Guest guest Posted November 7, 2003 Report Share Posted November 7, 2003 Let's not faulter in the final hours. Joe ______________________________________________________________ Date: Thu, 6 Nov 2003 16:40:53 -0800 From: " Preserve IDEA " <preserveidea@...> Add To Address Book Subject: IDEA Reauthorization Briefing #31 <jcautill@...> >From the Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund (DREDF) preserveIDEA@... IDEA Rapid Response Network (RRN) News Briefing #31 November 6, 2003 TO JOIN THE RRN: Visit www.dredf.org and complete our online subscription form. Earlier Briefings can also be found on our website: www.dredf.org. SENATE TIMETABLE: The Senate IDEA bill (S. 1248) was reported out of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee on November 3, 2003 and is now in the queue to go to the Senate floor for a vote. To read the bill, go to http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d108:s.01248: The bill has been placed on the Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders: Calendar No. 362. S. 1248 SINCE JUNE: There have been multiple technical changes to the Senate bill since the original HELP Committee version on June 25, 2003. We anticipate several amendments from each party when it comes to the floor: The Democrats will propose Senator Harkin's full funding amendment and an amendment concerning service provisions for homeless children. The Republicans will propose a provision for attorney fee limitations and something on paperwork reduction. We do not anticipate further action on discipline or vouchers. Sen. Lamar (R-TN) has withdrawn his plan to change No Child Left Behind (NCLB) to exclude children with disabilities from the Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) calculation if a school is determined to be failing because of the scores of students with disabilities. Nevertheless, we need to continue to make clear that our children cannot be excluded from assessments and school accountability. ATTORNEY FEES-KEY THREAT: There will be an amendment limiting attorney fees similar to the one in H.R. 1350 (see RRN #25 (http://www.dredf.org/rrn/briefing25.html) and the analysis below. This is the issue we must speak out most strongly about to say WE WANT NO AMENDMENT ON ATTORNEY FEES added to the Senate bill. BACKDOOR THREAT-POSSIBLE SNEAK ATTACK: The Republicans are making efforts to stall on bringing the bill to the Senate floor for a vote. That may seem at first glance a good thing-after all, the longer the reauthorization process drags, the longer current law stays in effect. However, the strategy may be to attach the House bill to an omnibus act so that HR 1350 becomes law. Therefore, much as we still find problems with the Senate bill, we want it to come up for a vote. WHAT HAPPENS NEXT: Once brought to the Senate floor, amendments will be proposed and discussed and a roll call vote taken. As S. 1248 differs markedly from H.R. 1350 passed by the House, members will likely take action to bring IDEA to a conference. Usually some version of a compromise between two differing bills emerges from conference to be signed into law. This process can take a long time. So even if the Senate should discuss and pass a bill next week, it will likely not be until into 2004 that an IDEA reauthorization statute is signed. During this period, as has been the case throughout reauthorization discussions, current law (that is, IDEA 1997) stands. WHAT YOU CAN DO: We must focus now on speaking out against any effort to limit attorney fees and making it clear that we will not tolerate any sneaky moves to make the House bill law and bypass the Senate. So fax and email your Senators urging two things. 1. Bring S. 1248 to the floor and vote on it. 2. Do not allow any limits on families' ability to find legal counsel to represent their children. Please copy Senate Party Leaders Frist and Daschle (contact information at the end of this briefing) as well as DREDF: preserveIDEA@... (email) or 510-841-8645 (fax) or 2212 Sixth Street, Berkeley, CA 94710 (post). SENATE ANALYSIS: See RRN #30 at www.dredf.org for specific issues in the S. 1248. There is much to applaud in the Senate bill, especially when it is compared with H.R. 1350. There remain provisions we are unhappy about, no doubt. But from a strategy perspective we need to face the fact that, the votes are falling against us and there remain formidable forces arrayed in opposition to our children's best interests. Thus we should consider ourselves as having dodged a bullet if we can emerge from conference with a bill more closely resembling the Senate's than the House's. And hence our need to guard against a stall that leads to the House bill becoming law through a backdoor strategy. That said, we don't want simply to be silent as the process unfolds. It is important that the other side not being able to say, as they said in contradiction of the evidence during House discussions, that they did not hear from parents and advocates. So we urge you to continue to tell your stories to the Senators in your state, to your House member, and to key members of the House and Senate committees, with a focus right now on the Senate. ATTORNEY FEE CAP ANALYSIS: The House IDEA reauthorization bill, H.R. 1350, was amended by Rep. Ed Case (D-HI) to include a provision that allows the Governors of each state to set the rates for attorneys who represent the parents of disabled children in disputes with school districts. The Senate bill, S. 1248, does not include a similar fee cap, but we expect one when the bill reaches the Senate floor. IDEA is a fee-shifting statute that provides for payment of fees by the school districts to parents who prevail at administrative hearings and in court ( " prevailing party " ). These provisions are modeled after and are identical to other civil rights fee- shifting provisions designed to allow poor and low-income and minority and non-English-speaking plaintiffs access to attorneys. This provision is a disaster for parents of disabled children who already face striking disadvantages when going up against educational institutions. Moreover, this provision presents a dangerous precedent for the setting of attorney fees in other areas. DREDF is indebted to southern California special education attorney Marcy for the five reasons this is a terrible idea for IDEA. 1. There are existing standards for determining " Reasonable Fees. " HR 1350 provides that the governor of each state will determine the rate for the " kind and quality of services furnished. " The current statutory provision takes many factors into consideration for legal rates. Under the IDEA, in order to recover fees a party must not only be a " prevailing party " but the amount of fees awarded must be " based on rates prevailing in the community in which the action or proceeding arose for the kind and quality of services furnished. " 20 U.S.C. § 1415(i)(3)©. There is no need for further legislation on this. 2. The IDEA attorneys' fees provision already discourages " frivolous " lawsuits because parents only recover fees when they substantially prevail. Under the IDEA, fees are awarded only if the parent is a " prevailing party. " Under case law, this means not just a " technical " win; there must be success on a " significant issue in litigation " that results in a benefit. This means that a parent gets no reimbursement for fees if their case lacks merit. Thus, there is already an effective mechanism for discouraging " frivolous " suits. 3. Parents only recover fees when the school district does not make a reasonable settlement offer. Under the IDEA, a school district can eliminate its liability for attorney fees in a litigated dispute by the simple expedient of making an appropriate settlement offer more than 10 days before a due process proceeding commences. If the parent rejects the offer and then does no better in due process, the parent is not entitled to recover any attorneys' fees. 4. Most parents cannot afford to hire a lawyer. Parents do not have deep pockets. Because having a disabled child creates enormous strains on a family, both emotional and economic, it is very difficult for families to pay an attorney for all the fees incurred as a case proceeds. A fee limit will make it even more difficult for parents to obtain representation. 5. School districts have no constraints on what they pay their own attorneys. School districts have no limit on what they can pay their own attorneys. School districts also pay their attorneys for every hour of their time, with no court oversight as to whether what they are paying is reasonable. School district attorneys do not have to wait to get paid until the end of the case, and they get paid whether they win or not. This explains why there are a number of large law firms that represent school districts, while the vast majority of attorneys who represent parents are sole practitioners. WHOSE IDEA IS IT ANYWAY? PRICE REDUCED-THE IDEA T-SHIRT: Wear a bright red IDEA and advertise your support of special education and civil rights for students with disabilities! Design: is a red light-bulb face with electric hair that spells out Individuals with Disabilities Education Act and the slogan is, " Whose IDEA Is It, Anyway? " White, with red DREDF logo on left sleeve and purple SEIU logo on right sleeve. Specifications: heavyweight 100% cotton, U.S. made and union printed, available in Youth Large and Adult Large and Extra Large sizes. Shirts are $12, plus $2.50 postage and handling. Buy 3 or more for $10 each. We don't have the capability to process online orders, but you can print out the order form from our website: http://www.dredf.org/ and send checks to DREDF, 2212 Sixth St., Berkeley, CA 94710. The order form has an illustration of the shirt to check out also. Remember to specify quantity and size. We are also offering these shirts as a special thank you to individuals who donate $100 or more for our work. Thanks from DREDF and the RRN Staff ****************************** SENATE MAJORITY LEADER: REPUBLICAN SENATOR BILL FRIST (R-TN) 461 Dirksen Senate Office Building United States Senate Washington, DC 20510 T 202-224-3344 F 202-228-1264 E-mail: Web Form: frist.senate.gov/index.cfm? FuseAction=AboutSenatorFrist.ContactForm **************************** SENATE MAJORITY LEADER: DEMOCRAT SENATOR TOM DASCHLE (D-SD) 509 Hart Senate Office Building United States Senate Washington, DC 20510 T 202-224-2321 (or toll-free from South Dakota: 800-424-9094) F 202-224-6603 E-mail: Web Form: http://daschle.senate.gov/webform.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.