More

Kelley Williams-Bolar Case Highlights Schools' Efforts To ID Fake Student Addresses

Kelley Williams Bolar

KANTELE FRANKO   02/25/11 09:53 AM ET   AP

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Kelley Williams-Bolar, alarmed after her home was broken into, yanked her two daughters out of their urban Akron, Ohio, schools and enrolled them in her father's suburban school district nearby, using his address.

That way, said the single mom and teacher's aide, they could come to a safer home after school.

Her peace of mind proved costly. Officials in the Copley-Fairlawn district challenged the residency of her girls in 2007, when they were 9 and 13 years old. Williams-Bolar was charged and convicted of felony records tampering.

Not only was she jailed last month for nine days, but the conviction threatens her efforts to earn a teacher's license and could jeopardize her job as a teacher's aide. She plans to appeal.

Her case has become a rallying point for advocates of school choice and it has outraged residents in her northeast Ohio community – some because of her dishonesty, others for the severity of her prosecution.

"My kids are not latchkey kids," said Williams-Bolar, who had no choice but to re-enroll her daughters in Akron schools two years ago. "I am a mother, and I want to make sure my kids are safe, and I want to make sure that they're educated."

Her prosecution and incarceration are a high-profile example of how schools are getting tougher on parents who sneak their children into other districts, usually better-funded and higher-performing schools. Districts are fighting back, having students followed by private investigators, fining or pressing criminal charges against their parents – even sending them to jail.

The cases raise questions about school funding disparities and pit parents' pursuit of better academics or safer hallways against schools' interests in protecting their funding and quality.

There's little data that tracks how many parents register students using false addresses or those of relatives in violation of state, city or school regulations, but districts from New Hampshire to Texas to California report that it's a problem. Jailing parents isn't common.

"I must say this is the first case I've ever heard of where somebody has been arrested," said Susan Gates, a senior economist who studies education issues at the RAND Corporation.

Copley-Fairlawn Superintendent Brian Poe said his district "has taken a certain amount of heat," with critics saying it should educate all children. "That's not the law in the state of Ohio, and that's not our board policy."

Recent letters to the Akron Beacon Journal capture high emotions on both sides of the issue. Hundreds of Williams-Bolar supporters recently rallied with the Rev. Al Sharpton, calling for her exoneration.

"To take a viable human being and cast her aside like a dangerous criminal again proves that the American justice system is only just for some people – certainly not poor, black and struggling members of society," wrote Mary L. Tabatcher of Mogadore.

But Donna Blair of Akron was sharply critical.

"Shame on Kelley Williams-Bolar," Blair wrote. "We all want what's best for our kids, but should we commit crimes to get them the best? The message she sent to her kids was that it's OK to lie, cheat and steal."

The newspaper reported this week that one lawmaker is preparing legislation that would allow children to enroll in school districts where their grandparents live.

Around the country, transfers between districts are allowed in most places if both districts agree, with some requiring the home district to pay tuition to the receiving district, said Michael Griffith, a senior policy analyst with the nonprofit, nonpartisan Education Commission of the States in Denver. Problems occur when parents seeking better academics, elite sports teams or safer environments falsify records or say students live with relatives or in rental homes when they don't.

Cases typically are resolved when a parent moves a student out, changes homes or pays tuition, but a few end up in court. Since 2005, Copley-Fairlawn has resolved conflicts with 47 other families over illegal student attendance.

Education officials say cases tend to surface more when budgets are tight and in areas where there are significant disparities between districts such as in academic success or local income level – particularly in wealthier districts near urban areas. That often means the districts in question also have racial disparities.

Williams-Bolar's attorney, Kerry O'Brien, raised the issue of race at one point in court papers, saying that because her client is black, the case raises the specter of "improper racial segregation and prosecution."

In a Pennsylvania case, Latoni Crowder used a cousin's address to ensure her eighth-grader could continue at Central Dauphin East Middle School in central Pennsylvania. Crowder had lost her job at a nursing home and, unable to afford her apartment rent, moved to a cheaper place in the underachieving Harrisburg district.

"Like any parent, I was just looking out for my daughter," said Crowder, 40, one of three Harrisburg residents prosecuted last fall and convicted for false enrollment in the better-performing Central Dauphin schools. "I just didn't want her to fall behind and not get a good education."

A judge gave her a year to pay $1,359 restitution to Central Dauphin for tuition. Her daughter has now adjusted well in Harrisburg, Crowder said.

In California, the San Francisco Unified School District started cracking down on residency fraud about a year ago. The schools allow residents to apply to any campus in the district.

With help from anonymous tips, investigators identified about 300 students whose use of false addresses potentially displaced residents trying to get into San Francisco's most sought-after schools. Offenders had to withdraw and pay $2,500 to $5,000 to reimburse investigative costs. The district chose not to prosecute.

"The board had a strong suspicion over the years that there were families using fake addresses to gain access to our schools," said Arcadio Fokin, director of the district's educational placement center.

About 300 other nonresident families came forward in November after the district offered amnesty to those who had falsified residency information, and those students were allowed to finish the semester at their SFUSD school, officials said.

In Georgia, Houston County superintendent Robin Hines said he decided to get tough in 2009 after hearing of parents lying on address affidavits to get their children into his 26,000-student district. The district, about 100 miles southeast of Atlanta, has high test scores and does well on federal benchmarks, he said.

Working with the county district attorney's office, the district gave families two weeks to withdraw or face criminal charges.

Hines said 130 families left immediately. About 25 indictments were returned on charges of falsifying documents, charges that were dismissed after families agreed to pay fines – ranging from $300 to $18,000, to make up for local tax dollars used.

"We are a highly attractive district and people want to go here," Hines said. "At the root of it all was people who wanted the best for their children, but to falsify records and have children lying, it was not a good situation."

Williams-Bolar could be forced to pay Copley-Fairlawn $30,000 for tuition. Her felony conviction could threaten her current license to work as an aide with special-needs students – and the teaching license she's pursuing in college.

Ohio Gov. John Kasich has asked the state parole board to determine whether her felony conviction was an appropriate punishment.

"I'm hoping for a pardon," she said.

___

Associated Press writers Kathy Matheson in Philadelphia, Meghan Barr in Cleveland, Donna Gordon Blankinship in Seattle, Terry Chea in San Francisco and Dorie Turner in Atlanta contributed to this report.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST EDUCATION

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Kelley Williams-Bolar, alarmed after her home was broken into, yanked her two daughters out of their urban Akron, Ohio, schools and enrolled them in her father's suburban school...
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Kelley Williams-Bolar, alarmed after her home was broken into, yanked her two daughters out of their urban Akron, Ohio, schools and enrolled them in her father's suburban school...
Filed by Victoria Fine  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 86
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
05:53 PM on 02/28/2011
How about getting rid of the students who should not be in this country first
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
45Caliber
02:28 PM on 02/27/2011
It is a shame that a parent gets penalized for wanting the best for their children, this is not a new car this is an education we are talking about. Something that would allow her children a better future. What makes matters even worse is not that she used a bogus address she used a family member's address in order to enroll er children in the school. Also,the fact that her teacher's license or her job as a teacher's assistant is on the line is absolutely ridiculous!
04:23 PM on 02/27/2011
I'll agree with the last sentence, but nothing else. If everyone was able to go to one school because a family member lived in the town, you'd double the enrollment of the school. If the woman really wanted that education for her kids and moving in with her dad wasn't an option, she'd be riding the kids and the school to make sure her kids were getting the best education possible.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
paulwl
12:50 PM on 02/27/2011
To think that INDIANA does not HAVE THIS KIND OF PROBLEM! Cause the state govt. made it possible for students to GO ANYWHERE THEY WANT TO in the state!! Any thing to NOT pay for Brown V.Board 1954.
11:57 AM on 02/27/2011
My bigger question here is, why do people that have no children in school still have to pay school taxes if they own property? What benefit are they receiving form them? I have no children in school, retired, and still have to pay high school taxes, that is unfair to me. Don't even tell me it is for the benefit of the children so they can have a good education because that is clearly not the case any more. So I agree with and promote home schooling, private schools and charter schools. Where ever the child can get the best education, which, at this time, is not always public schools.
04:26 PM on 02/27/2011
I don't pay for the senior citizen center in town, but like that there is a nice one available. I haven't needed the fire department or police at my house (and hopefully never will). As my kids get older, I'm not using the children's library anymore. Nor do I use the soccer fields or tennis courts in town. But these, like schools, are a quality of life issue and all of it enhances my community. So I will happily pay taxes that support them.
06:56 PM on 03/03/2011
Well said. That lady sounds like a selfish Republican.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Richie MuadDib
loves to be censored
11:57 PM on 02/26/2011
Let's clear up some misconceptions about Williams-Bolar:
Her father really did live in the school district. Now, granted she was probably only giving custody to granpa so that her daughters could go to a better school, but my point remains (as I make it on almost every Williams-Bolar article):
the school's only legitimate beef was that the girls did not actually sleep at granpa's house.

Now think about it for one second, do you REALLY think that if the girl's slept at granpa's house regularly, this would make it all better? It is a technicality. When a cop arrests you for jaywalking...it isn't about the JAYWALKING!

And what makes the whole situation worse is the shake-down nature of it: she pulled the girl's out of the school after exhausting her administrative rights (through the Board of Education). TWO YEARS LATER, the school still wanted tens of thousands of dollars from her, so instead of taking her to civil court (like the rest of us would have to do if we had a debt-collection issue), they got the prosecutor to bring criminal charges.

This is an exclusive hamlet being a bully, and nothing else!
09:07 AM on 02/27/2011
Please go to the akronnewsnow . com website as they have a lot of recordings of Williams-Bolar and her Dad from jail, as well as court documents from the trial, much more than the ABJ website. That should really clear up any doubts about this woman, her Father, and the lengths they went to to scam, defraud, whatever, C-F schools, AMHA, and even, at one point, our Military - when she wrote on an envelope "Deployed Overseas Returning in 18 months."

Please then tell me if it's still a small town being a bully (it was actually the county Prosecutor that chose to bring charges.) After reading, & listening thoroughly, to everything that's available, come talk to me.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Richie MuadDib
loves to be censored
01:00 AM on 02/28/2011
I agree, akronnewsnow.com is a great source for this, but you should also read her side.

This case is a classic watergate, or lewinsky situation, where the cover-up is what gets people more mad than the crime (not saying I would defend Nixon or Clinton).

This school was hunting for a way to hang her on a technicality, and she was trying her best to defend herself on each technicality. Why did they try to get her Power of Attorney voided? To hang her on a technicality, they didn't care if the dad was involved, they just didn't want these girls at their school.

Can you have two residences? Yes. Just ask any Fortune 500 executive. Can a public school charge tuition? I doubt it, not to mention they seemed to forget the amount her family ALREADY paid them (via the school tax).

Think about it, if this were a wealthy family that owned two houses (one in Canada, and one in the U.S.), and they paid the school taxes, would you really care that they got Canadian healthcare, but their kids got an American education?

We're not going to persuade each other, I'm sure we can all see that. You feel she stole thousands of dollars of education, I feel her dad paid for it already.
04:27 PM on 02/27/2011
You have to be the legal guardian for your kids to go there. It's the law.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
11:40 PM on 02/26/2011
Whenever a prosecutor sees a black face, they go straight for the felony conviction. Just like white drug users outnumber black by 10 to 1, I'm sure there are far more white folks cheating their kids enrollment. The prosecutor wanted to make an example, and how convenient that there was a black person to go after, so nobody would care.
photo
LearnMe
Native NY-er, father of 2, husband to 1. I teach
05:04 PM on 02/26/2011
Her quote, "I am a mother, and I want to make sure my kids are safe, and I want to make sure that they're educated." And can you blame her? I started homeschooling my son so he would get a good education. You can read about the experience, www.learnmeproject.com
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Richie MuadDib
loves to be censored
11:58 PM on 02/26/2011
nice plug...but not a bad website either.
Intelligentia
Anti-Racist
08:53 AM on 02/26/2011
Everytime I read this case, it turns my stomach. Criminal conviction for putting ones child in a school? Again, as much as people want to dance around the issue of race, if this woman were to be White, there would not have been a criminal conviction! I am almost certain that there is a White student in that school current or past whose parents have done the exact thing this woman did. Simply because you criminalized this does not make any of you who want to throw out your morality mumbo jumbo, which you do not follow yourselves, a better human being that this woman. The question I have that I have not yet seen an answer are these: (1) What triggered the investigation of these children? (2) Does the school investigate every student who attend that school to determine his or her residency? (3) Is there any proof that every parent in that school who have two children have spent $30,000 for the exact period of time this woman's children attended the school? New question: Do the grand-parents pay lower taxes since they do not have children in that school who would benefit from their taxes? This conviction is so revolting; even though I do not expect some people who are used to oppressing to understand the immorality of what happened here. They pretend to be so repulsed that the woman lied, but this is the type of thing they would call "white lie" when they do it.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
10:08 AM on 02/26/2011
Although I agree with some of your point there is absolutely no reason or evidence to throw the race card on the table.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Richie MuadDib
loves to be censored
11:19 AM on 02/26/2011
Except for the demographic breakdown of the school/district, and the fact that her daughters are a distinct minority...there is no reason to suggest race.

Think about it, why did they suspect these girls of not being "from 'round here" ? Do they call in EVERY kid in that school and question their residence?
Intelligentia
Anti-Racist
01:17 PM on 02/26/2011
I apologize for your disappointment with the race card; unfortunately, that is the only deck of cards on the table; it's always on the table. Once we switch to a different deck of cards, I will be glad to deal or play from that deck of cards.
06:54 PM on 02/26/2011
Fraud...Noun.
1 a : any act, expression, omission, or concealment calculated to deceive another to his or her disadvantage; specifically : a misrepresentation or concealment with reference to some fact material to a transaction that is made with knowledge of its falsity or in reckless disregard of its truth or falsity and with the intent to deceive another and that is reasonably relied on by the other who is injured thereby b : the affirmative defense of having acted in response to a fraud

While I agree the punishment is rather harsh she was fully aware she was breaking the law, took the risk, and got busted. The reason she was investigated for fraud is irrelevant as she was in fact committing fraud. Schools do not have the resources to investigate very much and as the story states school districts usually choose to do so only as a last resort. I feel terrible that you are so scared of your fellow countrymen to see a racial bias in each and every single thing that happens. That's a tough way to choose to live, pathetic, but still tough. Best of luck with that.
Intelligentia
Anti-Racist
09:15 PM on 02/26/2011
Don't feel soory for me; feel sorry for yourself. Let me give you a few examples: (1) Segregation was once the law, right? White folks did not have problems brutalizing Blacks who did not comply with segregation, it's "THE LAW." It was no longer the law when White folks decided it was no longer the law. Blacks who fought against segregation would have lived, according to you: a "pathetic" life; (2) Sentencing laws between crack cocaine and pure cocaine: Blacks get mandatory high sentences for crack cocaine but Whites get a slap on the wrist for pure cocaine. I guess it would be seeing race in everything for me to speak-out how these punitive laws, which specifically target Blacks, are unjust; (3) Employment discrimination: White employment agencies and employers use code words (baskellball player and hockey player) to tell each other the race of applicants in order to discriminate against Blacks. I guess that would constitute seeing race in everything.

If you noticed, Black people do not make these laws, Whites make them and impose it on us and expect us to agree with them that those racist laws are worthy of obeying, because, "IT'S THE LAW". The problem is that the same laws do not apply to whites equally. Help youself here:

http://www.hrw.org/en/node/62236/section/1

http://www.wordonemploymentlaw.com/2010/09/code-words-equal-discrimination/

http://www.aclu.org/drug-law-reform/president-obama-signs-bill-reducing-cocaine-sentencing-disparity
08:00 AM on 02/26/2011
ever hear of private schools ......wow
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
03:21 PM on 02/26/2011
The ones that offer free tuition? They are called public schools!
04:33 PM on 02/26/2011
you get what you pay for .....good plan
04:35 PM on 02/27/2011
She had a public school available to her. So she's too good for the public school, but not good enough to fork over money for a private school.
06:47 AM on 02/26/2011
Who breaks a butterfly upon a wheel?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ewb2001
05:21 PM on 02/25/2011
White people, myself included, unfortunately reacted to Busing in the 60's & 70's by moving to suburbia where "those people" could not move. My parents who claim not to be that way moved to a suburb in Ohio where it was ILLEGAL for a black person to own real estate! I heartily believ ther should be Regional School Boards that all share equally.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TaxpayingVoter
Wait....whut?
08:56 PM on 02/25/2011
Parma Heights, Ohio?
Intelligentia
Anti-Racist
08:54 AM on 02/26/2011
Your honesty is refreshing!!!! Thank you!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tressie Mc
05:17 PM on 02/25/2011
I would remind everyone that there was a time when it was illegal for black children to read.

There is such a thing as justly breaking an unjust law.
04:38 PM on 02/27/2011
This woman could do anything she wanted - yes, her financial status wouldn't allow some things, but we all have financial limits - so she wasn't justly breaking an unjust law. She was using a service she wasn't paying for.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tressie Mc
05:37 PM on 02/28/2011
The first part of your first sentence contradicts the second half.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Peter007
04:17 PM on 02/25/2011
If all kids were given vouchers , they would attend the school of their choice and the best schools would get the most money because they get the most votes or vouchers.
05:45 PM on 02/25/2011
If we tripled education funding, this would be an option. The average non-religious private school costs not quite triple what the average per-pupil spending in public school costs.

Not that it would really solve anything, as private schools can refuse low-skills or badly behaved students. So many students couldn't attend any school they chose, because private schools usually only want students that are easy to teach.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Peter007
05:53 PM on 02/25/2011
How does placing a student with emotional problems help the other students in the class?

And Private schools would drop in price if they didn't have to compete with free public schools.
09:40 PM on 02/25/2011
"Refuse......... badly behaved students" Is this a bad thing? Low skills? Not if they continue in private schools....especially Catholic ones "We have vays ov making you learn!" Easy to teach? More like "motivated to learn" by parents who give rip, again, is this really a negative?
09:09 PM on 02/25/2011
Most low-performing students would be kicked out of most private schools due to their inability to behave in a learning environment. What are we going to do with those kids? My guess is that they will end up right back at their neighborhood school and nothing will change because the problem is lack of discipline and work ethic on the part of students. A very small fraction of students will take this opportunity and flourish. The others want learning to fall into their brains with little to no effort on their part and there is no superman to help them with that.
09:46 PM on 02/25/2011
No amount of tax money is going to overcome a home environment where education just isn't a priority. A few will be self starters, a few may catch fire from the right teacher but the majority of those will be lifelong low performers & at some point the tax paying citizen has the right, indeed the obligation, to say enough is enough.
04:12 PM on 02/25/2011
I'm not sure how egregious this violation is

If her father is a resident of the district, then i'd assume that he is paying taxes, school taxes, for the district as well. If he was the children's guardian then there would be no violation.

There would be no additional tax due either. So really, who is being harmed? How is this "Stealing"??
07:05 AM on 02/26/2011
The mother was living in a HUD subsidized apartment that the mother qualified for by claiming that the two daughters lived with her. In addition, the mother qualified for more welfare because the daughters lived with her.

In other words, the mother is a con person who was scamming the government. Anything she says is worthless because she has lied to both the welfare agencies and the school districts. Who knows what else she has stolen over the years. My guess is that the claim that she is a full time college students who wants to be a teacher is a lie and the mother is doing it to get student aid.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Richie MuadDib
loves to be censored
11:30 AM on 02/26/2011
Exactly, NO ONE was harmed, thanks for playing, superdestroyer.
The question was: grandpa pays property/school tax, so how did the school lose out? Your answer discloses that you cannot identify in ANY way, shape, or form that the school/district lost money by those girls attending.

As for your attempt at misdirection: she was not charged with any sort of welfare fraud, or anything else stemming from her subsidized residence (probably because there was no fraud).

This is an example of an exclusive Hamlet getting over on its own resident (granpa) by refusing to educate the granddaughters; then having the unbridled chutzpah to demand granpa's daughter to pay tuition (in excess of granpa's taxes which fund the school).
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NEOHIO
The less government the better
04:02 PM on 02/25/2011
No question about it, the school district that she ILLEGALLY enrolled her kids into is much better than the Akron school system. She got caught as did many others trying to game the system. ALL except this woman resolved the issue before going to court. This woman felt she was "entitled" to do what she did, that forging papers and lying on legal documents was OK because she was ENTITLED... I feel sorry for her but find that the law was pretty much forced to do what it did as she refused to settle the case outside of court. Maybe a new system for school enrollment needs to be developed but until then one must play within the confines of what is legal.
Intelligentia
Anti-Racist
09:51 AM on 02/26/2011
There is nothing lawful about unlawful laws! While some people may believe that once it is called a law, we must all abide by it, some laws are so inhumane that everyone who is worth living aught to disregard it. Unfortunately, they pursued the wrong theory, in my view. She should have proceeded with a theory of difiance of an unjust law. This is the United States of America and citizens of the so-called United States should be able to enroll their children in any school they are willing and able to transport their children to. Why should her parents' residence in that district not qualify her children to attend shools in that district? What benefits are her parents getting from their "$30,000" taxes they are paying to educate the other students in that district? These laws are passed to continue to enforce segregation surrepticiously! Blacks usually abiding by these "unlawful" laws under duress, because the alternative is what happened to this woman. White people do what she did all across the United States. They call it "white lie" (wink wink). It's only when Blacks and brown people start taking the same advantages do the so-called moralist want to talk about legality and truthfullness; yet, you have no problem voting in liars and all sorts of criminal elements into you high political office. Please, save us your false sense of morality!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Richie MuadDib
loves to be censored
11:34 AM on 02/26/2011
get your facts straight, neo: this woman DID resolve the issue. She took the kids out of the school. The school then demanded tens of thousands of dollars from her (even though her dad already paid the school taxes for the residence the girl's were claiming).

Two years after she took the kids out of the school, they brought criminal charges...not because they were STILL going to the school (as that matter had been resolved for a couple years), but because she wasn't paying them back tuition.
07:08 PM on 02/26/2011
Sorry Richie your insistence on ignoring this woman's fraud is admirable but she still broke the law and there is nothing in the above article backing up what you are saying. Could you please provide a link to the information you are referring to on the details of the case from a reputable news source. I would like to see more about this case.