Brandywine Heights Area School District v. B.M. ex rel. B.M.

248 F. Supp. 3d 618, 2017 WL 1173836, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 48837
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 29, 2017
DocketNo. 5:14-cv-06624
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 248 F. Supp. 3d 618 (Brandywine Heights Area School District v. B.M. ex rel. B.M.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brandywine Heights Area School District v. B.M. ex rel. B.M., 248 F. Supp. 3d 618, 2017 WL 1173836, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 48837 (E.D. Pa. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION

Plaintiffs Motion for Judgment on the Administrative Record, EOF No. 25: Granted in Part and Denied in Part

Defendants’ Motion for Judgment on the Administrative Record, ECF No. 26: Granted in Part and Denied in Part

Joseph F. Leeson, Jr., United States District Judge

I. Introduction

B.M. is a student with autism who attends school in the Brandywine Heights Area School District. He entered Bran-dywine Heights ,as a kindergartener, transitioning to the District from an early intervention program. Concerned that Brandywine Heights was not affording B.M. the free appropriate public education he is entitled to under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), 20 U.S.C. § 1400 et seq., his parents requested a due process hearing partway through B.M.’s first-grade year. They argued that the District waited too long to begin planning for his arrival, did not have an appropriate plan in place for him when he arrived, and failed to provide him with a meaningful educational benefit during his kindergar[622]*622ten and first-grade years. The hearing officer concluded that the District initially failed to account for and control certain disruptive behaviors that B.M. had exhibited at times during the early intervention program, depriving him of a meaningful educational benefit for much of his kindergarten year and entitling him to compensatory education for that period of time. But, the hearing officer concluded that the District rectified the problem toward the end of B.M.’s kindergarten year and has -been providing B.M. with a free appropriate public education since that time.

Neither side was entirely pleased with that outcome. The District believes that it has provided B.M. the education he is due under the IDEA since the time he arrived, while B.M.’s parents1 maintain that no part of B.M.’s first two years at the District provided him with a meaningful educational benefit. The Court largely agrees with the hearing officer’s decision, with one difference of opinion about the amount of compensatory education that B.M. is due.

II. Background

' B.M. began receiving special education services soon after he was born. He participated first in a birth-to-three early intervention program before transitioning to a preschool early intervention program. In early 2011, partway through B.M.’s second year at the preschool eariy intervention program, his parents met with representatives of Brandywine Heights to consider transitioning him to kindergarten, but they ultimately decided to keep him in the early intervention program for an additional year.

In January 2012, B.M.’s parents met again with District representatives. This time, they signed an intent-to-register form, committing B.M. to start kindergarten at Brandywine Heights in the fall. During that meeting, the District representatives. informed B.M.’s parents that they planned to conduct a reevaluation of B.M. as part of their transitioning planning, and they explained that they would be sending a permission-to-reevaluate form that would need to be completed to authorize them to conduct the reevaluation. But the District did not mail the form until April 24, more than three months later. According to Brandywine Heights’s director’ of special education, it is the District’s policy to wait until the month of April to issue permission-to-reevaluate forms for students transitioning from early intervention programs; as she put it, “That is how we’ve always functioned.”2

B.M.’s mother claims that she did not receive the form in the mail until May 7. Concerned that the reevaluation might not begin in time to be completed before B.M. started kindergarten, she hand-delivered the form to the District three days later. Pennsylvania regulations allow schools sixty days from the date of parental consent to complete student reevaluations, not counting the summer months between school years. 22 Pa. Code § 14.124(b). The District completed the reevaluation on September 6—eleven days after B.M.’s first day of kindergarten.

The following day, the District convened a meeting with B.M.’s parents to discuss the reevaluation and the District’s overall individualized education program (IEP) for B.M. An IEP is a. “comprehensive plan” that a school district must pre[623]*623pare for each disabled student, which must “include ‘a statement of the child’s present levels of academic achievement and functional performance,’ describe ‘how the child’s disability affects the child’s involvement and progress in the general education curriculum,’ and set out ‘measurable annual goals, including academic and functional goals,’ along with a ‘description of how the child’s progress toward meeting’ those goals will be gauged.” Endrew F. ex rel. Joseph F. v. Douglas Cty. Sch. Dist. RE-1, — U.S. —, 137 S.Ct. 988, 994, 197 L.Ed.2d 335 (2017). The developmént of an IEP for each disabled student is “the centerpiece of the [IDEA’S] education delivery system for disabled students.” Id. (quoting Honig v. Doe, 484 U.S. 305, 311, 108 S.Ct. 592, 98 L.Ed.2d 686 (1988)). An IEP had been created for B.M. while he was attending the early intervention program (and it had been updated fairly recently, in May 2012), but the District’s plan was to craft a new IEP that would be tailored to the learning environment at Brandywine Heights and that would incorporate insights from the reevaluation.

At the meeting, B.M.’s parents reviewed the reevaluation with various representatives of the District, but after more than two hours spent discussing, it, they ran out of time before they could discuss the IEP. As a result, the District scheduled a second meeting to take place twelve days later, on September 19.

B.M.’s parents penned a letter to the District on the 12th, expressing their frustration that a new IEP was still not in place. In the absence of a new IEP, the District had been following the early intervention IEP, but his parents were concerned that the early intervention IEP did not account for some of the changes in B.M.’s environment, such as the need for a “plan -[to] be put in place to prevent him eloping [from school grounds] .,. [and] a plan for end of day dismissal [procedures].” 3 But there were also other, more troubling issues with B.M.’s transition to Brandywine Heights. Within his first few days, he exhibited some physically aggressive behavior, including grabbing a teacher’s hand and using it to strike himself in the head and physically disrupting group activities with other students. B.M. had a history of striking himself in the head, as well as striking others with his head when frustrated (behavior the parties refer to as “head-butting”), but those behaviors had appeared' .to wane during his last year in the program. Now, they seemed to be reappearing as he acclimated to a new environment.

On the 18th—one day before the planned IEP meeting—B.M.’s parents wrote again to the District, this time to express their belief that the revaluation that had been reviewed with them at the September 7th meeting suffered from a number of deficiencies that would hamper the creation of an appropriate IEP. They asked the District to arrange for another evaluation of B.M., this time by an independent examiner, at the District’s expense.

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Bluebook (online)
248 F. Supp. 3d 618, 2017 WL 1173836, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 48837, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brandywine-heights-area-school-district-v-bm-ex-rel-bm-paed-2017.