Washington, DC - Department Of Consumer & Regulatory Affairs DCRA regulates business activities; issues business and professional licenses; regulates land and building use, historic preservation, rental housing, and real estate. Corporate Registration. education Licensing. Housing regulations. Neighborhood. Stabilization. Real Estate Board Government of the district of columbia. John A. Wilson Building http://dcra.dc.gov/
District Of Columbia -- Sources [ ALSO! -- U.S. Law ] Back to public schools main page Initial Board Policies, regulations and Bylaws district of columbia Public Schools Board of education January 2001 Approved January 17, 2001 Home Bibliography Calendar Columns Dorothy Brizill Bonnie Cain Jim http://www.lawsource.com/also/usa.cgi?xdc
District Of Columbia State Of Education: Tuition Assistance Grants regulations Supporting Documents (as of 11/24/2000 Click Here To Visit The OfficialWebsite of the Government of the district of columbia Government of the http://seo.dc.gov/services/post_secondary_financial_assistance/tuition_assistanc
District Of Columbia State Of Education: Tuition Assistance Grants Constituent Information or Function Template, DC Government State education Office. SEO HOME. Financial Program Information. regulations. NEWS. DC Tuition Assistance Grant Program Government of the district of columbia. John A. Wilson http://www.tuitiongrant.dc.gov/
State Regulation Of Private Schools - District Of Columbia DC Municipal regulations 2100.2. Registration/Licensing/Accreditation The Districtof columbia Board of education is responsible for establishing http://www.ed.gov/pubs/RegPrivSchl/districc.html
Extractions: State Regulation of Private Schools - June 2000 To award credit for compliance with the District's compulsory school attendance law, independent, private and parochial schools must submit satisfactory evidence to the Superintendent of Schools that the amount of instruction, character of instruction, qualifications of staff and other conditions, such as class size, facilities, counseling services, and attendance recordkeeping, are acceptable to the Board of Education. D.C. Municipal Regulations 2100.2. Registration/Licensing/Accreditation: The District of Columbia Board of Education is responsible for establishing requirements to govern acceptable credit for studies at independent or private schools. D.C. Code Ann. 31-402(d). Schools must provide satisfactory evidence to the Superintendent of Schools that the amount of instruction, character of instruction, qualifications of staff and other conditions, such as class size, facilities, counseling services, and attendance record-keeping are acceptable to the Board. D.C. Municipal Regulations 2100.2. Institutions that submit proof of accreditation or that they are undergoing the process of accreditation by an accrediting body approved by the Board will be deemed to have presented satisfactory evidence. D.C. Municipal Regulations 2100.3. The parochial nature of an educational institution or sectarian nature of instruction cannot be a factor for the Board's determination. D.C. Municipal Regulations 2100.5. School approval for attendance purpose is contingent on the maintenance and submission of attendance records to the D.C. Board of Education. D.C. Municipal Regulations 2100.6.
Extractions: Superintendent, District of Columbia Public Schools INTRODUCTION According to Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, "No person in the United States shall, on the ground of race, color, ornatlonal origin, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of; or be subjected to discrimination under any program or activity receiving federal financial asslstance." Related Federal Regulations state, "School systems are responsible for assuring that students of a particular race, color, or national origin are not denied the opportunity to obtain the education generally obtained by other students in the system" (33 Federal Register, 4956). This law has been specifically interpreted as applying to school children classified as non- or limited-English proficient (NEP/LEP) by reason of having an other-than-English home language background. Such a condition is held to preclude the student from an equal learning opportunity in an all-English-medium classroom ( Lau vs. Nichols
Titles Of The District Of Columbia Municipal Regulations Mayor, Chairman, and Members of the Council of district of columbia, US Senator,US Representative, Members of the Board of education, and Advisory http://www.abfa.com/dcdocs/dcmrlist.htm
Extractions: TITLE 1 MAYOR AND EXECUTIVE AGENCIES (March 1986) TITLE 3 ELECTIONS AND ETHICS (June 1994 w/1996 Supplement) Amendments? Chapter 1 Organization of the Board of Elections and Ethics Chapter 2 Political and Ethical Conduct of Board Members and Employees Chapter 3 Advisory Opinions of the Board Chapter 4 Hearings Chapter 5 Voter Registration Chapter 6 Eligibility of Candidates Chapter 7 Election Procedures Chapter 8 Tabulation and Certification of Election Results Chapter 9 Filling Vacancies Chapter 10 Initiative and Referendum Chapter 11 Recall of Elected Officials Chapter 12 [Deleted] 38 DCR 7027, 7031 (November 22, 1991)
District Of Columbia Public Schools - Board Of Education under consideration by the district of columbia Board of education. Once adopted,these rules become part of the Title 5 of the DC Municipal regulations. http://www.k12.dc.us/dcps/boe/boerules.html
Extractions: This section contains the complete text of rulemakings either currently or recently under consideration by the District of Columbia Board of Education. Once adopted, these rules become part of the Title 5 of the D.C. Municipal Regulations. Written comments on any of these emergency and proposed rulemakings are invited from interested citizens. Such comments should be addressed as follows: Russell Smith Emergency and Proposed Rulemaking goes into effect upon enactment by the Board. It remains in effect for 120 days or until alternative emergency and proposed rulemaking or final rulemaking on the subject has been approved by the Board. Emergency and proposed rulemaking must be published in the D.C. Register for a period of at least 30 days before the Board can take action to finalize it.
Charter School Autonomy -- Updated March 2002 district of columbia and Puerto Rico, charter schools receive an automatic waiverfrom most state and school district education laws, regulations and policies. http://www.ecs.org/clearinghouse/24/14/2414.htm
Extractions: StateNotes Charter Schools 700 Broadway, Suite 1200 Denver, CO 80203-3460 Fax: 303.296.8332 www.ecs.org Charter School Autonomy First Completed in April 2001 Last Updated in March 2002 This ECS StateNote examines policies dealing with charter school autonomy across the states and answers the following questions: Are the states standards and assessments applied to charter schools? Are there any restrictions on a charter schools budgetary authority? What rules are waived for charter schools? Based on the information in this ECS StateNote Thirty-seven states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico apply state standards and assessments to charter schools. Twenty-one states do not place any restrictions on a charter schools budgetary authority. Eight states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico place restrictions on a charter schools budgetary authority. In six states, restrictions, if any, on a charter schools budgetary authority are specified in the charter. Restrictions on budgetary authority in two states, Massachusetts and Texas, depend on the type of charter school. In 20 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, charter schools receive an automatic waiver from most state and school district education laws, regulations and policies. In five states
Databases Company Profiles; Distance education database; district of columbia Healthcare Related Statutes and regulations; district of columbia http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/DLC/databases/browse.jsp?letter=D
GLAA Testifies On Proposed School Harassment Regulations mandates that a copy of the rules of the Board of education shall be or other appropriateplace in each public school in the district of columbia. This is http://www.glaa.org/archive/2002/dcpstestimony0206.shtml
Extractions: Proposed Rulemaking on Harassment February 6, 2002 My name is Bob Summersgill. I am President of the Gay and Lesbian Activists Alliance of Washington, DC (GLAA), the oldest continuously active gay and lesbian civil rights organization in the country. Thank you for the opportunity to comment on the proposed regulations. As you may be aware, GLAA's first lobbying success was persuading the DC Board of Education in May 1972 to ban discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation throughout the public school system. We have been involved in a number of other issues involving the school system over the past 30 years. GLAA began urging the DC Public Schools to adopt a policy to protect students from harassment in August 1999. This led to Superintendent Arlene Ackerman's Directive on March 29, 2000 on harassment and sexual harassment against students.
BCHSA: BC Regulations Division 4 Home education. 12. if no regional correspondence school provides serviceto that district or c), an independent school operating in British columbia. http://www.bchomeschool.org/Regs.htm
Extractions: Home Page BC Home School Association Contact Us! B.C. Regulations Information Support Groups Links Convention 2003 As of June 2002, there have been some changes in the education options available to BC families, with more schools now being able to offer Electronic Learning programs. Details coming soon to this site; see BCHLA site for info, and the Ministry's site on Distance Education and Electronic Delivered Education BC School Act: Home Education Basic Requirements Registration Investigation by Superintendent Power to Report ... Responsibility and Obligations of School and Board Official Government websites Links q BC School Act: Home Education Sections of Bill 67 - 1989 of the BC School Act Related to Home Education Division 4: Home Education A parent of a child who is required to enroll in an educational program provided by a board under section 3 may educate the child at home or elsewhere in accordance with this Division and shall provide that child with an educational program.
IFAP - Federal Registers Additionally, 37 States, the district of columbia, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands,Puerto (4) The education Department General Administrative regulations http://ifap.ed.gov/fregisters/FR031902.html
Extractions: Page Numbers: 12548-12549 Summary: Notice of the closing date for receipt of State applications for Award Year 2002-2003 funds. http:// fms.sfa.ed.gov http://www.ed.gov/legislation/FedRegister . To use PDF you must have Adobe Acrobat Reader, which is available free at this site. If you have questions about using PDF, call the U.S. Government Printing Office (GPO), toll free, at 1-888-293-6498; or in the Washington, DC area at (202) 512-1530. Note: The official version of this document is the document published in the Federal Register. Free Internet access to the official edition of the Federal Register and the Code of Federal Regulations is available on GPO Access at: http:// www.access.gpo.gov/nara/index.html . Program Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1070c et seq. Dated: March 13, 2002. Greg Woods, Chief Operating Officer, Federal Student Aid. [FR Doc. Filed ; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 4000-01-P Attachments/Enclosures: This Federal Register is in PDF
Extractions: Landmark Cases Related Organizations Regional Accrediting Organizations Specialized Accrediting Organizations National Accrediting Organizations Accrediting Association of Bible Colleges (AABC) Accrediting Commission of the Distance Education and Training Council (DETC) Accrediting Council for Independent Colleges and Schools (ACICS) Association of Advanced Rabbinical and Talmudic Schools (AARTS)
Washington State Courts: Court Rules CEURegs, Continuing education regulations (in Word Format Licensed in Other Statesor Territories of the United States or the district of columbia to Practice http://www.courts.wa.gov/rules/list.cfm?group=ga&set=APR
Boating Regulations By State Yes. district of columbia, No details available. Yes. Home study is accepted.Yes. Guam, No mandatory boating education requirements. N/A. http://www.boatsafe.com/nauticalknowhow/stateregs.htm
Extractions: accepts boating safety certificates from other states and/or NASBLA-approved courses. Alabama Minimum age to operate 12. Boating license required - proctored exam required to obtain license. Non-residents may operate up to 45 days without a license. Alaska No mandatory boating education requirements. N/A Arizona No mandatory boating education requirements. N/A Arkansas No mandatory boating education requirements. N/A California No mandatory boating education laws. Minimum age to operate is 16. California boating information. Yes Colorado Colorado residents - age 14-15 - who operate PWCs required to complete boating safety course. Home study is not accepted for this age group. Yes Connecticut All operators of vessels registered in, or who own property in, CT must successfully complete an approved boating course or pass the CT challenge exam. PWC operators must take proctored, state-approved PWC classroom course regardless of residency. Other vessel operators may take the CT challenge exam. No Delaware Delaware residents born after 1/1/78 must complete an 8 hour boating course.
SPHHS Directory district of columbia Human Rights Law. Inquiries concerning application of thispolicy and federal laws and regulations regarding discrimination in education http://www.gwumc.edu/sphhs/student_disk/directory/
Extractions: Anantatmula, Manga Banta, James Bartley, Rita Beck, Kristan Biles, Brian Blake, Susan Blanchard, Melvenia Borzi, Phyllis Bowman, Bernadette Boyd, Neal Bray, June Burke, Robert Calamita, Caren Carter J, Jocelyn Carter S, Sunga Cawley, James Chapman Th, Theresa Chapman T, Thomas Cheng, Tina Cleary, Sean Collins, Charlotte Cora-Bramble, Denice Cornejo, Santiago Culpepper-McRae, Dianne Cyprien, Souerette D'Angelo, Lawrence Darr, Kurt Davis, Richard Dingwall, Alison Dunie, Justin Eastaugh, Steven Eckert, Heather Eichner, Nancy El-Mohandes, Ayman Embrey, Martha Ferebee, Annette Focht, Cheryl Foster, Virginia Ganic, Esmir Gassert, Ann Gibson, Ken Glass, Jolie Goldman, Ann Goldsmith, David Good, Donald Greenberg,Warren Greenfield, George Guidotti, Tee Haider, Muhiuddin Hamm, Larry Harvey, Jennel Hernandez, Mercedes Hew, Chin Choo Hickman, Jonathan Hidalgo, Julia Hirsch, Robert Hoffman, Dan Horak, Bernard Hsing, Nelson
JHU Catalog Administrative Regulations And Registration Maryland and the district of columbia laws prohibit the in the regulations, have thefollowing rights (1) to inspect and review their education records, as http://www.jhu.edu/~admis/catalog/admin/policy.html
District Of Columbia Public Postsecondary Education Reorganization Act district of columbia Public Postsecondary education Reorganization Act An Act October 26, 1974, Public Law 93471, 88 Stat. 1423, D.C. Code 31-1701 et seq. TITLE I-SHORT TITLE, PURPOSES, AND DEFINITIONS of public postsecondary education in the district of columbia. http://www.reeusda.gov/1700/legis/udc.htm
Extractions: District of Columbia Public Postsecondary Education Reorganization Act An Act October 26, 1974, Public Law 93-471, 88 Stat. 1423, D.C. Code 31-1701 et seq. TITLE I-SHORT TITLE, PURPOSES, AND DEFINITIONS SHORT TITLE SEC. 101. This Act may be cited as the "District of Columbia Public Postsecondary Education Reorganization Act". STATEMENT OF PURPOSE SEC. 102. It is the intent of Congress to authorize a public land-grant university through the reorganization of the existing local institutions of public postsecondary education in the District of Columbia. It is the clear and specific intent of the Congress that vocational and technological education, as well as liberal arts, sciences, teacher education, and graduate and postgraduate studies, within the University be given at all times its proper priority in terms of funding with other units within the University, and that the land-grant funds be utilized by the University in accordance with the provisions of the Act of July 2, 1862 (7 U.S.C. 301-305, 307, 308) (known as the First Morrill Act). DEFINITIONS SEC. 103.