JFABD Homeless Students: Enrollment Rights and Services

JFABD

HOMELESS STUDENTS: ENROLLMENT RIGHTS AND SERVICES

To the extent practical and as required by law, the district will work with homeless students and their families to provide stability in school attendance and other services. Special attention will be given to ensuring the enrollment and attendance of homeless students not currently attending school. Homeless students will be provided district services for which they are eligible, including Head Start and comparable pre-school programs, Title I, similar state programs, special education, bilingual education, vocational and technical education programs, gifted and talented programs and school nutrition programs.

Homeless students are defined as lacking a fixed, regular and adequate nighttime residence, including:

  1. Sharing the housing of other persons due to loss of housing or economic hardship;

  2. Living in motels, hotels, trailer parks or camping grounds due to the lack of alternative adequate accommodations;

  3. Living in emergency or transitional shelters;

  4. Being abandoned in hospitals;

  5. Living in public or private places not designed for or ordinarily used as regular sleeping accommodations for human beings;

  6. Living in cars, parks, public spaces, abandoned buildings, substandard housing, transportation stations or similar settings;

  7. Migratory children living in conditions described in the previous examples.

The superintendent shall designate an appropriate staff person to be the district’s liaison for homeless students and their families

To the extent feasible, homeless students will continue to be enrolled in their school of origin while they remain homeless or until the end of the academic year in which they obtain permanent housing. Instead of remaining in the school of origin, parents or guardians of homeless students may request enrollment in the school in the attendance area in which the student is actually living, or other schools. Attendance rights by living in attendance areas, other student assignment policies, or intra and inter-district choice options are available to homeless families on the same terms as families resident in the district.

If there is an enrollment dispute, the student shall be immediately enrolled in the school in which enrollment is sought, pending resolution of the dispute. The parent or guardian shall be informed of the district’s decision and their appeal rights in writing. The district’s liaison will carry out dispute resolution as provided by state rule. Unaccompanied youth will also be enrolled pending resolution of the dispute.

Once the enrollment decision is made, the school shall immediately enroll the student, pursuant to district policies. If the student does not have immediate access to immunization records, the student shall be admitted under a personal exception. Students and families should be encouraged to obtain current immunization records or immunizations as soon as possible, and the district liaison is directed to assist. Records from the student’s previous school shall be requested from the previous school pursuant to district policies. Emergency contact information is required at the time of enrollment consistent with district policies, including compliance with the state’s address confidentiality program when necessary.

Documentation to substantiate free meal eligibility that is acceptable in lieu of a free and reduced price meal application may consist of the child's name or list of names, effective date (s), and the signature of the Homeless Education Liaison or the director of the homeless shelter.

Homeless students are entitled to transportation to their school of origin or the school where they are to be enrolled. If the school of origin is in a different district, or a homeless student is living in another district but will attend his or her school of origin in this district, the districts will coordinate the transportation services necessary for the student, or will divide the costs equally.

The district’s liaison for homeless students and their families shall coordinate with local social service agencies that provide services to homeless children and youths and their families; other school districts on issues of transportation and records transfers; and state and local housing agencies responsible for comprehensive housing affordability strategies. This coordination includes providing public notice of the educational rights of homeless students in schools, family shelters and soup kitchens. The district’s liaison will also review and recommend amendments to district policies that may act as barriers to the enrollment of homeless students.

The Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education defines unaccompanied youth as

  • A youth who is homeless;

  • A youth who is not in the physical custody of a parent, guardian; and

  • A youth not in the custody of a state agency.

This definition includes youth living in runaway shelters, in abandoned buildings, cars, on the street or in inadequate housing, youth denied housing by their families, those who have left home voluntarily, even when their parent/s want them to return home, and youth doubled up with friends or relatives.

Unaccompanied youth must be immediately enrolled in school like any other homeless student. They may enroll themselves or be enrolled by a parent, non-parent caretaker, older sibling, a caseworker, or the homeless liaison. Unaccompanied youth have the right to remain in either their school of origin or enroll in the school where they are temporarily residing. A school cannot refuse to enroll an unaccompanied youth who does not have a parent or guardian.

LEGAL REFS.: Title I, Part C

No Child Left Behind Act, 2002

Homeless Education Advisory 2002 – 1-4, 2003 5-7B and 2005 - 8

First Reading: 04/12/05 Second Reading: 04/25/05 ADOPTED: 04/25/05 Revised & Readopted: 5/22/18