Lamoine School Committee v. MS Z. Ex Rel. N.S.

353 F. Supp. 2d 18, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 151, 2005 WL 32437
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedJanuary 4, 2005
DocketCV-03-197-B-W
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 353 F. Supp. 2d 18 (Lamoine School Committee v. MS Z. Ex Rel. N.S.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lamoine School Committee v. MS Z. Ex Rel. N.S., 353 F. Supp. 2d 18, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 151, 2005 WL 32437 (D. Me. 2005).

Opinion

ORDER AND MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

WOODCOCK, District Judge.

Plaintiff Lamoine School Committee (“Lamoine”) filed this action pursuant to 20 U.S.C. § 141500(2) of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (“IDEA” or “the Act”) 1 challenging a decision of a Maine Department of Education Hearing Officer (“Hearing Officer”). The Hearing Officer granted Defendant Ms. Z’s request for reimbursement in connection with the placement of her son (“N.S.”) at the School of Urban Wilderness Survival (SUWS) in North Carolina and the Academy at Cedar Mountain, a private school in Utah. Ms. Z. filed a cross-appeal for attorney fees. This Court AFFIRMS the decision of the Hearing Officer, DENIES the Plaintiffs appeal, and GRANTS the Defendant’s request for attorney fees.

I. BACKGROUND 2

A. Underlying Facts

N.S. is currently sixteen years old. (R. at 64). In third grade, he was identified with learning disabilities in reading, written language, and math and began receiving special education services. (R. at 64, 407-08). In fifth grade, N.S. attended school in Bar Harbor, Maine and continued to receive special education services. (R. at 64, 408-09). During his early education, N.S. progressed academically, but teachers reported concern about his low self-esteem and isolation from classmates. (R. at 64-65, 409). After N.S. refused to engage therapeutically with Peter Rees, a mental health counselor, he was treated by his family physician for sleep and bed wetting problems and was prescribed a mild antidepressant, which had a beneficial effect. (R. at 65, 409-10).

William E. Davis, Ph.D. evaluated N.S. at the beginning of his sixth-grade year (1999) and concluded N.S. “manifested very strong failure-set behavioral patterns,” experienced “some fairly substantial feelings of inadequacy, especially regarding his overall cognitive and academic abilities,” and “may often know more than his overt performance might suggest but that he likely ‘shuts down’ when anticipating difficulty — thus avoiding possible embarrassment.” (R. at 65, 313). Dr. Davis summarized the results of N.S.’s evaluation as follows: (1) an average to high average range of cognitive functioning; (2) evidence of strong cognitive abilities within both verbal and nonverbal domains, but with major cognitive strengths lying within the nonverbal, visual perceptual domain; (3) evidence of very strong failure-set behavioral patterns; and, (4) evidence of feelings of anxiety and frustration, primarily involving academic performance. (R. at 315-16). Dr. Davis recommended “in *22 structional supports and whatever instructional modifications are deemed necessary” to help N.S. “gain more confidence in himself and in his abilities,” noting N.S. “is a very sensitive young man who may be experiencing more frustration and anxiety than his overt behaviors might suggest.” (R. at 65, 316).

N.S. attended Connors-Emerson School in Bar Harbor his seventh-grade year (2000-2001). (R. at 65, 300). Under an Individualized Education Plan (“IEP”) dated December 8, 2000 he received resource room services in reading, writing, and math. (R. at 65, 303). The December Pupil Evaluation Team (“PET”) minutes document that N.S. “shut[s] down when he doesn’t understand something” and “has a difficult time with his learning disabilities and self esteem.” (R. at 301). However, the school provided no counseling services, and his mother did not request any at this time. (R. at 413). N.S. expressed an interest in attending boarding school, and the special education teacher provided his mother with a list of schools for children with learning disabilities. (R. at 301).

In the spring of N.S.’s seventh-grade year, he stopped taking his medications, which resulted in a major period of depression. (R. at 65, 411-12). N.S. began “sleeping all the time,” withdrawing from his friends, and acting disrespectfully towards his mother. (R. at 65, 412). In August 2001, the summer before N.S.’s eighth-grade year, his mother sought the help of Dr. David Hawkins, a psychiatrist. (R. at 65, 412-13). N.S. refused to meet with Dr. Hawkins without his mother present and never really engaged therapeutically. (R. at 65, 414).

B. Transfer to Lamoine: 2001-2002

During the early fall of eighth grade (2001-2002), N.S. did not attend school regularly due to depression; in November 2001, he transferred to the Town of La-moine school system. (R. at 65, 418). Ms. Z asked the Lamoine PET to order a home-based tutorial program, based in part on an assessment by Dr. Hawkins. (R. at 210, 218). In a letter dated November 21, 2001 to the Special Education Director, Laura Sereyko, Dr. Hawkins noted that N.S. “suffers [from] severe depression, which impairs his ability to function academically, and has destroyed his ability to attend school.” (R. at 218). He wrote that N.S. “requires intensive supportive one to one attention to progress in learning,” which leads “to the obvious need for tutoring in the home.” (R. at 218). During a November 30, 2001 Lamoine PET meeting, Ms. Sereyko stated there was “no documentation or evaluation to support emotional issues” and recommended a behavioral/psychological evaluation “to determine if [N.S.] is emotionally disturbed or [if] his behavior/actions are caused as a result of control issues.” (R. at 212). Pursuant to a November 30, 2001 IEP, N.S. began receiving in-home tutoring by the Lamoine School District. (R. at 65-66, 195-96).

In January 2002, Bruce Saunders, Ph.D. evaluated N.S. to determine whether his refusal to attend school was disability-based or a result of control issues. (R. at 66, 203-08). Dr. Saunders reviewed PET minutes, prior psycho-educational evaluations, and Dr. Hawkins’s November 21, 2001 letter; conducted clinical interviews with N.S. and his mother; and administered the Rorschach Technique and the Millón Adolescent Clinical Inventory (“MACI”). (R. at 66, 203-08). Dr. Saunders found no clinical or psychometric evidence to warrant a diagnosis of depression, but accepted by history the diagnoses of major depression, adjustment disorder with anxiety, and learning disability. (R. at 66, 207-08). In response to N.S.’s de *23 sire to attend a preparatory school, Dr. Saunders noted the following:

[N.S.] would be devastated in a preparatory school. He clearly needs the support of his family .... [N.S.] is highly vulnerable. Forcing him to attend a structured public school program would likely result in his breakdown. I believe that neither Dr. Hawkins nor I could support that move, although he and I did not discuss this ease directly. I believe that if we force this child to attend school, we will not be providing a service for him.

(R. at 208). Dr. Saunders recommended continued tutoring as well as individual psychotherapy services with Dr. Hawkins. (R. at 66, 208).

The next PET meeting was held on February 8, 2002 to discuss Dr. Saunders’s evaluation. (R. at 190-91). The PET changed the IEP to increase tutorial time with a focus on reading, wilting, and math. (R. at 194). Modifications included access to computers for written work, untimed use of the resource room, and a regular discipline program. (R. at 194).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Doe v. Cape Elizabeth Sch. Dep't
382 F. Supp. 3d 83 (D. Maine, 2019)
Kasenia R. Ex Rel. M.R. v. Brookline School District
588 F. Supp. 2d 175 (D. New Hampshire, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
353 F. Supp. 2d 18, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 151, 2005 WL 32437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamoine-school-committee-v-ms-z-ex-rel-ns-med-2005.