Briere Ex Rel. Brown v. Fair Haven Grade School District

948 F. Supp. 1242, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19072
CourtDistrict Court, D. Vermont
DecidedDecember 18, 1996
DocketCivil Action 2:93cv138
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 948 F. Supp. 1242 (Briere Ex Rel. Brown v. Fair Haven Grade School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Briere Ex Rel. Brown v. Fair Haven Grade School District, 948 F. Supp. 1242, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19072 (D. Vt. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

SESSIONS, District Judge.

This is an appeal brought by Lorraine Brown on behalf of her daughter, Elizabeth Briere, and herself of an administrative due process hearing decision denying her petition to require Defendants to reimburse her for tuition payments at Maplebrook School from September 1992 to June 1995, together with reasonable attorneys’ fees. Jurisdiction is based on 20 U.S.C. § 1415(e)(2) (1990) and Vt.Stat.Ann. tit. 16 § 2957 (1989). The Court has reviewed the record of the due process hearing, together with the decision- of the hearing officer. The Court also considered additional evidence elicited at trial, which commenced on September 4, 1996. Based upon that review, the Court hereby reverses the hearing officer’s decision and enters judgment in favor of Plaintiffs.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Elizabeth (“Betsy”) Briere was born on October 6,1975. She resides with her mother, Lorraine Brown, in Fair Haven, Vermont. The Fair Haven Probate Court granted Mrs. Brown full guardianship over Betsy with respect to all major areas of living. When Betsy turned eighteen, both Mrs. Brown and her son became Betsy’s guardians.

Betsy has a number of serious learning disabilities. Her I.Q. scores range between 64 and 74, putting her in the mildly mentally retarded-to-borderline category. She has a severe global language disorder affecting both expressive and receptive language functioning. She processes information, very slowly. She is extraordinarily shy and reserved, and has difficulty socializing with others. She has a severe memory impairment, affecting primarily her short-term memory. Betsy also has a number of physical disabilities. She has a sight impairment and is legally blind in one eye. She has a congenital heart murmur from birth and tires easily.

Betsy has been eligible for special education services under the Individuals with Disabilities Act (“IDEA”) since her enrollment in pre-school. For the first nine years of her education, Betsy was educated in self-contained classes at the Vermont Achievement Center and the Castleton Area Program. These programs served students with disabilities exclusively. The placements were consistent with her Individual Education Program (“IEP”).

In 1987, Betsy underwent a comprehensive evaluation at the Newington Children’s Hospital. The. Hospital’s evaluation summary noted that her achievement levels in all subjects were at the first or second percentiles. The report also noted a neurological impairment, limited motor and social skills, and a “severe expressive and receptive language disorder.” Administrative Hearing Exhibits: Parents’ L at 2-3 and Parents’ J at 4. The report recommended that she participate in full-time, special education programming, using a language-based curriculum. Those observations were confirmed in a subsequent evaluation at Newington Children’s Hospital in 1990.

The local school district completed a speech and language evaluation of Betsy on April 10, 1990. The' evaluation determined that she was eligible to continue speeeh/language services, and recommended that those services focus on vocabulary, expressive, and receptive language skills.

*1246 Betsy was also tested at the Stern Center for Language and Learning in 1993. Again, she scored below the first percentile in all language assessments. Although Betsy was eighteen years old at the time of the evaluation, her vocabulary level was that of a child of eight years, ten months. The existence of a “severe” language disorder was identified.

During Betsy’s fourth grade year, she attended a mainstreamed social studies class in Castleton and spent the remainder of the day in self-contained special education classrooms. In fifth grade, she attended a mainstreamed science class as well. Mrs. Brown was fully in support of Betsy’s expanded mainstreamed learning experiences.

By 1990, Betsy and her mother had moved to Fair Haven, Vermont. On March 7,1990, with the encouragement of Mrs. Brown, Betsy entered a regular sixth grade class at Fair Haven Elementary School. Betsy’s teacher had been an instructor at the Vermont Achievement Center, and knew Betsy. A speech and language evaluation was conducted by the school. As a result, Betsy received remediation in vocabulary, expressive, and receptive language skills.

Mrs. Brown is a certified special educator and has provided substantial support in satisfying Betsy’s educational needs. She has reviewed and adapted texts, pre-taught difficult concepts and words, and assisted Betsy in completing homework assignments. She coordinated her work with that of Betsy’s teachers. She also attended all IEP meetings and fully cooperated with the school’s staff. Her work has been invaluable in'helping her daughter cope with the rigors of a standard educational curriculum. She continued to work directly with Betsy, adapting tests and tutoring concepts and assignments, until Betsy left the public school. Much of the credit for Betsy’s academic achievement is due to Mrs. Brown’s exceptional efforts.

Betsy attended the Fair Haven Grade School for the seventh and eighth grades. This junior high school had approximately 100 students and was located in an area of the building separated from the younger students. Junior high school students had the same teachers for each subject for both years. The faculty was small and they met each week to coordinate their programs. There was constant communication among the teachers, both formal and informal. The environment of the junior high school was extremely supportive.

In the seventh grade, pursuant to the terms of her IEP, Betsy had a full-time aide, Maria Hyatt. She also received special education services in the resource room in the areas of reading, writing, and math. She attended mainstreamed classes in the other academic areas, using texts modified by the teachers and Mrs. Brown. Betsy’s mother agreed fully with the IEP Team’s decision to put Betsy in mainstreamed academic classes with this level of educational support. In the eighth grade, Betsy asked that her aide be reduced to half-time because she was concerned that the presence of an aide was an embarrassment in her social setting. Aside from that modification, her academic program in the eighth grade remained essentially unchanged.

The IEP Team decided on September 10, 1991 to conduct a supplemental evaluation in the area of speech and language. With Mrs. Brown’s consent, the Team discontinued speech and language services.

During Betsy’s two years at the junior high school, she made progress in a number of areas. Although she remained mostly nonverbal in the classroom, making assessment of her academic progress difficult, her social skills had begun to improve toward the end of her eighth grade year. She also made progress in reading, vocabulary and math, subjects which were taught in the resource room. However, tests administered by the local school district indicated little or no progress in the area of language. In May 1990 the school administered the Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals (“CELF-R”) to Betsy, assessing her language in age equivalency at six years, seven months. The same test administered sixteen months later showed no appreciable change in result.

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948 F. Supp. 1242, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19072, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/briere-ex-rel-brown-v-fair-haven-grade-school-district-vtd-1996.