really want to move to Maryland. If you move once the school year starts then how does that work? Or another possibility is moving now but renting out the house. In other words isn't it really about paying taxes in DC? As long as we don't sell the house it doesn't really matter where we live, correct?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If someone asks you where you live, and you answer honestly and not coyly, that is where your child should go to school. You and your child sleep in silver spring? your kid should go to school in silver spring. it doesn't really matter if you pay property taxes on a house you own in DC. You don't live there. Maybe someone else lives there, and registers their kid at school in DC. They are entitled to send their kid to DC public/charter school by virtue of their actually living in DC. You are not entitled to send your kid to DC public/charter school because YOU DO NOT. It isn't a question of where you pay property taxes, because you could, theoretically, pay property taxes in a dozen different school districts or more. It is a question of where you LIVE. Residency is a legal question that is rooted in where you intend to live, not where your tax dollars are. If you move mid-year, you may be allowed to stay in your current school at the discretion of the school, but really, you should move your kid to the new school. If you move before or at the beginning of the school year, your child should attend their new local school, or go to private school if that doesn't suit you.
I honestly don't see why people have such a problem with this. If you lived in Manhattan and in the middle of the school year your family moved to Hoboken, NJ, you wouldn't ask if your kid could keep attending a PS in NYC.
I share custody with my ex, and my child divides his time between us roughly evenly, when he's not visiting his grandparents out of state (which he does for weeks on end). So where does he live and where should he go to school? How about wherever one of us has all the right residency documents, pays taxes and is comfortable with a public school. You're certainly not the arbiter of residency rulings; you're just the guy or gal determined to bust families who, on the face of things, are committing residency fraud. Parents need to comply with a particular school system's residency rules, not those set by a random poster on DCUM. I honestly don't see why people have such a problem with others leading lives where a child's residency isn't as easy to pin down as in their own family.
Anonymous wrote:If someone asks you where you live, and you answer honestly and not coyly, that is where your child should go to school. You and your child sleep in silver spring? your kid should go to school in silver spring. it doesn't really matter if you pay property taxes on a house you own in DC. You don't live there. Maybe someone else lives there, and registers their kid at school in DC. They are entitled to send their kid to DC public/charter school by virtue of their actually living in DC. You are not entitled to send your kid to DC public/charter school because YOU DO NOT. It isn't a question of where you pay property taxes, because you could, theoretically, pay property taxes in a dozen different school districts or more. It is a question of where you LIVE. Residency is a legal question that is rooted in where you intend to live, not where your tax dollars are. If you move mid-year, you may be allowed to stay in your current school at the discretion of the school, but really, you should move your kid to the new school. If you move before or at the beginning of the school year, your child should attend their new local school, or go to private school if that doesn't suit you.
I honestly don't see why people have such a problem with this. If you lived in Manhattan and in the middle of the school year your family moved to Hoboken, NJ, you wouldn't ask if your kid could keep attending a PS in NYC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LOL.
If this is a sincere question, no you can't legally claim your rental property as you home for school residency purposes. That's why they want to see your pay stub, drivers license, etc, and not just your utility bill. But no, if you've already submitted paperwork for this year, you're totally not going to get caught over the next school year. They only check once.
Ahhhh, no. Residency is checked EVERY YEAR when you register. It will be verified.
Anonymous wrote:LOL.
If this is a sincere question, no you can't legally claim your rental property as you home for school residency purposes. That's why they want to see your pay stub, drivers license, etc, and not just your utility bill. But no, if you've already submitted paperwork for this year, you're totally not going to get caught over the next school year. They only check once.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LOL.
If this is a sincere question, no you can't legally claim your rental property as you home for school residency purposes. That's why they want to see your pay stub, drivers license, etc, and not just your utility bill. But no, if you've already submitted paperwork for this year, you're totally not going to get caught over the next school year. They only check once.
I am saved because my now rented house in DC has the same address on my paystub and drivers license even though I lay my head every night in a different state.
You may be "saved" but you're still committing fraud.
+1 I hope you get caught and prosecuted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LOL.
If this is a sincere question, no you can't legally claim your rental property as you home for school residency purposes. That's why they want to see your pay stub, drivers license, etc, and not just your utility bill. But no, if you've already submitted paperwork for this year, you're totally not going to get caught over the next school year. They only check once.
I am saved because my now rented house in DC has the same address on my paystub and drivers license even though I lay my head every night in a different state.
You may be "saved" but you're still committing fraud.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LOL.
If this is a sincere question, no you can't legally claim your rental property as you home for school residency purposes. That's why they want to see your pay stub, drivers license, etc, and not just your utility bill. But no, if you've already submitted paperwork for this year, you're totally not going to get caught over the next school year. They only check once.
I am saved because my now rented house in DC has the same address on my paystub and drivers license even though I lay my head every night in a different state.
You may be "saved" but you're still committing fraud.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LOL.
If this is a sincere question, no you can't legally claim your rental property as you home for school residency purposes. That's why they want to see your pay stub, drivers license, etc, and not just your utility bill. But no, if you've already submitted paperwork for this year, you're totally not going to get caught over the next school year. They only check once.
I am saved because my now rented house in DC has the same address on my paystub and drivers license even though I lay my head every night in a different state.