STATE ADVISORY PANEL ON EXCEPTIONAL CHILDREN:
DUE PROCESS UPDATE AND OTHER LEGAL ISSUES
January 16, 2014David Wickersham, Assistant General Counsel
OVERVIEW OF PRESENTATION
• Due Process Hearing Report (July 1, 2012-January 7, 2014)
• Mediation Report (July 1, 2012-January 7, 2014)
• N.W. v. Poe • J.R. v. Cox-Cruey • January 8, 2014 Dear Colleague Letter
from the United States Department of Education
• Other matters as time permits
DUE PROCESS HEARING REPORT
Between July 1, 2012 and January 7, 2014, the Kentucky Department of Education (department) received twenty requests for hearing
Hearing requests involved the following districts: Leslie, Fayette (5), Henderson, Nelson, Marshall, Bullitt, Kenton (2), Floyd, Boone (2), Ashland Independent, Oldham, Garrard, Laurel, and Paducah Independent
DUE PROCESS HEARING OUTCOMES
Ten (10) complaints were resolved by agreement, settlement, mediation, withdrawal, or otherwise
Three (3) matters were adjudicated The remaining seven (7) complaints are
pending before Hearing Officers
DUE PROCESS DECISIONS
One decision found denial of FAPE, but denied compensatory education and tuition reimbursement (Fayette)
One decision was in favor of the district (Bullitt)
One case was decided and appealed to the ECAB, to the United States District Court, and to the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals (Kenton)
DUE PROCESS ECAB
The ECAB heard two matters: In one matter, the Hearing Officer was
upheld but for the omission of a remedy for a denial of FAPE during the 2011-2012 school year (Fayette)
In the other matter, the ECAB overturned the Order of the Hearing Officer (Kenton)
MEDIATION
Between July 1, 2012 and January 7, 2014, the department received twenty-four (24) requests for mediation
Mediation requests involved the following districts: Fayette (5), Henderson, Bullitt, Kenton, Floyd (2), Boone (5), Ashland Independent, Oldham, Leslie, Scott, Bracken (2), Anderson, Covington Independent, Walton-Verona, and Christian
MEDIATION
Full or partial agreement was reached in fourteen (14) matters
Agreement was not reached in six (6) matters
One district declined to participate in mediation, one mediation request was withdrawn by the parent, and two requests are pending
N.W. v. Poe
N.W. is a nine-year old student with severe apraxia and autism. At age three, N.W. was enrolled in the Boone County Schools. His ARC placed him at St. Rita’s School for the Deaf
In June 2010, N.W.’s parents unilaterally enrolled him in the Applied Behavioral Services (ABS) school
The district convened an ARC, but placement could not be agreed upon
N.W. v. Poe
The parties entered a mediated agreement under which the district would reimburse a period of tuition at ABS, transportation and attorney costs, and tuition for the 2010-2011 school year and funds toward summer tuition
The parties also agreed to convene an ARC to discuss transition back to the district’s schools
N.W. v. Poe
Difficulties arose with the scheduling of the ARC, the composition of the ARC, and goals
N.W.’s parents rejected the district’s offers and ended the ARC. The district tried to convene another ARC. The parents responded by filing a due process complaint on October 31, 2011
N.W. v. Poe
On June 15, 2012, the Hearing Officer held that the ARC included the required members and that the district provided a FAPE.
The Hearing Officer also held that the district’s proposed transition plan did not deny a FAPE
However, the Hearing Officer ordered the district to reimburse transportation and tuition costs through the end of the 2012 summer session at ABS
N.W. v. Poe
Both parties appealed to the ECAB The ECAB affirmed findings that a FAPE
had been offered, but reversed the stay-put order and, consequently, the order regarding attorney’s fees and reimbursement
N.W. then filed suit in the federal District Court at Covington
N.W. v. Poe
The District Court found that the transition plan offered by the district was not inadequate:
N.W. never actually transitioned to the district, so there was no substantive harm done, and a transition plan was not required by the IDEA
“The IDEA was not intended to fund private school tuition for the children of parents who have not first given the public school a good faith opportunity to meets its obligations”
N.W. v. Poe
The District Court found that the absence of a member of the ARC is a procedural error, only, and no substantive harm resulted, even if the absent district employee was a required member of the ARC
Likewise, there was no error regarding the district’s placement decision
N.W. v. Poe
The District Court found that the ECAB erred in concluding that ABS was not N.W.’s appropriate stay-put placement, and ordered the district to reimburse N.W.’s parents for tuition from October 31, 2011 until the end of the proceedings in District Court
The school district appealed the decision to the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals
N.W. v. Poe
The District Court decision has provoked national attention from NSBA and special education authorities
The District Court’s decision seems at odds with Sixth Circuit jurisprudence, and that of other circuits, that provides for retroactive reimbursement if the district failed to provide a FAPE
Generally, federal courts defer to the final decision of the ECAB or similar body
N.W. v. Poe
Courts have determined that there is a difference between placement and payment
The agreement did not call for placement, but reimbursement and payment
The agreement was time-limited, and contemplated a transition back to district schools
Settlements would decline sharply if a district’s agreement for reimbursement obligated the district to subsidize a private school education
J.R. v. Cox-Cruey
J.R. is a 21 year old female who suffered a traumatic brain injury prior to enrolling in a Kenton County school in January 2012
J.R. was served by an IEP under the category of Traumatic Brain Injury
After being notified that J.R. would not be eligible for services after her 21st birthday, J.R.’s parents, on January 30, 2013, filed a due process complaint alleging that J.R. was entitled to services at least until her 22nd birthday
J.R. v. Cox-Cruey
On February 6, 2013, the Hearing Officer ordered that J.R. would stay-put until after mediation
Mediation was unsuccessful On March 12, 2013, J.R.’s parents filed an
amended due process complaint The Hearing Officer ordered that J.R. stay
in her current placement until the end of the 2012-2013 school year
J.R. v. Cox-Cruey
On May 6, 2013, J.R.’s parents filed a second amended due process complaint
The Hearing Officer rejected the parent’s request for an extension of the stay-put order
On June 21, 2013, J.R.’s parents filed suit in the federal District Court at Covington
J.R. v. Cox-Cruey
The District Court determined that while stay-put is virtually an automatic injunction, it only applies if the student has a continuing entitlement to a public special education
Section 1412, and common law, show that a FAPE must be provided to all children between the ages of 3 and 21, inclusive, which period ends on the last day of the student’s 21st year
States may impose different age restrictions
J.R. v. Cox-Cruey
The Court found that while Kentucky’s pupil attendance and SEEK funding formula regulations contemplate education beyond the 21st birthday, these regulations simply accommodate practices that exceed the statutory obligation established in KRS 158.100 “under twenty-one (21) years of age.”
J.R. v. Cox-Cruey
The Court held that Kentucky’s school districts are “consistently inconsistent” with the IDEA, and that Kentucky does not follow the IDEA
As a result, J.R. was no longer entitled to any further FAPE, and stay-put was rendered inapplicable
The Court rejected the parent’s argument that their amendments (to include violations that might lead to compensatory education) “tolled” the age restriction
Dear Colleague Letter
On January 8, 2014, the United States Department of Education issued a Dear Colleague letter discouraging strict discipline policies against student misbehavior
At first blush, the letter appears to merely encourage a reconsideration of zero-tolerance discipline policies
Dear Colleague Letter
The letter has no direct bearing on special education, and addresses only discrimination based on race, color, or national origin
Special education advocates are already seeking guidance on whether districts are liable for discrepancies in the rate at which certain student populations are disciplined
Dear Colleague Letter
The letter incorporates themes from the administration’s “disparate impact” theory of legal liability
The “disparate impact” theory holds that practices may be discriminatory and illegal if they have a disproportionate impact on members of a minority group
The United States Supreme Court has twice lost opportunities to consider whether the theory can be validly applied outside of employment discrimination lawsuits
Dear Colleague Letter
The challenge for districts will lie in insuring that school disciplinary policies are not only non-discriminatory in their treatment of students, but also that there are equal results for students of all groups
It is unclear how districts will accomplish this goal if the rate of the underlying misbehavior is not, in fact, uniform among every group of students
Dear Colleague Letter
It is difficult to predict how long it will take districts to implement alternative disciplinary strategies that satisfy USED, and how districts will manage discipline in the interim
Studies suggest that while out-of-school suspensions do not academically benefit the suspended student, out-of-school suspensions academically benefit the non-disciplined students who remain, perhaps because of decreased disruption
Dear Colleague Letter
Zero-tolerance disciplinary policies are now discouraged by USED because of fears of disparate impact
Zero-tolerance disciplinary policies were instituted to protect school districts from allegations that districts disciplined students unequally based on race or other factors
The goal of Zero-tolerance was to promote blind and mechanical discipline that did not consider race or other factors
Dear Colleague Letter
Zero-tolerance discipline policies were adopted, not because they were in the interest of students, but because they reduced legal exposure for districts
Zero-tolerance discipline policies, to comply with the Dear Colleague letter, must now be abandoned, not because they fail to consider the interest of students, but because they increase legal liability exposure for districts
Other Issues
If we’ve gotten this far, I’ve talked too fast
The department has been contacted by advocates, districts, and others seeking information regarding musical instrument lessons to be provided as compensatory education
This is a novel question, that, as presented, does not distinguish between music lessons and music therapy, a more formal and recognized discipline
Other Issues
The department has advised that in the absence of an ARC determination that music therapy is a related service, music therapy is not a proper vehicle for compensatory education.
The goal of compensatory education is to provide services to which the student was entitled.
Where there has been no determination that the student was entitled to music therapy, it would
be, procedurally, a remedy for an omission that was not made. Letter to Margaret Kohn, 17 EHLR 522 (1990).
Other Issues
Even if an ARC determined, after the fact, that music therapy is a related service, such a determination would not imply that the student should have received music therapy at an earlier time, and that the student would be, consequently, eligible for compensatory music therapy.
Questions