Anonymous wrote:“Ward 9” is an actual term on some DC govt. forms. I work in a branch of education in DC and was shocked to see “Ward 9” as a choice in a drop down menu, used to define residency of foster children who are DC residents but placed in Md or Va.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone on one of these threads posted an anecdote about a kid who was in DCPS but then didn’t qualify for DC TAG. So I went to look for the requirements. OSSE runs that verification too. Tax filers have to provide a certified tax form, and there is an electronic system to do it (DCOne App?). If you are not a tax filer, you have to supply a statement of other benefits (TANF, etc.), bill/pay stub, AND successfully file a FAFSA.
So, there is already a more stringent system at OSSE that has accommodations for low income non-filers.
Can we bring that to scale for schools? That benefit (12k) is worth more than the 10k DCTAG.
https://osse.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/osse/publication/attachments/2018-19%20DCOneApp%20Checklist.pdf
yes, excellent point, but note that the 12K comes from DC budget and TAG is federally funded. TAG may be more restrictive to meet federal grant requirements whereas DC has budget oversight of its per pupil allocation.
This would not go down well with the "Ward 9 community."
But surely DC could align its residency verification practices with the more restrictive TAG requirements.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone on one of these threads posted an anecdote about a kid who was in DCPS but then didn’t qualify for DC TAG. So I went to look for the requirements. OSSE runs that verification too. Tax filers have to provide a certified tax form, and there is an electronic system to do it (DCOne App?). If you are not a tax filer, you have to supply a statement of other benefits (TANF, etc.), bill/pay stub, AND successfully file a FAFSA.
So, there is already a more stringent system at OSSE that has accommodations for low income non-filers.
Can we bring that to scale for schools? That benefit (12k) is worth more than the 10k DCTAG.
https://osse.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/osse/publication/attachments/2018-19%20DCOneApp%20Checklist.pdf
yes, excellent point, but note that the 12K comes from DC budget and TAG is federally funded. TAG may be more restrictive to meet federal grant requirements whereas DC has budget oversight of its per pupil allocation.
This would not go down well with the "Ward 9 community."
But surely DC could align its residency verification practices with the more restrictive TAG requirements.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Count them, and charge VA and MD. Reciprocity, not freeloading. Identify a handful of schools that are eligible for out of state kids
Cap the eligible AGI of the parents -- limit it to those making $120k or less, depending on the number of kids. Limit it only to DC city employees. Any number of ways to make this a good policy for recruitment and retention of City workers to lower-paying jobs.
Oh please. Anyone making a $100,000 or more at a city job can find a decent place to live in DC if they choose. They are making an economic choice to get a bigger house by luving in the suburbs, but it’s not that they “can’t afford” DC.
I am not suggesting those people should be accommodated - have an income cap to prevent such families from getting the benefit. That may also be an outlier (or one of a few extreme examples).
We rarely develop policies based on one or two anecdotal examples (I hope). We need more data on who is doing this and why, and all the relevant demographics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone on one of these threads posted an anecdote about a kid who was in DCPS but then didn’t qualify for DC TAG. So I went to look for the requirements. OSSE runs that verification too. Tax filers have to provide a certified tax form, and there is an electronic system to do it (DCOne App?). If you are not a tax filer, you have to supply a statement of other benefits (TANF, etc.), bill/pay stub, AND successfully file a FAFSA.
So, there is already a more stringent system at OSSE that has accommodations for low income non-filers.
Can we bring that to scale for schools? That benefit (12k) is worth more than the 10k DCTAG.
https://osse.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/osse/publication/attachments/2018-19%20DCOneApp%20Checklist.pdf
yes, excellent point, but note that the 12K comes from DC budget and TAG is federally funded. TAG may be more restrictive to meet federal grant requirements whereas DC has budget oversight of its per pupil allocation.
But surely DC could align its residency verification practices with the more restrictive TAG requirements.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone on one of these threads posted an anecdote about a kid who was in DCPS but then didn’t qualify for DC TAG. So I went to look for the requirements. OSSE runs that verification too. Tax filers have to provide a certified tax form, and there is an electronic system to do it (DCOne App?). If you are not a tax filer, you have to supply a statement of other benefits (TANF, etc.), bill/pay stub, AND successfully file a FAFSA.
So, there is already a more stringent system at OSSE that has accommodations for low income non-filers.
Can we bring that to scale for schools? That benefit (12k) is worth more than the 10k DCTAG.
https://osse.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/osse/publication/attachments/2018-19%20DCOneApp%20Checklist.pdf
yes, excellent point, but note that the 12K comes from DC budget and TAG is federally funded. TAG may be more restrictive to meet federal grant requirements whereas DC has budget oversight of its per pupil allocation.
But surely DC could align its residency verification practices with the more restrictive TAG requirements.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone on one of these threads posted an anecdote about a kid who was in DCPS but then didn’t qualify for DC TAG. So I went to look for the requirements. OSSE runs that verification too. Tax filers have to provide a certified tax form, and there is an electronic system to do it (DCOne App?). If you are not a tax filer, you have to supply a statement of other benefits (TANF, etc.), bill/pay stub, AND successfully file a FAFSA.
So, there is already a more stringent system at OSSE that has accommodations for low income non-filers.
Can we bring that to scale for schools? That benefit (12k) is worth more than the 10k DCTAG.
https://osse.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/osse/publication/attachments/2018-19%20DCOneApp%20Checklist.pdf
yes, excellent point, but note that the 12K comes from DC budget and TAG is federally funded. TAG may be more restrictive to meet federal grant requirements whereas DC has budget oversight of its per pupil allocation.
Anonymous wrote:Someone on one of these threads posted an anecdote about a kid who was in DCPS but then didn’t qualify for DC TAG. So I went to look for the requirements. OSSE runs that verification too. Tax filers have to provide a certified tax form, and there is an electronic system to do it (DCOne App?). If you are not a tax filer, you have to supply a statement of other benefits (TANF, etc.), bill/pay stub, AND successfully file a FAFSA.
So, there is already a more stringent system at OSSE that has accommodations for low income non-filers.
Can we bring that to scale for schools? That benefit (12k) is worth more than the 10k DCTAG.
https://osse.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/osse/publication/attachments/2018-19%20DCOneApp%20Checklist.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone on one of these threads posted an anecdote about a kid who was in DCPS but then didn’t qualify for DC TAG. So I went to look for the requirements. OSSE runs that verification too. Tax filers have to provide a certified tax form, and there is an electronic system to do it (DCOne App?). If you are not a tax filer, you have to supply a statement of other benefits (TANF, etc.), bill/pay stub, AND successfully file a FAFSA.
So, there is already a more stringent system at OSSE that has accommodations for low income non-filers.
Can we bring that to scale for schools? That benefit (12k) is worth more than the 10k DCTAG.
https://osse.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/osse/publication/attachments/2018-19%20DCOneApp%20Checklist.pdf
Well, you can't require the parents to file a FAFSA for K-12. So if someone claims to be a non-filer, how are the enforceable restrictions any more than under the current system? I mean, a non-filer who receives no public benefits submits only a bill or a pay stub, or both . . . but apparently non-residents are able to get DC bills in their names and/or change their pay stub address for one pay period, right?
I agree that we need to crack down on the proof of residency, I'm just not sure if this will help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Count them, and charge VA and MD. Reciprocity, not freeloading. Identify a handful of schools that are eligible for out of state kids
Cap the eligible AGI of the parents -- limit it to those making $120k or less, depending on the number of kids. Limit it only to DC city employees. Any number of ways to make this a good policy for recruitment and retention of City workers to lower-paying jobs.
Oh please. Anyone making a $100,000 or more at a city job can find a decent place to live in DC if they choose. They are making an economic choice to get a bigger house by luving in the suburbs, but it’s not that they “can’t afford” DC.
"Oh, please" (my god, you are rude). Take a gander at the real.estate page. There is no way you can find safe housing with 3 bedrooms in DC on 100k a year and feed your 2-3 kids. What is your definition of decent?
Anonymous wrote:Someone on one of these threads posted an anecdote about a kid who was in DCPS but then didn’t qualify for DC TAG. So I went to look for the requirements. OSSE runs that verification too. Tax filers have to provide a certified tax form, and there is an electronic system to do it (DCOne App?). If you are not a tax filer, you have to supply a statement of other benefits (TANF, etc.), bill/pay stub, AND successfully file a FAFSA.
So, there is already a more stringent system at OSSE that has accommodations for low income non-filers.
Can we bring that to scale for schools? That benefit (12k) is worth more than the 10k DCTAG.
https://osse.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/osse/publication/attachments/2018-19%20DCOneApp%20Checklist.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Someone on one of these threads posted an anecdote about a kid who was in DCPS but then didn’t qualify for DC TAG. So I went to look for the requirements. OSSE runs that verification too. Tax filers have to provide a certified tax form, and there is an electronic system to do it (DCOne App?). If you are not a tax filer, you have to supply a statement of other benefits (TANF, etc.), bill/pay stub, AND successfully file a FAFSA.
So, there is already a more stringent system at OSSE that has accommodations for low income non-filers.
Can we bring that to scale for schools? That benefit (12k) is worth more than the 10k DCTAG.
https://osse.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/osse/publication/attachments/2018-19%20DCOneApp%20Checklist.pdf