Anonymous wrote:I saw a CMI sticker with new Maryland temp tags. I wonder if other parents will turn that car in with the school's long waitlist.
Anonymous wrote:Don't you need more than just a license plate to report residency fraud? I remember looking at the rules on another thread here indicating that was the case.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is this school's performance like? If it's dismal then it's charter should be pulled. I didn't realize that public funds could be used for single sex education. Not sure how I feel about that.
Excel is the all girls school and then there is an all boys school- but the name escapes me.
Both of them suck- in terms of actually educating kids. So not much 'education' going on. Just a waste of public funds- in general.
Anonymous wrote:I saw a CMI sticker with new Maryland temp tags. I wonder if other parents will turn that car in with the school's long waitlist.
It's more of an insurance scam and it is definitely enough of a savings to be "worth it" from a cost-benefits analysis in the minds of those who attempt it.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sure there are some residency cheaters, but I would bet that most of the MD plates are from car registration scofflaws who actually live in DC. A lot of DC residents who have off-street parking (DC has cracked down on non-DC plates frequently parked on the street in DC) use a relative's address in MD to register their cars to keep their insurance low. Many of my neighbors do this--it's not good, but they are actually DC residents.
Where do you live? Car reg in dc is very cheap. I can't imagine foregoing street parking just to save a few bucks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And this is why, as a teacher in DCPS I never turn in the kids who live in MD. A child is money for the school. Admin does not care where they live.
I teach in DCPS as well. You're just a coward looking for excuses not to act, or you're at a very low performing or under - enrolled school with no waitlist. Because for most of the school's that residency cheats want in to, reporting the cheats has barely any effect on per pupil funding because plenty of actual DC residents are waiting to jump into those spots.
Whoa. Fuck off! I teach at a title 1 school. So don't knock me for knowing the lay of the land. Our principal wants kids at her school. She will take them from anywhere. If I report a kid she will retaliate. Just like what happened at excel.
Sorry I'm not coasting along at janney. You are a bitch.
I'm a teacher too, not the OP, if there really a need to curse to get your point across?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And this is why, as a teacher in DCPS I never turn in the kids who live in MD. A child is money for the school. Admin does not care where they live.
I teach in DCPS as well. You're just a coward looking for excuses not to act, or you're at a very low performing or under - enrolled school with no waitlist. Because for most of the school's that residency cheats want in to, reporting the cheats has barely any effect on per pupil funding because plenty of actual DC residents are waiting to jump into those spots.
Whoa. Fuck off! I teach at a title 1 school. So don't knock me for knowing the lay of the land. Our principal wants kids at her school. She will take them from anywhere. If I report a kid she will retaliate. Just like what happened at excel.
Sorry I'm not coasting along at janney. You are a bitch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sure there are some residency cheaters, but I would bet that most of the MD plates are from car registration scofflaws who actually live in DC. A lot of DC residents who have off-street parking (DC has cracked down on non-DC plates frequently parked on the street in DC) use a relative's address in MD to register their cars to keep their insurance low. Many of my neighbors do this--it's not good, but they are actually DC residents.
Where do you live? Car reg in dc is very cheap. I can't imagine foregoing street parking just to save a few bucks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sure there are some residency cheaters, but I would bet that most of the MD plates are from car registration scofflaws who actually live in DC. A lot of DC residents who have off-street parking (DC has cracked down on non-DC plates frequently parked on the street in DC) use a relative's address in MD to register their cars to keep their insurance low. Many of my neighbors do this--it's not good, but they are actually DC residents.
I doubt this.
Anonymous wrote:I'm sure there are some residency cheaters, but I would bet that most of the MD plates are from car registration scofflaws who actually live in DC. A lot of DC residents who have off-street parking (DC has cracked down on non-DC plates frequently parked on the street in DC) use a relative's address in MD to register their cars to keep their insurance low. Many of my neighbors do this--it's not good, but they are actually DC residents.