Bradley v. Arkansas Department of Education

443 F.3d 965, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 8408, 2006 WL 894959
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 7, 2006
Docket04-3520
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 443 F.3d 965 (Bradley v. Arkansas Department of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradley v. Arkansas Department of Education, 443 F.3d 965, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 8408, 2006 WL 894959 (8th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

BOWMAN, Circuit Judge.

Thomas and Dianna Bradley, on behalf of their son David Bradley, appeal from the judgment of the District Court, 1 entered after a bench trial, dismissing their claims against all defendants, including the Arkansas Department of Education (ADE); the Williford, Arkansas, School District; and several individual defendants. We affirm.

David Bradley, born in May 1981, was diagnosed at a young age with autism 2 and was, at the relevant times, a student with a disability entitled to special education and related services under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA or Act), 20 U.S.C. §§ 1400-1491o. 3 The IDEA requires that children with disabilities be afforded a free appropriate public education. “The core of the statute ... is the cooperative process that it establishes between parents and schools.” Schaffer v. Weast, — U.S. -, 126 S.Ct. 528, 532, 163 L.Ed.2d 387 (2005). As we will explain, the record in this case reflects a regrettable failure of that cooperative process.

At the time of trial, there were fewer than 300 children in the entire Williford School District, kindergarten through twelfth grade. 4 David started first grade, and completed elementary school, in the Williford school system. At some point, a written individualized education program, or IEP, was developed for David. See 20 U.S.C. § 1401(a)(20) (defining IEP). 5 Through the sixth grade, David received most of his instruction in a regular classroom, supplemented by indirect services (therapy sessions and other classes not provided by his classroom teachers) and some time in a resource classroom for special education. Someone accompanied him when he changed classrooms. But when David entered the seventh grade in *969 the fall of 1994, it was necessary for him to change classrooms by himself, and he became frustrated and anxious about going to school. In order to relieve some of David’s stress, his father began going to school with David and staying there all day, sometimes staying with David in David’s classroom.

The Bradleys felt that David was not learning as he should and called for a meeting of David’s IEP team (parents, teachers, and others, see id.). Dissatisfied with the results of that meeting, the Brad-leys called in consultant Sidney Padgett, a psychologist specializing in developmental disabilities, who had evaluated David earlier in grade school. Padgett and Rita Lee, a behavior consultant, observed David and made written recommendations. The Bradleys called for another IEP meeting where the recommendations of Padgett and Lee were presented to the team. That was followed in the spring of 1995 by an annual review conference. Again dissatisfied with the response from other members of the IEP team, the Bradleys requested a due process hearing in April 1995 to address the proposed 1995-96 IEP. See id. § 1415(b)(2) (providing for an impartial due process hearing at the parents’ request). The parties, together with the hearing officer, negotiated an IEP acceptable to the Bradleys, which incorporated suggestions of Padgett, Lee, and the family. By the fall of 1995, the superintendent of schools had named Bruce Evans, an English teacher and former coach, as administrative assistant and had made him responsible for supervising the implementation of David’s IEP. Around this time, it was also agreed that it would be a positive step to phase out David’s excessive reliance on his father, with Thomas Bradley gradually increasing the distance between himself and his son while David was at school.

After David started the eighth grade in the fall of 1995, the Bradleys concluded that the School District was not following David’s IEP. Thomas Bradley filed an administrative complaint with the ADE in March 1996. Among the charges: the School District hired an aide for David without consulting the IEP team and failed to give her intensive training (although the evidence showed that the aide was trained by Padgett, the consultant chosen by the Bradleys), the software the District agreed to purchase for David’s use at home was more than sixty days late, and there were problems with the integrated speech therapy and the occupational therapy the District was to provide for David. • The state employees who conducted the investigation reviewed the case file; the IEP; the notes from weekly meetings held with David’s teachers and others, including his parents; and David’s school records. They interviewed the Bradleys and others who were involved in David’s education. The investigative team found that the only charge with merit concerned David’s occupational therapy. The Bradleys had located the occupational therapist for David when it was the School District’s responsibility to do so. By the time the School District contacted the therapist and arranged for payment and transportation to the therapist’s office in Jonesboro (about an hour and a half away from Williford), the implementation of this IEP service was six days late. The School District was directed to provide two hours of compensatory occupational therapy.

As David’s eighth-grade year was drawing to a close in the spring of 1996, David’s IEP team met to review and revise the IEP in anticipation of David’s ninth-grade year. The IEP for 1996-97 was far less detailed than the one for 1995-96 that had been negotiated with the hearing officer, and Thomas Bradley was not happy. In May 1996, he requested another due pro *970 cess hearing. He thought that the 1996-97 IEP omitted most of the positive modifications that had been included a year before. The hearing officer identified the primary issue as an alleged denial of a free appropriate public education to David because of these purported flaws in his IEP: it relied on inaccurate test data, it did not require the assistive technology (computer software) that David needed, it did not provide for extended-year speech and occupational therapies, the related services 6 were inadequate, and the behavior management plan was inadequate. Other issues included in-service training of school personnel about autism and reimbursement for an independent evaluation sought by the Bradleys. 7 Late in October, the hearing officer, rejecting Thomas Bradley’s arguments, ruled in favor of the School District and ordered immediate implementation of the 1996-97 IEP. In December 1996, the Bradleys filed suit against the ADE, the Williford School District, and various individuals charging, inter alia, violations of the IDEA and the Rehabilitation Act. 8

In April 1997, near the end of David’s ninth-grade year, Thomas Bradley filed another administrative complaint with the ADE.

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Bluebook (online)
443 F.3d 965, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 8408, 2006 WL 894959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-v-arkansas-department-of-education-ca8-2006.