Adams v. District of Columbia

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedJanuary 29, 2018
DocketCivil Action No. 2017-1816
StatusPublished

This text of Adams v. District of Columbia (Adams v. District of Columbia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Adams v. District of Columbia, (D.D.C. 2018).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

CHUNDRA ADAMS, Parent and next friend of T.J.,

Plaintiff, v. Civil Action No. 17-1816 (JEB) DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA,

Defendant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Plaintiff Chundra Adams, acting on behalf of her child T.J., brought this action alleging

that the District of Columbia is violating the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA),

20 U.S.C. § 1400 et seq., by failing to provide her son a free and appropriate public education.

She now seeks a preliminary injunction requiring his placement at a private school. Magistrate

Judge Deborah A. Robinson, having been referred the case, has issued a Report and

Recommendation to deny the Motion, largely for lack of irreparable harm. Finding alternatively

that Adams does not have the requisite likelihood of success on the merits for an injunction to

issue, the Court will adopt the Report’s conclusion and deny the Motion.

I. Background

The Court will not reiterate the full factual background of the case, which is set out in

detail in the 35-page hearing officer determination (HOD) and the Report and Recommendation.

In short, T.J. is a minor child currently enrolled in the 6th grade in the District of Columbia

Public School system. See ECF No. 1 (Complaint), ¶ 7. He is eligible for special education and

related services as a student with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder and Emotional

1 Disturbance, and his reading and math skills are significantly below grade level. Id., ¶ 9; ECF

No. 1-4 (Interim HOD) at 24. In 2015, T.J.’s Individualized Education Program required two

hours per day of specialized instruction outside general education and one hour per day within

general education, with 120 minutes per month of Behavioral Support Services. See Compl., ¶

11. In March 2016, the IEP was increased to four hours a day of special education, with 120

minutes per month of Behavioral Support. Id., ¶ 27. After T.J. underwent a series of

psychological and behavioral assessments in early 2017, his IEP team was reconvened on March

16. Determining that he required additional support, the team bumped up his Specialized

Instruction Services to 20 hours per week, including 15 hours outside general education, and

increased his Behavior Support to 240 minutes per month. Id., ¶ 44. The District later

determined, however, that in order for T.J. to have this level of special education, all 20 hours of

his Specialized Instruction would have to be outside general education. See Interim HOD at 17.

On May 23, 2017, the Special Education Manager for DCPS circulated a proposed revised IEP

reflecting this change and suggested holding an IEP meeting to finalize a plan providing for 20

hours outside general education and placement in a Behavior and Education Support (BES)

classroom. See AR 338-354. Plaintiff, however, declined to participate in the May IEP meeting.

On June 30, DCPS sent Adams a location-of-services letter for the 2017-18 school year

informing her that T.J. would be placed in a BES classroom at Kramer Middle School. See AR

163.

On May 15, however, prior to the circulation of the revised IEP and proposed BES

placement, Plaintiff filed a Due Process Complaint naming DCPS as respondent. See AR 05-21.

The Complaint alleged that T.J.’s 2015, 2016, and 2017 IEPs and placements denied him a free

and appropriate public education (FAPE) and requested that the Hearing Officer “[o]rder DCPS

2 to fund the student’s tuition and transportation at a non-public school of the parent’s choosing.”

AR 18. Plaintiff later identified her chosen private school as the Phillips School, which is a

private special-education day school located in Maryland with an annual tuition of approximately

$49,000. See ECF 12-1 (Administrative Hearing Transcript) at 94:22. It enrolls only students

with IDEA disabilities and implements a school-wide behavior system to accommodate those

students with emotional and behavioral challenges. Id. at 113:12-15. Phillips currently holds a

Certificate of Approval from the State Superintendent of Education, and it enrolls a number of

students from DCPS. Id. at 93:2; 95:12-14. T.J. has been accepted for admission for the 2017-

18 school year and would, at this point, still be able to attend Phillips for the remainder of the

term. Id. at 106:10-11.

On August 2-3, the parties participated in an administrative hearing before Hearing

Officer Peter B. Vaden. See Interim HOD at 1. Plaintiff called as witnesses T.J’s educational

advocate, Dr. Ida Holman, who offered testimony as to his educational needs and past IEPs, as

well as Laura Green from the Lindamood-Bell Reading Center, who testified as to the Center’s

reading program, and Sarah Headley, the Program Director at Phillips School, who discussed the

offerings at Phillips and the school’s ability to serve T.J.’s disabilities. See Compl., ¶ 61. DCPS

called Tina Allen, a school social worker, who testified as to T.J.’s prior IEPs and the

educational impacts of his disabilities; Dr. Jamie Wyche, the Special Education Manager from

Aiton Elementary School, where T.J. had been previously placed; and Jacqueline Walters, the

Assistant Principal of Kramer Middle School, who testified as to the special-education programs

available at Kramer. Id., ¶ 62 Over the course of the two-day hearing, Officer Vaden heard

testimony from both sides on T.J.’s educational and behavioral impairments, the respective

3 special-education offerings of Phillips School and DCPS, and the alleged prior deprivations of

FAPE.

On August 18, the Hearing Officer issued his determination, finding that DCPS had

violated IDEA by denying T.J. his right to a FAPE. Specifically, Officer Vaden concluded that:

(1) DCPS’s delay of one year in conducting an updated Functional Behavioral Assessment

(FBA) impeded T.J.’s access to a FAPE; (2) DCPS denied T.J. a FAPE by providing him with an

inappropriate IEP on March 22, 2016; (3) DCPS denied T.J. a FAPE by providing him with an

inappropriate IEP on March 16, 2017; and (4) Plaintiff did not, however, demonstrate that DCPS

could not provide a special-education placement capable of meeting T.J.’s needs.

Turning to the appropriate remedies for DCPS’s violations, the Hearing Officer found

that the “evidence [did] not establish that no suitable public school is available for Student.”

Interim HOD at 31. He therefore declined to order DCPS to fund T.J.’s private-school

placement and instead directed the District to convene T.J.’s IEP team within 15 business days of

his decision to “review and revise, as appropriate, Student’s IEP, in accordance [with] this

decision” and to, within five days of the IEP revision, “identify to the parent a suitable school

location to implement the revised IEP.” Id. Finally, Officer Vaden found that T.J. was entitled

to an award of compensatory education to remedy his prior denials of FAPE. On September 7,

the parties held the IEP meeting ordered in the Interim HOD, see ECF No. 4-3 (Holman

Affidavit), ¶ 8, where they agreed upon T.J.’s enrollment in the 20-hour/BES program as a “stay

put” placement. See ECF No. 18 (Objections) at 3 (stating that 20-hour/BES IEP proposed by

DCPS in May 2017 is “the same one that student has now”). On September 12, 2017, after

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