Residency Issues Print E-mail
Iowa law states that a person between five and 21 years of age is of school age, and is to be provided a tuition-free education and that "nonresident children shall be charged the maximum tuition rate as determined in section 282.24(1)."  Another state law prohibits districts from rebating any portion of tuition.

"Resident" is defined as a person who is physically present in a district, whose residence has not been established in another district by operation of law, and who meets any of the following conditions:

1.     Is in the district for the purpose of making a home and not solely for school purposes.

2.     Meets the definitional requirements of the term "homeless individual."

3.     Lives in a juvenile detention center, foster care facility, residential correctional facility or residential facility in the district.

 Public school officials face a dilemma upon discovering (as sometimes happens) that enrolled and attending children are not actually residents (nor did they use open enrollment).  Here are the options available to school officials:

1.     First, always talk to the family to point out the problem.  Sometimes families honestly do not know in which district their home is located.  But the family still must be informed that the law requires it to pay tuition or transfer the children to the district of residence...unless the next option is viable.

2.     Try to work out an open enrollment with the real district of residence.  Remember that under the open enrollment law, a late-filed open enrollment application may be "granted at any time with approval of the resident and receiving districts."

3.     No one wants to punish the student(s), but expulsion has been recognized by the courts as a legitimate option.

4.     Bring legal action against the parents/guardians to recover tuition.  In the late 1960s, an Iowa district determined that a family of four children were not actual residents of the district and were therefore not entitled to free education in that district.  The local board's decision was appealed to the State Board of Education, which agreed with the local school board that the family did not reside in the district.  The district then notified the family that it owed tuition to the district.  The family complained all the way to the Iowa Supreme Court, which ruled that the district had both the right and the obligation to recover tuition for the children from the family.

 References:  Iowa Code sections 282.1, 282.6, 282.18(16), 282.20;  Maquoketa Community School District v. George, 193 N.W.2d 519 (Iowa 1972).