K.D. v. Villa Grove Community Unit School District No. 302 Board of Education

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 24, 2010
Docket4-09-0913 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of K.D. v. Villa Grove Community Unit School District No. 302 Board of Education (K.D. v. Villa Grove Community Unit School District No. 302 Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
K.D. v. Villa Grove Community Unit School District No. 302 Board of Education, (Ill. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Filed 8/24/10 NO. 4-09-0913

IN THE APPELLATE COURT

OF ILLINOIS

FOURTH DISTRICT

K.D., by and Through His Parents, ) Appeal from NICHELLE D. and BRADLEY D., ) Circuit Court of Plaintiffs-Appellees, ) Douglas County v. ) No. 09CH27 VILLA GROVE COMMUNITY UNIT SCHOOL ) DISTRICT NO. 302 BOARD OF EDUCATION; ) and DR. STEVEN POZNIC, in His ) Official Capacity as District No. 302 ) Honorable Superintendent, ) Chris E. Freese, Defendants-Appellants. ) Judge Presiding. _________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE KNECHT delivered the opinion of the court:

In July 2009, plaintiff, K.D., by and through his

parents, Nichelle D. and Bradley D., filed a complaint for

injunctive relief alleging defendants, Villa Grove Community Unit

School District No. 302 and Dr. Steven Poznic, in his official

capacity as District No. 302 superintendent (referred to collec-

tively herein as the District), violated section 14-6.02 of the

School Code (105 ILCS 5/14-6.02 (West 2008)) by denying K.D., a

student with autism, use of a service animal. In November 2009,

the trial court entered an order finding K.D.'s dog to be a

service animal and ordering the District to allow K.D. to bring

the dog to school functions.

The District appeals, arguing the trial court erred in

granting plaintiffs injunctive relief because (1) plaintiffs

failed to exhaust their administrative remedies and (2) K.D.'s dog was not a "service animal" pursuant to section 14-6.02 of the

School Code. We disagree and affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

When this action commenced, K.D. was six years old and

attending Villa Grove Elementary School, a school located within

the District. K.D. is autistic, which places him under the

purview of article 14 of the School Code (105 ILCS 5/14-1.01

through 14-16 (West 2008)) as a child with a disability. In May

2009, K.D. received a Labrador retriever named "Chewey" from

Autism Service Dogs of America (ASDA). Later that month, the

District sent plaintiffs a letter informing them Chewey was

prohibited from accompanying K.D. to school. Plaintiffs contin-

ued to negotiate with the District as to Chewey's entry into the

school. On June 29, 2009, the District informed K.D.'s parents

it prohibited Chewey from attending school with K.D. that summer.

K.D. was enrolled in an extended school-year program to prevent

his academic and functional skills from regressing during the

summer scheduled to begin July 1, 2009, but was unable to attend

after the District refused to allow Chewey to accompany K.D. to

class.

On July 9, 2009, K.D.'s parents filed a verified

complaint and a motion for temporary restraining order and

preliminary injunction on K.D.'s behalf, claiming section 14-6.02

of the School Code (105 ILCS 5/14-6.02 (West 2008)) permitted

- 2 - K.D. to bring Chewey with him to Villa Grove Elementary School.

On July 13, 2009, the District filed a motion to

dismiss plaintiffs' motion for temporary restraining order and

preliminary injunction, contending (1) plaintiffs failed to

exhaust their administrative remedies before commencing their

action before the trial court and (2) Chewey was not a "service

animal" for purposes of section 14-6.02 of the School Code.

After a hearing the following day, the court denied the Dis-

trict's motion and granted plaintiffs' motion for a temporary

restraining order, thereby enjoining the District from denying

Chewey from attending school with K.D. As a result, Chewey

accompanied K.D. to school during the entire 2009-2010 school

year.

In August 2009, plaintiffs amended their complaint

regarding the prayer for relief. Upon amendment, plaintiffs

sought a trial court order requiring the District to not only

permit Chewey to attend school with K.D. but also (1) train at

least one primary staff member and one backup staff member in

service-animal equipment and the necessary commands for Chewey to

accompany K.D. to all school functions; (2) designate one primary

staff member to hold Chewey's leash while K.D. is also tethered

to Chewey during student transition periods throughout the school

day; (3) designate one primary staff member to release K.D. from

his tether while he uses the restroom facilities and during

- 3 - periods with heavy physical activity, such as physical-education

classes; and (4) allow Chewey access to water and to relieve

himself when appropriate during the school day. The District

filed a motion to strike the amended prayer for relief. The

court allowed the District's motion, finding plaintiffs' re-

quested relief exceeded the scope of the School Code.

On November 10, 2009, the trial court conducted a

hearing on plaintiffs' complaint. At the hearing, plaintiffs

called two witnesses, Kati Witko and Nichelle D., and the Dis-

trict called three, Aimee Reardon, Kathy Burgess, and Beth

Wiessing.

Witko testified ASDA employs her as a program training

director. Witko holds a two-year "dog certificate" from Animal

Behavior College, and her job consists of training dogs to assist

children with autism, including Chewey.

According to Witko, ASDA dogs receive approximately 16

months of training, beginning when the dogs are between 6 and 8

months old. As part of a dog's training, ASDA employees take the

dog to schools, with both autistic and nonautistic children, so

it can learn to remain calm around children who exhibit loud

behavior. While at school with its child, a dog remains in a

"down-stay" position, which "can look like sleeping," to keep the

child calm and safe. The dog does not move from the down-stay

position unless commanded by its handler. Accordingly, the

- 4 - handler plays "a big role" by ensuring the dog does "what he's

supposed to at the right time."

Witko stated Chewey is not currently commanded by K.D.

because K.D. does not function at a level where he could provide

Chewey with a sense of leadership or control. Rather, he is

specifically trained not to respond to K.D.'s commands, and thus

someone else must command him. Although Chewey knows over 30

commands, a handler needs to know only 5 to manage Chewey in a

school environment. Chewey's main handler is K.D.'s mother,

Nichelle.

Witko further testified Nichelle received training in

Oregon with Chewey before ASDA placed Chewey with the family in

Villa Grove. After placement, Witko flew to plaintiffs' home in

May 2009 to teach Chewey how to apply his training to K.D.

Typically, such training includes school placement, but because

the District refused to allow Chewey in K.D.'s elementary school,

Witko could not perform such placement during her May 2009 visit.

However, she was able to conduct the training upon her return in

August 2009, which K.D.'s speech teacher, his one-on-one aide,

the head of special education at the school, and "some fill-in

aides" attended. Upon completion of the training, Witko provided

written information, her phone number, and her e-mail address.

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