T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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915.1 | Independant Independance | DNEAST::DEE_ERIC | | Fri Dec 01 1989 08:48 | 26 |
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Karen,
I strongly suggest that this young woman rent a Post Office Box in
what ever town she would like to be a resident of. She should also
register with the town municipal office and be established on the
voting register to be assured legal residency in that town. She does
not have to supply a street address, as she can just say that she is a
student and may move from semester to semester or sooner, and that her
address is at the PO Box as provided. With this arrangement she has
established legal independance without dragging you in (I get the
feeling that you become her accomplice if you let her claim your
address, and it may not be in your best interest if her parents want to
get nasty.)
To this point, my legal residence is in Monmouth, my mail is in a
PO Box in Manchester (to get my mail on the way to Monmouth), and I am
currently living in Sidney. All my bills, notices from the town of
Monmouth, etc. go to the Manchester PO Box, no questions asked.
Tell her to do it right and above board - don't claim addresses or
residences that are false.
I don't know what the legal ramifications are if you let her claim
your residence as hers, but I think it may be important to know in case
you are tempted to agree.
For what opinions are worth,
Eric
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915.2 | Ask a _real_ expert | CADSE::SMITH | Tom Smith | Sat Dec 02 1989 21:16 | 13 |
| re: .1
While it is true that nearly everyone (except U.P.S.) will accept a
post office box as a mailing address, my experience is that the post
office supplying the box, the department of motor vehicles, most other
governmental or "official" agencies, and many financial institutions
require a permanent residence address (a real street address),
regardless of whether or not you also have a p.o. box.
As to advice to Karen, I would have the same reservations. I think I
would advise a brief chat with an attorney.
-Tom
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915.3 | | HPSRAD::KIRK | Matt Kirk -- 297-6370 | Sun Dec 03 1989 19:05 | 9 |
| .2 is correct - some government agencies (FCC, for one) won't accept a P.O.
box for some uses.
I had a friend in college who had a drivers license and car registered to
his dorm address, so you could suggest that too. Also, in Massachusetts the
RMV allows you (or did a few years ago) to specify a mailing address in
addition to a street address, so when I didn't have a permanent address I
had the RMV send correspondance to my parents in Pennsylvania (your
daughter's friend could have correspondance sent to a P.O. box).
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915.4 | | DNEAST::DEE_ERIC | | Mon Dec 04 1989 09:20 | 28 |
|
>Re: .2 and .3
My address as stated in .1 is a PO Box.
The Post Office required no street address from me. They asked me
where I live, and I told them. They asked why I don't take a PO Box
in that town, and I told them it would add a 10+ mile round trip to
my commute each day. No problem. (The questions were small town
talk, not ones to validate if I qualify for a box or not.)
The Motor Vehicle Dept. required no strret address from me.
No financial institution has ever ask for a street address - I just up
front tell them my residence is the town of Monmouth, but my address is
PO Box etc.
The town of Monmouth asks only my mailing address and what road I live
on, no numbers, RFD number, or anything.
The Internal Revenue Service accepts my PO Box as my address, and just
Monmouth as my residence. There's one govt. agency not to worry about.
Other government offices may have different requirements, but this young
lady may not have dealings with government offices - and when she does,
she should give the PO Box as the address.
Which makes me wonder - who does she want to furnish with residence
information?
Eric
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915.5 | Have her see a lawyer | GIAMEM::MACKINNON | | Mon Dec 04 1989 12:17 | 16 |
|
If this woman wants to be free financially from her parents she
must have a long talk with her college financial aid office.
I know the rules have changed since I left school. So I will not
put the rules I remember in cause they may not apply anymore.
This certainly is a tough thing for her to have to choose. There
are far reaching implications than just not having mom and dad
to help out. I would advise sending her to a financial planner
and a lawyer. She is going to need advice in both arenas.
Your daughter must be a special person and so should you to want
to help this person. Good luck to all of you.
Michele
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915.6 | | CLOVE::GODIN | Shades of gray matter | Mon Dec 04 1989 12:24 | 15 |
| re. -.4 (Eric)
At this point she figures she'll need a permanent address for auto
registration and driver's license. There will probably be other
needs she discovers as time goes on (IRS and bank, just to name
two that have been mentioned in this string), but she is just in
the early stages of her investigation, and being a teenager still,
car was the first concern to enter her head.
re. all
Thanks for the input so far; I'll pass concrete suggestions on to
her as they come forward.
Karen
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915.7 | she has to live somewhere | GOBO::PELUSO | Master the Moment | Mon Dec 04 1989 12:30 | 12 |
| I knew of many people who used their dorm address as their address.
Some had stuff sent to PO boxes (bills ect) as well, because they were
constantly moving during the course of the year. Mass RMV had no
problems w/ dorm addresses (this was usually a street and box type
set up), infact I doubt they could differentiate it from an apartment
address.
SHe might not have considered using a PO box, or she may have
underlying reasons for wanting to use yours. I would also suggest
that she speak to the financial aid office, She may not realize
what she is getting herself into (or how bad it might be to have to
admit she can't do it on her own.....).
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915.8 | Be careful! | INTER::C_MILLER | | Tue Dec 05 1989 12:21 | 30 |
| Some other things to consider: your daughter is a freshman, she has
only known this girl since September, yet your family has taken her in
as if she has known her a lifetime! In my four years of college, I met
lots of people from similar and different backgrounds than mine. That
is what makes college life so much more interesting. BUT, how many
people do I still keep in touch with from freshman year? How many
people did I befriend/lose from freshman to senior year?
I commend you for opening your heart and your home to this stranger,
but keep in mind that you are only hearing one side of the story. You
do not know this girl's history, her parents, all of the situations
leading up to this.
Once you let this girl use your name and address for ANY type of legal
address you are opening up the door to a lot of problems. Supposing
she applies for credit cards, loans etc... and gives your address, then
can't pay the bills or moves away. YOU will receive all the warnings,
phone calls, and collection agents at YOUR door.
Be careful! your daughter is in a very impressionable state of mind
right now. She wants to make friends and feel less like a new kid on
the block. It is during the first two years of college most kids will
experiment and do lots of things they never did before. And is this
girl is used to having financial security, at age 18, without a job
or a college education, she won't last long. She should try to work
somethign out with her family to get through the next four years.
Her therapist should be the one to lead her down the right path and
work things out, not your daughter.
Please let us know what you decide.
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915.9 | What are her options? | CLOVE::GODIN | Shades of gray matter | Tue Dec 05 1989 13:13 | 48 |
| Re. -.8 (C_Miller)
Thank you for putting your finger right on some of the nebulous
concerns I've been having. I agree that the freshman year at college
is a tumultuous time of adjustment, breaking away, learning,
establishing and breaking relationships, etc. etc. etc. Perhaps
that's been in the back of my mind as I felt some resistance to
throwing open my arms/heart/home to this "stranger."
YET -- _IF_ what we're hearing is really true (and who would want
to reject it out of hand, given some of the reports in this and
other conferences and in the press of people looking the other way
when a hurting soul cried out for help?) I want to do what ever
I can that's REASONABLE, RESPONSIBLE, and SUPPORTIVE.
As I've indicated in previous responses, I've referred the girl
back to her counselors for what I HOPE will be informed advice.
I've also (just this week) indicated through my daughter that we
(the adults in this equation) can't be expected to do much more
than make her feel welcome for the holidays until the girl feels
she is able to open up to us (not just to our daughter) about her
situation, her needs, and her expectations.
I have no way of knowing what type of rearing this young person
has had. My own children were taught and encouraged in independence
from a very young age. As a result they know that there are certain
things they can turn to me for and others they're going to have
to handle on their own as a result of independent decisions they
have made. I'm honored that my daughter has felt there's enough
compassion in me to come to me with this problem. Yet if it were
her making the same decision (for whatever reason), I'd hope she
had enough foresight to anticipate most of the problems that would
result and be convinced she could handle those problems on her own
before opting for financial independence. I don't want to be placed
in a situation where I'm supposed to expect less from a stranger.
Are there any readers of this conference who have gone through the
process of establishing financial independence (apparently a rather
formal process required by most schools before they will provide
financial aid to a student without considering parental assets in
the decision)? What is involved? Can a youngster realistically
hope to provide food, clothing, and shelter for him/herself and
continue educational pursuits? (She does have a marketable skill
- EMT training and certification -- to call on.)
I'm so thankful it's not my daughter facing such a decision!
Karen
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