Colón-Vazquez v. Department of Education of Puerto Rico

46 F. Supp. 3d 132, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 135493, 2014 WL 4701169
CourtDistrict Court, D. Puerto Rico
DecidedSeptember 23, 2014
DocketCivil No. 3:14-cv-01644 (JAF)
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 46 F. Supp. 3d 132 (Colón-Vazquez v. Department of Education of Puerto Rico) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colón-Vazquez v. Department of Education of Puerto Rico, 46 F. Supp. 3d 132, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 135493, 2014 WL 4701169 (prd 2014).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

JOSÉ ANTONIO FUSTÉ, District Judge.

This matter appears before the court on Plaintiffs’ Motion for Preliminary Injunction,1 filed on August 25, 2014. (Docket No. 2.)

I.

Introduction

A.

The judge is a citizen in the community he serves and is exposed to the same benefits and inconveniences of a non-judicial citizen. Judges are not silent observers of processes before the court; they have a role to play in the difficult task of delivering some form of acceptable justice to the litigants before the tribunal. Judges cannot escape being incensed by injustice or mediocrity resulting from executive, legislative, and private forces and interests. When it comes to education, the judge knows about the value of it and of the maddening effects of governmental institutionalized indifference to acceptable standards in public education.

This case, simple in its facts, is a loud cry for action that makes one ponder: How is it possible that the unacceptable [135]*135problems of special public education have not been able to see closure after thirty-four years of state court litigation governed by a judgment entered on February 14, 2002, in the case of Rosa Lydia Vélez et al. v. Department of Education, Superi- or Court, San Juan, Case # KPE1980-1738 (804).

B.

As an introductory note, it is no secret that the quality level of education in public schools in Puerto Rico is poor, broken, embarrassing, negligent, disgraceful, pitiful, and dishonorable.

The judge or the reader does not have to be a rocket scientist to realize that a school system where a large proportion of its students fail Puerto Rican tests on academic performance is a shame that all Puerto Ricans must shoulder. Eighty-five percent (85%) of over 1,800 public schools are in the improvement program. As of September 2014, figures have been published showing that recently sixty percent (60%) of students failed the Spanish academic performance tests in their respective grades, sixty-one percent (61%) failed the English tests,'and seventy-five percent (75%) failed the mathematics tests.

The Caribbean Business September 2014 edition2 reports as follows:

To be in accordance with the federal No Child Left Behind Act, all students in the Puerto Rico public school system must pass the tests by 2014. The system’s dropout rate, meanwhile, is about 12%. In general, urban schools, especially those located in poorer neighborhoods, tend to do worse than their counterparts located in more suburban or middle-class areas or in smaller towns. The Department of Education has a consolidated budget of $8.8 billion, much more than any other government agency, including the Health and the Police departments. But the Education Department has had three different secretaries over a 22^-month period starting in January 2009, and seems most focused on meeting the requirements to qualify for federal funds. Meanwhile, the two main teachers’ unions — The Teachers Federation of Puerto Rico (FMPR by its Spanish acronym) and the Puerto Rico Teachers Association (A MPR by its Spanish acronym) have either expressed reservations, or opposed (in the case of the FM PR) the most recent appointee to head the Education Department.
As of August 2010, public schools had 436,741 students from kindergarten through to the high-school level, roughly twice the number of students attending private schools. In October 2010, more than 200,000 students were enrolled in 1,078 licensed private schools ranging from preschools to those that offer classes at the high-school level.

C.

The picture depicted above pales in comparison with the problem of special education that is the subject of this particular case. When one examines Court Exhibit 3, the 2012-2013 monitor report in the Rosa Lydia Velez 34-year-old litigation, one’s jaw drops at the August 26, 2014, conclusion by the monitor, Dr. Pilar Belén-dez-Soltero. The level of compliance with 69 identified judgment dispositions of special education needs was 1.99. A score of 1.99 in the applicable scale is between fifty [136]*136percent (50%) and no more than sixty-nine percent (69%) compliance, meaning under acceptable levels and requiring a plan for corrective action. Thirty-four years of paper pushing and excuses. Thirty-four years of inefficiency and mediocrity where the victim is the child whose parents cannot afford private education — the only acceptable recourse to this tragedy these days. But for those who have the ability to pay, private education has become common. 31 The statistics show that roughly one-third (1/3) of Puerto Ricans ranging from preschool to high-school attend private schools. Superior private education is creating a superclass of privileged students against whom the best majority of the publicly-educated cannot and will never be able to compete on an equal footing. That is unfair to the less privileged. Indeed, such government-created inequality creates an ever-growing chasm between Puerto Rico’s haves and its have nots — an almost caste structure within our education system.

D.

Going now to the present case, Plaintiff Ivis Colón-Vázquez is the single, widowed mother of Plaintiff ECC, a minor who suffers from hearing problems, vision problems, diabetes, a heart murmur, and ADHD-related health problems associated with Down syndrome. This is not the first occurrence where Plaintiff Colón has had to resort to the justice system to get the Department of Education to comply with what the law provides or legislative remedies to deal with the special education needs of ECC. One of the previous suits was mentioned during the preliminary injunction hearing held on September 9 and 10, 2014. The court also has access to the full record of a district court case that ended in a favorable judgment for Plaintiff Colón3 and access to the recent, June 24, 2014, decision by an Administrative Law Judge, the decision which is, in part, the basis of this matter (Joint Ex. 1).

II.

Background and Procedural History

Plaintiff Ivis Colón-Vázquez (“Colón”) filed an administrative complaint on behalf of her minor child, ECC, against the Department of Education of Puerto Rico (“DOE”) on May 5, 2014. According to Plaintiff Colón, ECC is diagnosed with ADHD-related health issues associated with Down syndrome, ECC attends school at the Dr. Hiram González School in Bayamón (“the School”). The School has not been providing ECC with special needs education as required under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, 20 U.S.C. § 1400 et seq., (“IDEA”).

On June 24, 2014, the Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) granted Plaintiffs’ complaint and ordered the following:

a. That the DOE name a special education teacher to be ready by the start of the academic year, that is, August 6, 2014;
b. That, on or before July 16, 2014,- the DOE hold a [IEP Team4] meeting with the purpose of creating ECC’s Individualized Educational Plan (“IEP”) for the 2014-2015 school year;
c. That ECC be granted the “compensatory time” that she has not received [137]

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Bluebook (online)
46 F. Supp. 3d 132, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 135493, 2014 WL 4701169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colon-vazquez-v-department-of-education-of-puerto-rico-prd-2014.