Guest guest Posted August 4, 2004 Report Share Posted August 4, 2004 Food for thought.... http://www.nytimes.com/2004/07/30/education/30suit.html July 30, 2004 Students' Suit on Special Ed Becomes Class Action By ELISSA GOOTMAN federal judge has cleared the way for a class action lawsuit arguing that the New York City school system has improperly removed thousands of disabled and special education children from their classrooms, placing some of them for months at a time in settings that lack the services they need. The development in the suit was announced yesterday by Advocates for Children, a nonprofit group that filed the suit two years ago. The lawsuit charges that over the years, children with special needs have been suspended, expelled, transferred, discharged or otherwise removed from city schools without adequate notice, without being informed of their legal rights, and, in some cases, without required procedures. The students, the lawsuit argues, are sometimes placed in settings that cannot provide the conditions or services they require and are entitled to by law, like smaller student-teacher ratios and instruction tailored to their special needs. Some students, it contends, are turned away without being told where to go. According to the complaint, the Department of Education " instituted a policy, practice and custom " under which children with disabilities have been " illegally excluded from school and denied educational services to which they are entitled by federal and state law. " The complaint claims that these students " have missed days, weeks and months of educational services. " The lawsuit has nine plaintiffs, who are identified by their initials. The ruling allowing the class action lawsuit to proceed was filed yesterday by Judge P. Sifton of Federal District Court in Brooklyn. Hyman of Advocates for Children, the students' lead lawyer, said the practices cited in the lawsuit began before Mayor R. Bloomberg took control of the school system and have continued. " This is not this administration's fault. However, this administration has been on notice of these problems since the beginning and hasn't taken any real steps to address them, " Ms. Hyman said. " The department has basically been turning a blind eye to the fact that thousands of children are being improperly excluded from school and denied educational services, in violation of federal law. " The significance of the judge's ruling, Ms. Hyman said, is that if the lawsuit is successful, the Department of Education could be forced to make widespread changes in its practices instead of having to simply address the problems of the nine plaintiffs. The city's Department of Education declined to comment, saying it was its policy not to discuss pending litigation. Al-Yasid , 11, a plaintiff who was identified by his family, who is classified as autistic but functions relatively well, spent about two months in the fall of 2002 in a classroom by himself, visited by teachers but without peers, even though his individualized special education program requires that he be placed in a general education classroom with special supplementary services, lawyers in the case said. Ina Farmer, the boy's sister and foster parent, said he was kept in the room alone even after a hearing officer ruled that he should be returned to a regular classroom. This did not happen, Ms. Farmer said, until Al-Yasid became a plaintiff . " He was very sad about it, " she said. " He would come home and ask me, 'Why don't they like me? What did I do wrong?' " In another case cited in the complaint, a 17-year-old student classified as learning disabled said he was told in the spring of 2002 that he had to transfer from one high school to another. But according to the lawsuit, the boy was later told he could not enroll in the second school, and he was out of school for eight months. Another plaintiff, a disabled first grader, " spent much of the 2002-2003 school year out of his class, in the in-house suspension room and time-out rooms, " the complaint states, adding that his mother " never received any notice or information " about his rights. He was " denied educational services for weeks at a time, " it states. The suit contends that other children were sent to " alternative " centers " that do not provide special education services or minimally adequate regular instruction. " " After spending weeks or months in these centers, the students fall completely behind in their schoolwork, " the complaint said. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2004 Report Share Posted August 12, 2004 I would join a class action suit like this against Texas schools. class action against schools Food for thought.... http://www.nytimes.com/2004/07/30/education/30suit.html July 30, 2004 Students' Suit on Special Ed Becomes Class Action By ELISSA GOOTMAN federal judge has cleared the way for a class action lawsuit arguing that the New York City school system has improperly removed thousands of disabled and special education children from their classrooms, placing some of them for months at a time in settings that lack the services they need. The development in the suit was announced yesterday by Advocates for Children, a nonprofit group that filed the suit two years ago. The lawsuit charges that over the years, children with special needs have been suspended, expelled, transferred, discharged or otherwise removed from city schools without adequate notice, without being informed of their legal rights, and, in some cases, without required procedures. The students, the lawsuit argues, are sometimes placed in settings that cannot provide the conditions or services they require and are entitled to by law, like smaller student-teacher ratios and instruction tailored to their special needs. Some students, it contends, are turned away without being told where to go. According to the complaint, the Department of Education " instituted a policy, practice and custom " under which children with disabilities have been " illegally excluded from school and denied educational services to which they are entitled by federal and state law. " The complaint claims that these students " have missed days, weeks and months of educational services. " The lawsuit has nine plaintiffs, who are identified by their initials. The ruling allowing the class action lawsuit to proceed was filed yesterday by Judge P. Sifton of Federal District Court in Brooklyn. Hyman of Advocates for Children, the students' lead lawyer, said the practices cited in the lawsuit began before Mayor R. Bloomberg took control of the school system and have continued. " This is not this administration's fault. However, this administration has been on notice of these problems since the beginning and hasn't taken any real steps to address them, " Ms. Hyman said. " The department has basically been turning a blind eye to the fact that thousands of children are being improperly excluded from school and denied educational services, in violation of federal law. " The significance of the judge's ruling, Ms. Hyman said, is that if the lawsuit is successful, the Department of Education could be forced to make widespread changes in its practices instead of having to simply address the problems of the nine plaintiffs. The city's Department of Education declined to comment, saying it was its policy not to discuss pending litigation. Al-Yasid , 11, a plaintiff who was identified by his family, who is classified as autistic but functions relatively well, spent about two months in the fall of 2002 in a classroom by himself, visited by teachers but without peers, even though his individualized special education program requires that he be placed in a general education classroom with special supplementary services, lawyers in the case said. Ina Farmer, the boy's sister and foster parent, said he was kept in the room alone even after a hearing officer ruled that he should be returned to a regular classroom. This did not happen, Ms. Farmer said, until Al-Yasid became a plaintiff . " He was very sad about it, " she said. " He would come home and ask me, 'Why don't they like me? What did I do wrong?' " In another case cited in the complaint, a 17-year-old student classified as learning disabled said he was told in the spring of 2002 that he had to transfer from one high school to another. But according to the lawsuit, the boy was later told he could not enroll in the second school, and he was out of school for eight months. Another plaintiff, a disabled first grader, " spent much of the 2002-2003 school year out of his class, in the in-house suspension room and time-out rooms, " the complaint states, adding that his mother " never received any notice or information " about his rights. He was " denied educational services for weeks at a time, " it states. The suit contends that other children were sent to " alternative " centers " that do not provide special education services or minimally adequate regular instruction. " " After spending weeks or months in these centers, the students fall completely behind in their schoolwork, " the complaint said. Texas Autism Advocacy Unlocking Autism www.UnlockingAutism.org Autism-Awareness-Action Worldwide internet group for parents who have a child with AUTISM. SeekingJoyinDisability - Prayer support for those touched by Disability: SeekingJoyinDisability/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2004 Report Share Posted August 12, 2004 Not to dissuade you; as many major law changes take years of battling. Most class actions take up to 10 yrs, and a team of attys. I would join a class action suit like this against Texas schools. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 12, 2004 Report Share Posted August 12, 2004 Ladies & Gentlemen: Actually, I would avoid a " class action " at almost all costs since this procedural vehicle has very limited use in the real legal world and, I fear that any " class settlement " would be similar to the " Felix Decree " (settlement of the class action in Hawaii), which produced the lowest common denominator in terms of educational opportunities for all kids in Hawaii. Remember, the " I " in IDEA stands for individual-individual cases are the way to go in my humble opinion. Don't get me wrong, I do support what ARC is doing by filing the class action, but I worry about any agreements that may be reached on behalf of the entire class. If the agreement is bad, then we will be forced to accept it and live with it. As a father of twins on the spectrum, I know all too well that what works for Ben, may not work (be appropriate) for Joe!! Peacefully, Jeff Sell & Sell, L.L.P. 4309 Yoakum Blvd., Suite 2000 Houston, Texas 77006 713-874-6444 713-874-6445 (fax) 832-731-3145 (cell) JZSell@... www.JZSLAW.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ " This e-mail may contain confidential information. Any unauthorized or improper disclosure, copying, distribution, or use of the contents of this e-mail and/or the attached document(s) is prohibited. The information contained in this e-mail and/or the attached document(s) is intended only for the personal and confidential use of the recipient(s) named above. If you have received this communication in error, please notify the sender immediately by e-mail and delete the original e-mail and attached document(s). _____ From: blessingsx10@... [mailto:blessingsx10@...] Sent: Thursday, August 12, 2004 5:08 PM Autism Treatment Subject: Re: Class action against schools Not to dissuade you; as many major law changes take years of battling. Most class actions take up to 10 yrs, and a team of attys. I would join a class action suit like this against Texas schools. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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