Ashland School District v. Parents of Student R.J.

588 F.3d 1004, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 26566, 2009 WL 4546736
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedDecember 7, 2009
Docket08-35937
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 588 F.3d 1004 (Ashland School District v. Parents of Student R.J.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ashland School District v. Parents of Student R.J., 588 F.3d 1004, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 26566, 2009 WL 4546736 (9th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

O’SCANNLAIN, Circuit Judge:

We must decide whether the district court abused its discretion by denying reimbursement for private-school tuition to the parents of a student eligible for services under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.

I

A

R.J. was born in 1989 and adopted by her parents at the age of four-and-a-half. As a second grader in Saginaw, Michigan, R.J. was diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (“ADHD”).

In 2001, R.J. and her parents moved to Ashland, Oregon, where R.J. enrolled in the Ashland School District (“ASD”). A school psychologist noted that R.J. had been diagnosed with ADHD, and that she “appear[ed] to present a profile typical of a child with deficits in the control of attention.” After concluding that R.J. was eligible for services under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (“IDEA”), 20 U.S.C. § 1400 et seq., ASD established an individualized education program *1006 (“IEP”) for R.J. with her parents’ approval.

In 2003, R.J. repeated the eighth grade because her mother believed she lacked the maturity for high school. In December of that year, R.J.’s IEP team, which included her parents and representatives from ASD, developed a new IEP. The new IEP identified R.J.’s disability as ADHD, and noted that she had “difficulty with distractibility in the classroom,” namely, with “completing tasks, working independently, and organizing assignments.” It explained that although R.J. “receives A’s and B’s when she completes her assignments and turns them in on time,” she “consistently struggles to complete many of her assignments and as a result earns C’s and D’s.” To address R.J.’s needs, the new IEP called for specially designed instruction and counseling support.

R.J.’s IEP team met again in April 2004 to plan her transition to high school. R.J. entered the ninth grade the following fall. As a freshman, she began meeting with a counselor at school, with whom she discussed her parents’ divorce, which had recently become final. She also began dating T., another student at the high school, who allegedly forced her to have sex with him. Around this time, R.J. started showing signs of depression.

In November 2004, R.J. was reevaluated by the school psychologist, who concluded that while R.J. did have some “inattentive behaviors,” ADHD was not having “a significant impact ... on [her] classroom performance.” At a meeting the following month, R.J.’s IEP team decided to renew her existing IEP, with only minor changes. R.J. finished the fall semester with one A, three B’s, and two D’s on her report card.

In January 2005, R.J. stayed late one night at the home of a custodian who worked at the high school. After R.J.’s mother complained to school officials, ASD reassigned the custodian to the night shift and demanded that he have no further contact with R.J. In the weeks that followed, R.J. told her counselor that her parents were upset about the incident, and another student saw R.J. harming herself by sticking safety pins in her arm. A psychiatric nurse practitioner diagnosed R.J. with adjustment disorder, and R.J.’s mother requested a reevaluation of R.J.’s IEP.

In February 2005, R.J.’s parents decided to keep R.J. at home until they learned more about her mental condition. ASD provided R.J. with home tutoring, and she continued to meet weekly with her counselor. The counselor explored R.J.’s urges to harm herself, and concluded that they were triggered by her anger toward her ex-boyfriend and frustration about her parents’ divorce. After a few weeks of home tutoring, her mother determined that R.J. was ready to return to school. By early March, R.J. was back at school half-time, and by the end of the month, she was attending school again full-time. R.J. finished her freshman year with two B’s and three F’s.

During the summer of 2005, R.J. snuck out of the house several times to see male friends, including T. When school resumed in the fall, she told her counselor that T. abused her emotionally and physically. She also said that she was attracted to the custodian at the school, and that her mother feared she would move in with him as soon as she turned eighteen.

In late September 2005, R.J.’s mother advised ASD that she was considering placing R.J. in a more restrictive program. ASD agreed to hold a meeting about R.J.’s IEP in October. At the meeting, two of R.J.’s teachers reported on her progress in class. Her English teacher said that R.J. had not turned in all her assignments, but *1007 that she had earned “A’s and an occasional B” on the ones she had completed. Her social studies teacher described her participation in class as “frequent and positive,” and said that her current grade was a “solid” B.

After the teachers spoke, R.J.’s mother expressed concern about R.J.’s “emotional issues.” She said:

I just think that there are some serious emotional issues that are going on here that are affecting her interaction with peers and her interaction with parents and her interaction with teachers. Going behind people’s backs, not being trustworthy. Lying about things that are supposed to be done and not done or whatever.... She lies about things that have happened to her and gets kids in trouble.... And I really am worried about her. She’s expressed some really risky, risky behaviors. Extremely risky behaviors including the custodian.

Although R.J. insisted that she was “making better friends,” her mother said that she did not “honestly believe” that R.J. had “stopped seeing [T.] or stopped associating with [the custodian].” According to her mother, R.J. was “defiant” at home, and there would be “no option” but to “put her in a residential facility” if such behavior continued.

ASD’s director of student services attempted to respond to R.J.’s mother’s concerns. “[W]hat I’m really hearing,” he said, “is that classes are going well and [R.J. is] not getting in to trouble during the school day----Where[she is] getting in trouble is when [she] sneak[s] out at night and make[s] some poor choices.” Emphasizing that “by-and-large school is successful,” he recommended that R.J.’s mother look into “classes and resources ... in the community in terms of learning how to really set limits at home.” At the end of the meeting, the IEP team decided to keep R.J.’s existing IEP in place, with a new behavior plan.

In November 2005, R.J.’s mother learned that R.J. was still sneaking out of the house to meet friends. Her mother sent her to live with her father, and R.J. later told one of her teachers that her mother was considering “sending her away” to a private residential facility. The day after Thanksgiving, R.J.’s mother formally notified ASD of her plans to remove R.J. from public school in December and place her at Mount Bachelor Academy, a private residential facility in central Oregon.

ASD held another IEP meeting on December 9, but R.J.’s parents did not attend.

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588 F.3d 1004, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 26566, 2009 WL 4546736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashland-school-district-v-parents-of-student-rj-ca9-2009.