Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder how exhaustive the investigations are. I can think of 2 cases at my DC's last school where I know for a fact the families were not living in DC (no parents are divorced, nanny/grandma picks them up/ house is being remodeled excuses). I guess the school gets extra funding so it is what it is.
I myself wonder at the kind of woman who worries exhaustively that some children might be from maryland, enough that she notices their parent's license plates, reports them, stalks them when the findings aren't to her liking. As I said before, as someone whose child has a friend who is in a very housing insecure situation, desperately poor, and is sometimes at a Maryland address, it depresses the hell out of me that you make it your life's mission to upset children like this. Because, "cheating."
You're replying to the wrong person. My child had 1 whose family is living it up in a suburban McMansion. The other got into the pre-common lottery through "connections" and has since moved to MD. Nice families and I like them but if they are caught they deserve to face consequences
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^^, Yeah, so that means they did nothing. Reporting is wasting your time.
Or you need therapy. So much therapy. So much that we are not qualified to give you, sweetie. Please. I hope you get some help.
And eat a sandwich.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder how exhaustive the investigations are. I can think of 2 cases at my DC's last school where I know for a fact the families were not living in DC (no parents are divorced, nanny/grandma picks them up/ house is being remodeled excuses). I guess the school gets extra funding so it is what it is.
I myself wonder at the kind of woman who worries exhaustively that some children might be from maryland, enough that she notices their parent's license plates, reports them, stalks them when the findings aren't to her liking. As I said before, as someone whose child has a friend who is in a very housing insecure situation, desperately poor, and is sometimes at a Maryland address, it depresses the hell out of me that you make it your life's mission to upset children like this. Because, "cheating."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder how exhaustive the investigations are. I can think of 2 cases at my DC's last school where I know for a fact the families were not living in DC (no parents are divorced, nanny/grandma picks them up/ house is being remodeled excuses). I guess the school gets extra funding so it is what it is.
I myself wonder at the kind of woman who worries exhaustively that some children might be from maryland, enough that she notices their parent's license plates, reports them, stalks them when the findings aren't to her liking. As I said before, as someone whose child has a friend who is in a very housing insecure situation, desperately poor, and is sometimes at a Maryland address, it depresses the hell out of me that you make it your life's mission to upset children like this. Because, "cheating."
Anonymous wrote:I wonder how exhaustive the investigations are. I can think of 2 cases at my DC's last school where I know for a fact the families were not living in DC (no parents are divorced, nanny/grandma picks them up/ house is being remodeled excuses). I guess the school gets extra funding so it is what it is.
Anonymous wrote:I wonder how exhaustive the investigations are. I can think of 2 cases at my DC's last school where I know for a fact the families were not living in DC (no parents are divorced, nanny/grandma picks them up/ house is being remodeled excuses). I guess the school gets extra funding so it is what it is.
Anonymous wrote:^^^, Yeah, so that means they did nothing. Reporting is wasting your time.
Anonymous wrote:http://osse.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/osse/publication/attachments/OSSE%27s%20Residency%20Report%20June%202015%20FINAL%20to%20OPLA%205%2028%2015%20%282%29.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For the 20 millionth time picking up a child in car in a car with MD or Virginia tags is not definitive proof of anything. Maybe we should have a law that says only custodial parents can pick up their children.
In individual cases, this may be true. But a large number of MD cars, for example, picking up and dropping off, suggests that there is some amount of residency fraud going on. It's interesting, for example, that schools where you would expect to see high levels of nannies picking up children in their own vehicles (e.g., Janney, Mann) actually have relatively low anecdotal numbers of MD plated vehicles dropping or retrieving students. Other schools, particularly those who draw their students from around the city (where it may be easier for a fraudster to fly below the radar because the school-neighborhood identity isn't as strong) have higher numbers of out of state cars.
84% of kids at Mann are in-bounds. At Amidon, it's 82%. Not a huge difference.
Some school communities are very diligent in ferreting out and reporting fraud. Fraudster families don't last very long at Janney, for example.