Mohamed Abdelkadir v. Seattle School District

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 3, 2019
Docket78628-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of Mohamed Abdelkadir v. Seattle School District (Mohamed Abdelkadir v. Seattle School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mohamed Abdelkadir v. Seattle School District, (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

MOHAMED ABDELKADIR, individually and as limited guardian ad litem for DIVISION ONE SERGO ABDELKADIR, and REYA AREY, No. 78628-8-1

Appellants, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

V. FILED: September 3, 2019 SEATTLE SCHOOL DISTRICT,

Res•ondent. DWYER, J. — After an unsuccessful administrative appeal from the denial of their daughter's nonresident enrollment application to the Seattle School

District (the District), Mohamed Abdelkadir and Reya Areyl commenced this

action, asserting that the District violated the Washington Law Against

Discrimination (WLAD), chapter 49.60 RCW,and that the District breached a

settlement agreement. The trial court granted summary judgment dismissal to

the District, accepting its contention that the Parents' WLAD claim was barred by

either claim or issue preclusion, and that there was no basis to assert that the

District had breached a settlement agreement. We affirm.

1 For simplicity, we will refer to the appellants as the "Parents" unless context requires otherwise. No. 78628-8-1/2

I

S.A. resides with her parents, Mohamed Abdelkadir and Reya Arey, in the

Shoreline School District. For several years she was permitted to enroll in a

Seattle elementary school as a nonresident student. Each year she needed to

reapply for nonresident enrollment for the next school year. She most recently

attended a District school during .the 2015-16 academic year, when she

completed the fifth grade.

S.A. has a learning disability that makes her eligible for special education.

After S.A. entered the fifth grade, the Parents and the District disputed the

magnitude of S.A.'s disability and the services that she required. After mediation,

the parties signed a settlement agreement, pursuant to which the Parents would

arrange for S.A. to receive an independent education evaluation (IEE), paid for

by the District, which would then be considered in developing a new

Individualized Education Plan (IEP). Despite selecting a professional to conduct

it, the Parents never arranged the IEE. However, as S.A. completed the fifth

grade, the parties developed an IEP for the following school year, which provided

for S.A. to receive three 30-minute sessions each month from a speech language

pathologist(SLP).

Subsequently, the Parents submitted S.A.'s nonresident student

enrollment application for the 2016-17 school year. The application was referred

to the District's special education department to determine whether there would

be sufficient capacity, both in the classroom and in the SLP program, to enroll

S.A. at one of the middle schools she requested. At this time, the District's ability

2 No. 78628-8-1/3

to admit nonresidents was limited by a severe shortage of SLP staff to serve the

anticipated number of resident students who would require SLP involvement.

Thus, the District-wide SLP team leader recommended declining all nonresident

student applications for students requiring SLP services.

On July 8, 2016, the Parents received a letter denying S.A.'s application,

giving the following grounds for the decision:

We have determined that available capacity (if any) at the school grade and/or program is needed to accommodate anticipated needs of resident students;[and]

Accepting this student would create a financial hardship for SPS.[2]

Pursuant to chapter 28A.225 RCW,the Parents appealed the District's

denial of S.A.'s nonresident enrollment application to the Office of the

Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSP1). An adjudicatory hearing was held

over two days—October 11 and November 8, 2016—before an administrative

law judge (AU). From the evidence, the AUJ found as a fact that all

nonresidential transfer applications from students requiring SLP services had

been denied for the 2016-17 school year and that this was due to the District's

inability to fill SLP staff positions.3 The AUJ also found that the unavailability of

SLPs district-wide, and not solely at S.A.'s requested middle schools, was a

proper consideration, as the District was actively mitigating its shortage by re-

assigning students from SLPs with high caseloads to those with lower caseloads.

2 Seattle Public Schools. 3 The District's collective bargaining agreement in effect at the time set a targeted maximum caseload of 47 students per SLP. In the fall of 2016, nearly half of the District's SLPs had caseloads above this maximum. Furthermore, based on experience, the District anticipated an increase in students requiring SLP services during the school year.

3 No. 78628-8-1/4

The AUJ also reviewed the District's nonresident student enrollment policy,

adopted pursuant to RCW 28A.225.225, a statute that limits the discretion of

school districts to accept or reject nonresident students.4 This policy allows the

District's superintendent to accept or reject an application for nonresident

admission based on certain standards including, but not limited to,

A. Whether space is available in the grade level or classes at the building in which the student desires to be enrolled;

B. Whether appropriate educational programs or services are available to improve the student's condition as stated in requesting release from his or her district of residence;

D. Whether the student's acceptance would constitute a financial hardship for the district.

4 The pertinent subsection of the statute, RCW 28A.225.225, provides as follows: (4) Except as provided in subsection (1) of this section, all districts accepting applications from nonresident students or from students receiving home-based instruction for admission to the district's schools shall consider equally all applications received. Each school district shall adopt a policy establishing rational, fair, and equitable standards for acceptance and rejection of applications by June 30, 1990. The policy may include rejection of a nonresident student if: (a) Acceptance of a nonresident student would result in the district experiencing a financial hardship; (b) The student's disciplinary records indicate a history of convictions for offenses or crimes, violent or disruptive behavior, or gang membership; (c) Accepting of the nonresident student would conflict with RCW 28A.340.080; or (d) The student has been expelled or suspended from a public school for more than ten consecutive days. Any policy allowing for readmission of expelled or suspended students under this subsection (4)(d) must apply uniformly to both resident and nonresident applicants. For purposes of subsection[]. . .(4)(b) of this section,"gang" means a group which: (i) Consists of three or more persons; (ii) has identifiable leadership; and (iii) on an ongoing basis, regularly conspires and acts in concert mainly for criminal purposes.

4 No. 78628-8-1/5

The AU recited relevant portions of the District superintendent's

Procedures for Student Assignment that implement the nonresident enrollment

policy:

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Mohamed Abdelkadir v. Seattle School District, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mohamed-abdelkadir-v-seattle-school-district-washctapp-2019.