BG BY FG v. Cranford Bd. of Educ.

702 F. Supp. 1140
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedDecember 29, 1988
DocketCiv. A. Nos. 87-1360, 87-4745
StatusPublished

This text of 702 F. Supp. 1140 (BG BY FG v. Cranford Bd. of Educ.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BG BY FG v. Cranford Bd. of Educ., 702 F. Supp. 1140 (D.N.J. 1988).

Opinion

702 F.Supp. 1140 (1988)

B.G., by his Guardian Ad Litem, F.G., Plaintiff,
v.
CRANFORD BOARD OF EDUCATION, Defendant.
CRANFORD BOARD OF EDUCATION, Plaintiff,
v.
B.G., by his Guardian Ad Litem, F.G., Defendant.

Civ. A. Nos. 87-1360, 87-4745.

United States District Court, D. New Jersey.

November 18, 1988.
As Amended December 29, 1988.

*1141 Weinberg & Kaplow, P.A. by Richard J. Kaplow, Springfield, N.J., for plaintiff.

Theodore A. Sussan, Spotswood, N.J., for defendant.

OPINION

WOLIN, District Judge.

Currently pending before this Court are two related actions arising under the Education for All Handicapped Children Act ("EAHCA"), P.L. 94-142, 20 U.S.C. § 1400 et seq., consolidated for trial and requiring review of an Order issued by an Administrative Law Judge ("ALJ") determining that the subject child ("B.G.") be placed in a year-round residential program approved by the State of New Jersey for emotionally disturbed students. Ancillary to this determination is the issue of reimbursement for prior program placement. The order of the ALJ directing that B.G. be placed in a residential placement is affirmed. The issue of reimbursement is reserved and shall be the subject of a supplementary opinion.

I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The procedural history of this case is fully documented in two decisions by Edith Klinger, an Administrative Law Judge of the State of New Jersey. Her initial Opinion, dated December 10, 1986, concluded that B.G. should be classified as emotionally disturbed and directed that the Cranford Child Study Team ("CST") consider an appropriate placement for him, including the Youth Behavior Program ("YBP") located in Colorado. At the time of this decision, B.G.'s parents had voluntarily placed him at YBP and the ALJ continued this placement until the CST developed a suitable Individualized Education Program ("IEP") and placement for him. Parental reimbursement for YBP placement was left to the parties to resolve. This issue, which the parties were unable to settle, as well as the issue of counsel fees arising from these proceedings, still remain in dispute.

The second Opinion, issued on September 30, 1987, ordered that B.G. be placed in a year-round residential program approved by the State of New Jersey for emotionally disturbed students and that the Cranford Board of Education ("Board") pay for B.G.'s associated costs as enumerated in the Opinion. The ALJ further decided that *1142 YBP was an inappropriate placement and that therefore B.G.'s father ("F.G.") was not entitled to reimbursement for placing B.G. in that program.

The two prior ALJ Opinions are incorporated herein by reference, thereby obviating the need to further amplify the procedural history.

II. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

B.G., currently 14 years old, was adopted by F.G. and his wife ("the F.G.'s") when he was four and one-half years of age. He is one of three Korean children adopted by the F.G.'s. Two younger female children complete the family unit. In sequence of adoption B.G. is the middle child.

When adopted, B.G. showed signs that he had previously been physically abused, malnourished and abandoned in his native Korea. Initial episodes of screaming and temper tantrums escalated into angry, hostile and provocative acts as he advanced in age. Early on, the F.G.'s noticed that he was distrustful, unaffectionate, uncommunicative and unwilling to accept responsibility for acts of negative conduct. Frequently, he lied about occurrences that ultimately were proven to have been committed by him. Disobedience to his mother, hoarding of food in his room, theft of money from his father, harassment of his sisters and the setting of minor fires when angry depict the type of conduct that undermined the peace and tranquility of the F.G. home.

His school adjustment was also fraught with difficult circumstances. Learning ability was seriously impeded by easy distraction and a short attention span. He constantly had to be refocused to his assigned task. Peer pressure and troubled peer relationships caused B.G. to frequently engage in disruptive behavior through the hitting, tripping or kicking of another child. Notwithstanding a succession of educational placements in both the public and private sector, B.G.'s school behavior profile remained the same.

When B.G. was in the fifth grade at St. Michael's, a parochial school, F.G. determined that he was not learning and sometime in October 1985 transferred him, against B.G.'s wishes, to Cranford's Brookside School. His fifth grade teacher, Greta Sobelson, after a period of observation, suggested that the F.G.'s seek the assistance of a counselor. They contacted Dr. Leonard Volenski, a certified school psychologist and a licensed clinical psychologist. From December 1985 until June 1986 Volenski saw B.G. on a weekly basis. Volenski advised the F.G.'s that in his opinion B.G.'s school problems were related to underlying emotional problems. He found B.G. to be a very depressed child who had experienced a great deal of rejection in his life and who suffered from an attachment disorder stemming from B.G.'s abandonment by his natural parents. During his testimony before Judge Klinger on October 23, 1986, Dr. Volenski characterized B.G. as an emotionally disturbed child with a primary diagnosis of an intentional deficit disorder and a secondary diagnosis of a developmental disorder tracing back to B.G.'s early childhood. He further testified that B.G.'s emotional problems exacerbated the perceptual problems associated with his inadequate attention span. Volenski concluded that the most appropriate classification for B.G. was Emotionally Disturbed ("E.D.") and that the least restrictive program would be a residential setting. This opinion was bottomed on the theory that the selected program must be all-inclusive, thereby encompassing B.G.'s living needs and addressing his emotional and perceptual problems. Volenski rejected a day setting program because "I think B.G.'s emotional problems will tend to interfere with his learning process until he finds a setting that deals with the emotional problem."

Despite his opinion as to the need for a residential placement, Volenski recommended that F.G. place B.G. with the Youth Behavior Program in Colorado, since it was the only program of which he was aware that addressed attachment disorders of Korean children. Since YBP, in Volenski's opinion, dealt with both the home and school environment, he considered it as "the most appropriate placement." Volenski was particularly impressed with its *1143 therapeutic approach through trained surrogate parents, utilization of a contained classroom for emotionally disturbed children, outside therapy, and inclusion of the F.G.'s through a parent training program. YBP's establishment of limited and long-term goals seemed to Volenski a reasonable approach and, together with the other enumerated facets of the program, was the reason he recommended it to the F.G.'s.

Volenski made two other critical observations in his testimony: first, that B.G.'s educational and emotional needs were inseparable in terms of program placement; and second, that the CST's recommendation that B.G. be classified Perceptually Impaired ("P.I.") was inappropriate since it ignored B.G.'s emotional disturbance.

During Volenski's therapeutic intervention with B.G., he was alerted to certain death wish ideation that led him to believe that B.G. was potentially suicidal.

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