M.M. Ex Rel. C.M. v. School Board of Miami-Dade County

437 F.3d 1085, 2006 WL 167993
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 25, 2006
Docket04-14982
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 437 F.3d 1085 (M.M. Ex Rel. C.M. v. School Board of Miami-Dade County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M.M. Ex Rel. C.M. v. School Board of Miami-Dade County, 437 F.3d 1085, 2006 WL 167993 (11th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

C.M.’s parents appeal the district court’s dismissal of their complaint filed pursuant to the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (“IDEA”), 20 U.S.C. §§ 1400 et seq. After review and oral argument, we affirm the district court’s dismissal but remand for the limited purpose of allowing the district court to modify its order of dismissal.

I. BACKGROUND

A. C.M. ’s Disability

C.M. was born on November 24, 1998, with profound bilateral sensorial hearing loss. The diagnosing audiologist asked C.M.’s parents whether they wanted C.M. to learn to communicate orally (through spoken language) or manually (using sign language). C.M.’s parents indicated that they wanted C.M. to be an oral communicator.

The audiologist recommended that C.M. be fitted with hearing aids and begin auditory-verbal therapy (“AVT”). 1 After doing considerable research, C.M.’s parents determined that AVT was the best methodology for their child.

Accordingly, C.M.’s parents fitted C.M. with hearing aids and took her to see Kathy Bricker, an audiologist with the University of Miami Ear Institute, for an hour of AVT each week.' C.M. was nine months old at the time..

After about six months, it was clear that C.M. was not getting enough sound from the hearing aids she was wearing, even though they were the most powerful on the market. After consulting with experts, C.M.’s parents decided that C.M. should receive a cochlear implant. 2

*1090 On April 4, 2000, Dr. Thomas Balkany, the head of the Health Services’ Department of Otolaryngology at the University of Miami, successfully performed C.M.’s cochlear implant surgery. The device was “activated” three to four weeks after the surgery. The date of activation of a cochlear implant is considered “day one of hearing” for an implant recipient, who “has to learn all the pragmatics of hearing, just like a newborn has to learn them.”

Cochlear, which sells the devices, recommends that children who are implanted with a cochlear device receive an “educational program that maximizes exposure to meaningful sounds ... [particularly] exposure to spoken language every day.” However, Cochlear does not recommend any particular program.

Although Cochlear does not recommend any particular program, Dr. Balkany does. According to Dr. Balkany, AVT “is the best form of therapy” for the implanted child. Consequently, C.M. continued to receive AVT for one hour each week.

In the summer of 2001, C.M.’s parents enrolled her in a half-day summer program at their local synagogue. C.M.’s parents then elected to enroll C.M. in the synagogue’s year-round preschool program for children from six weeks to five years of age. Although the synagogue accepts disabled students like C.M., it does not provide them with special education classes, such as AVT.

Until C.M. turned three in November 2001, the AVT she received was paid for through the Miami-Dade County Early Intervention Program (“Early Intervention Program”). After age three, the Early Intervention Program no longer pays for AVT. In addition, until age of three, C.M. received oral motor therapy and other special education services under the authority of a public agency.

B. Efforts to Provide an Individual Education Plan _

In late 2001, the Miami-Dade School Board received written materials from the Early Intervention Program in order to determine whether C.M. was a candidate for receiving special education services from the Miami-Dade School Board. In mid-November 2001, School Board staff members and C.M.’s parents met to discuss C.M.’s eligibility for special education services.

At the outset of the meeting, C.M.’s parents inquired about AVT, as C.M. was still receiving AVT one hour per week. The School Board stated that before any decisions were made, they would have to “go through” the Early Intervention Program materials. The evaluations were finished on November 30, 2001.

On January 10, 2002, the School Board and C.M.’s parents met again and the results of the evaluations were discussed. The School Board and C.M.’s parents agreed that C.M. was eligible for special education services.

C.M.’s parents indicated that they were satisfied with C.M.’s current private preschool placement at the synagogue and that they wanted C.M. to continue to receive AVT but have the School Board pay for it. 3 The School Board explained to C.M.’s parents that the Board did not provide AVT but that it did have other programs to recommend.

*1091 The School Board utilizes the verbotonal (“VT”) approach, rather than AVT, to develop the oral- communication skills of hearing-impaired students who communicate orally. 4 VT is a recognized and well-established means by which to teach hearing-impaired children to speak. VT has evolved since cochlear implants and has become a flexible methodology that can be adapted to meet the individual needs of an implanted child. Like AVT, VT focuses on sharpening listening skills and strengthening the auditory pathway. Visual and tactile clues, vibratory stimulation, and body movements are used, but only if needed. VT may be provided on either a group or individual basis. Unlike AVT, VT does not rely on parental participation for successful results.

As to C.M.’s academic classes, the Board advised C.M.’s parents at the January 2002 meeting that there was no age-appropriate, “mainstream” public school placement option available in Miami-Dade County that the School Board could offer. However, the Board did recommend placement in a “special education” class taught by Darci Lester at one of the public schools.

Specifically, Lester is a teacher for the deaf and hearing impaired who received VT training from the Board. Lester taught a self-contained class of three-four-, and five-year-old, hearing-impaired children at Areola Lakes Elementary School. There were seven students in her class, one of whom had a cochlear implant. Two of the older students had cognitive impairments. The three-year olds were “very high functioning.” The children in the class were grouped according to their abilities.

The Board also offered C.M. a varying exceptionalities, reverse mainstream class (with 12 “mildly handicapped” students and two non-disabled students serving as models for the disabled children) at Highland Oaks Elementary School, and a half-day, self-contained speech/language class, taught by a certified teacher for the deaf at Myrtle Grove Elementary School.

After the Board made its recommendations during the January 2002 meeting, C.M.’s parents- informed the Board that they were not interested in any of them. C.M.’s parents repeated their desire for C.M. to remain in the synagogue preschool, but have the Board pay for C.M.’s AVT.

■ The School Board refused to pay for C.M.’s AVT.

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Bluebook (online)
437 F.3d 1085, 2006 WL 167993, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mm-ex-rel-cm-v-school-board-of-miami-dade-county-ca11-2006.