Cal88 said:
^ The local CC route might also enable her to gain California residency, and a huge break on UC tuition?
It's difficult.
But it can be done.
You have to relinquish all ties to your State.
Here is how to establish intent:
- Remain in California when school is not in session.
- Register to vote and vote in California elections.
- Designate your California address as permanent on all legal matters such as school and employment records, including current military records, taxes, bank statements, etc.
- Obtain a California driver's license within 10 days of settling in California, and no later than the campus deadline. (Nondrivers must obtain a California identification card.)
- If you own a car, obtain a California motor vehicle registration within 20 days of settling in California.
- Work in California and file California resident income tax returns effective from the date of residency in the state. Income earned outside of California after that date must also be declared in California.
- Surrender all out-of-state identification (including driver's license).
- Establish a permanent home in California where your belongings are kept.
- Obtain a license for professional practice in California, if applicable.
You will need to relinquish out-of-state ties and demonstrate intent while simultaneously meeting the physical presence requirement.
Absences from CaliforniaIn order to demonstrate intent, it is important to stay in California during nonacademic periods. If you're a nonresident student who is in the process of establishing California residency, and you leave California for more than one month during the summer before the term in which you are establishing resident status, your intent will be questioned. Absences exceeding 6 weeks during the one-year qualification period is disqualifying.
Graduate and professional degree students who must leave for nonacademic-related reasons for more than a month during the summer should contact the campus residence deputy to seek advice prior to leaving and filing for classification.
Financial independenceNonresident undergraduates
This requirement makes it extremely difficult for most undergraduates who are not financially dependent on a California-resident parent to qualify for classification as a California resident.
If you're an unmarried undergraduate under the age of 24 and your parent(s) are not California residents,
you must be able to document (for example, using tax returns, W-2 forms, bank statements) that you have been totally self-sufficient starting one full year prior to the residence determination date, supporting yourself, through jobs, financial aid, commercial/institutional loans in your name only, and documentable savings from your earnings. This also means you can't have been claimed as an income tax dependent by any individual or have accepted gifts (cash or other support) that contributed to your subsistence for the tax year immediately preceding the term.
How to establish residency | Understanding residency for purposes of UC tuition (ucop.edu) "Cults don't end well. They really don't."