Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCPS enrollment paperwork clearly states that the name of the person (parent/guardian) on the paperwork needs to also be the name on the utility bill.
Yes, but now, a plain old utility bill, even though it shows "CR" at the top where you paid the previous month, is not good enough anymore. You have to have separate proof of payment for the same month as the bill you are bringing in. Which is what happened to me when I tried to reenroll my kid earlier this week. Registrar said I could bring back in my bank statement reflecting the payment, but frankly, I don't want to give the school my bank statement even with all other info blacked out, which seems like a royal pain. We don't own a car and neither of us receives physical pay stubs. So I think I need to go get a certified copy of my tax return before I can reregister.
Yes it is a pain. But you could print out a copy of your online pay stub (they work; I did it this week). What do you think they would do with your redacted bank statement exactly?
My pay stub has no address.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCPS enrollment paperwork clearly states that the name of the person (parent/guardian) on the paperwork needs to also be the name on the utility bill.
Yes, but now, a plain old utility bill, even though it shows "CR" at the top where you paid the previous month, is not good enough anymore. You have to have separate proof of payment for the same month as the bill you are bringing in. Which is what happened to me when I tried to reenroll my kid earlier this week. Registrar said I could bring back in my bank statement reflecting the payment, but frankly, I don't want to give the school my bank statement even with all other info blacked out, which seems like a royal pain. We don't own a car and neither of us receives physical pay stubs. So I think I need to go get a certified copy of my tax return before I can reregister.
Yes it is a pain. But you could print out a copy of your online pay stub (they work; I did it this week). What do you think they would do with your redacted bank statement exactly?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCPS enrollment paperwork clearly states that the name of the person (parent/guardian) on the paperwork needs to also be the name on the utility bill.
Yes, but now, a plain old utility bill, even though it shows "CR" at the top where you paid the previous month, is not good enough anymore. You have to have separate proof of payment for the same month as the bill you are bringing in. Which is what happened to me when I tried to reenroll my kid earlier this week. Registrar said I could bring back in my bank statement reflecting the payment, but frankly, I don't want to give the school my bank statement even with all other info blacked out, which seems like a royal pain. We don't own a car and neither of us receives physical pay stubs. So I think I need to go get a certified copy of my tax return before I can reregister.
Anonymous wrote:DCPS enrollment paperwork clearly states that the name of the person (parent/guardian) on the paperwork needs to also be the name on the utility bill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Back to the point I was trying to make --and it was not about cellphones. It was simply that the system of residency checks ignores the realities of modern day life and work --such as people who live in DC but work out of state, or no longer do landlines and have work and personal cellphones with various area codes, and whole range of complications that did not exist even five years ago, let alone decades.
But more to the point the vast majority of people being caught up in fraud investigations are actually District residents with small paperwork triggers, and not scofflaws from MD and VA. Which is not to say those people do not exist, but nowhere near the levels being bandied about on DCUM.
The over-arching point is that DCPS doesn't want to fix their residency checking. As the Post article that started this thread showed, many of the hardcore cheaters are insiders. The last thing they want is a system that works.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Back to the point I was trying to make --and it was not about cellphones. It was simply that the system of residency checks ignores the realities of modern day life and work --such as people who live in DC but work out of state, or no longer do landlines and have work and personal cellphones with various area codes, and whole range of complications that did not exist even five years ago, let alone decades.
But more to the point the vast majority of people being caught up in fraud investigations are actually District residents with small paperwork triggers, and not scofflaws from MD and VA. Which is not to say those people do not exist, but nowhere near the levels being bandied about on DCUM.
The over-arching point is that DCPS doesn't want to fix their residency checking. As the Post article that started this thread showed, many of the hardcore cheaters are insiders. The last thing they want is a system that works.
Anonymous wrote:Back to the point I was trying to make --and it was not about cellphones. It was simply that the system of residency checks ignores the realities of modern day life and work --such as people who live in DC but work out of state, or no longer do landlines and have work and personal cellphones with various area codes, and whole range of complications that did not exist even five years ago, let alone decades.
But more to the point the vast majority of people being caught up in fraud investigations are actually District residents with small paperwork triggers, and not scofflaws from MD and VA. Which is not to say those people do not exist, but nowhere near the levels being bandied about on DCUM.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your phone number does have a connection to fees and other charges you pay, though I don't think there is any legal requirement to tie your phone number to your residency. There are local taxes and 911 fees that you might pay if, for example, you have a 443 phone number as compared to a 202.
I've had my 917 area code since 2000 -- and haven't live in NYC for a decade. Not unusual at all.
Anonymous wrote:Your phone number does have a connection to fees and other charges you pay, though I don't think there is any legal requirement to tie your phone number to your residency. There are local taxes and 911 fees that you might pay if, for example, you have a 443 phone number as compared to a 202.