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Serpo
21st April 2011, 03:49 PM
Homeless Mom Charged With Stealing $16,000 in Education Expenses By Lying About Son’s Address for School
Posted by Real News Reporter on April 21st, 2011

A homeless mother in Connecticut has been charged with theft of “education expenses” totaling nearly $16,000 after it was discovered that she registered her son for school using the babysitter’s address.

A homeless woman from Bridgeport who enrolled her 6-year-old son at a Norwalk elementary school has become the first in the city to be charged with stealing more than $15,000 for the cost of her child’s education.

Tonya McDowell, 33, whose last known address was 66 Priscilla St., Bridgeport, was charged Thursday with first-degree larceny and conspiracy to commit first-degree larceny for allegedly stealing $15,686 from Norwalk schools. She was released after posting a $25,000 bond.
McDowell’s babysitter, Ana Rebecca Marques, was also evicted from her Roodner Court public housing apartment for providing documents to enroll the child at Brookside Elementary School.
According to the story, McDowell was primarily sleeping at a home in a different city, although she could not be there during the days, and also spent time at a local shelter. The boy went to the sitter’s house daily after school.


An argument could be made that as they had no permanent home, there is no reason why the babysitter’s house isn’t a place of residence, as it was a place he went to daily and had more permanence than their other living situations appeared to. However, the school disagreed and decided after an investigation to press charges against the mother, claiming theft.

The Chair of the board of education admits the move is unusual — normally a child found attending school out of district is just sent away. Others are speculating why this case became the case that the district appears to be interested in using to “set an example” in order to discourage other parents from attempting to send their children to school with false addresses, especially since the mother obviously has no ability to pay for the “theft.” A lawyer involved in a similar case wonders why they wouldn’t choose to go after someone where they may have a chance to get reimbursement back for the educational costs while making their point.

Could it be that the district is less concerned about sending a general example and more concerned about sending one geared to a specific audience? Like, for example, the low-income and homeless in the area?

http://www.realnewsreporter.com/?p=2810

TheNocturnalEgyptian
21st April 2011, 05:16 PM
The charges went on to state: By enrolling this young man in school, you are depriving the government of a large sum of money that would have been created by the sale of his flesh to willing government agencies. How dare you attempt to keep him out of our system by putting him in our system?

Ponce
21st April 2011, 05:40 PM
Something smells here......I read the same story elswhere ......... but......the mom was living SIX FEET outside of the school district so that she used the baby sitters adress next door.......and this was in the UK.

Serpo
21st April 2011, 06:27 PM
Something smells here......I read the same story elswhere ......... but......the mom was living SIX FEET outside of the school district so that she used the baby sitters adress next door.......and this was in the UK.


six feet.............

Ponce
21st April 2011, 07:15 PM
Jep..........six feet.....will try to find the article.

drafter
21st April 2011, 07:24 PM
Here's the UK article with the 6 foot thing.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1379158/5-year-old-turned-away-school-lives-6-feet-outside-catchment-area.html

Ponce
21st April 2011, 07:26 PM
The five-year-old boy turned away from school because he lives SIX FEET outside the catchment area.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1379158/5-year-old-turned-away-school-lives-6-feet-outside-catchment-area.html#ixzz1K9UBR0ol

Distance is measured from centre of child's home to centre of school. If taken from the shortest points Max Guerretta would be within the qualifying distance
A little boy has missed out on going to his local primary school - because he lives just six feet outside the catchment area.

Nicole Guerretta, 41, is outraged that her son Max, five, has been turned down by Fleet Primary School for the second year running, despite living just 200 metres away.
The mother-of-three is now demanding a council tax rebate as she branded the local authority 'ignorant and arrogant.'
Red tape: Nicole Guerretta, 41, is outraged that five-year-old Max has been turned down by Fleet Primary School in Camden, north London for the second year running, despite living just 200 metres away
Ms Guerretta said the centre of their home in Parkhill Road, Camden Town, north London, is just 218 yards away from the centre of the school.

But Camden Council says the cut-off point for children to be in the school's catchment area is 216 yards - just two yards less.

The council's policy is to measure the distance from the centre of schools to the middle of homes.
If measured to the shortest points, Max would be well within the qualifying distance.

Ms Guerretta said: 'Would the council consider giving parents who haven't got into a school they applied to a reduction in council tax?
'We're still paying the full whack at £2,218 a year - and we've been paying council tax for the 15 years we've lived here - yet we're not receiving the benefits.

More...A quarter of maths teachers don't have a degree in the subject
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She applied for her son to attend three non-denominational schools in Camden but he was not offered a place at any of them.
Instead, the council offered Max a place at St Dominic's Catholic Primary School in Southampton Road, Gospel Oak.
A STRUGGLE FOR PLACES
The Guerrettas' situation is not uncommon for parents in London trying to get their children into primary schools.
There is currently an increase in demand for places, fuelled by immigration and the increasing birth rate in London, as well as families feeling the pinch.
Fewer young families are moving out of the city and parents are less able to afford private education.
In 2009, 4,680 appeals were launched by London parents who had been rejected by their chosen primary schools for admission to infant classes, a rise of 750 on the previous year.
But more than 90 per cent of parents whose appeals got as far as an official hearing failed in their bid to win a place.
Nicole does not want to send him, or her three-year-old twin daughters, to a faith school.
So she and her husband are now paying for Max to attend the private Maria Montessori School in Lyndhurst Gardens while they wait for him to be given a school place.
'I grew up in London and I'm very for state education,' said Ms Guerretta. 'I put down three places for non-faith schools but they offered my son a place at St Dominic's.
'Why would they offer me a faith school? Would they offer a Jewish family a Muslim school? It's ignorant and arrogant to do so.
'Technically it avoided me being part of the statistics of people who have not been offered a place at all.'
The breakdown of admissions to Fleet Primary School last year shows that of the 30 children offered a place, 14 went to children who already had a sibling there, three went to children with special educational needs, leaving just 13 for other children who live locally.
A Camden Council spokeswoman said: 'Ms Guerretta lives 0.1242 miles from the school, when the cut-off distance last year was 0.123 miles, measured from the middle of the home to the middle of the school.

'There are places at other community schools and we will work with the family to find a suitable place for their son.'


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1379158/5-year-old-turned-away-school-lives-6-feet-outside-catchment-area.html#ixzz1K9TZxQYz

Cobalt
21st April 2011, 08:20 PM
I understand it is only 6 feet but it is still outside the zone.

Her neighbor may only be 8 feet, would that be okay to include them also?

Where do you draw the line of close enough?

The way I see it is the rule was made with a specific measurement so it would clear you are either inside the line or outside the line.

Ponce
21st April 2011, 08:31 PM
I know Cobalt, and that is one thing that pisses me off about the law......the law applys to you depending as to who you are.