Norristown Area School Distric v. F. C.

636 F. App'x 857
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJanuary 8, 2016
Docket14-3322, 14-4057
StatusUnpublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 636 F. App'x 857 (Norristown Area School Distric v. F. C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norristown Area School Distric v. F. C., 636 F. App'x 857 (3d Cir. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION *

SCIRICA, Circuit Judge.

The Norristown Area School District (school district) appeals an order from the *859 United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania awarding compensatory education to a student, F.C., and his parents for failing to provide F.C. with a free and appropriate public education (FAPE) for his second- and third-grade school years under the Individuals With Disabilities Education Act, 20 U.S.C. § 1400 et seq. The school district also appeals the award of attorneys’ fees and costs under IDEA’S fee-shifting provision, 20 ‘ U.S.C. § 1415(i)(3)(B)(i)(I). These cases have been consolidated on appeal. We will affirm. 1

I.

F.C. is an eleven-year-old Pennsylvania student who attended public school in the school district from the start of kindergarten in 2009 through the end of second grade in 2012. Prior to kindergarten, the school district completed an evaluation of F.C. and concluded he had autism and speech and language impairment and was in need of specially designed instruction, as required under IDEA, 20 U.S.C. § 1401(29). The school district implemented an Individualized Education Plan (IEP) for F.C.’s kindergarten school year that placed him in a separate classroom with seven children and two paraprofe's-sionals for full-time autistic support.

F.C.’s initial first-grade IEP pláced him in the same full-time autistic-support classroom he had attended in kindergarten. The teacher and behavior management services were also the same, and the teacher-to-student ratio remained three to six or seven. F.C. attended this full-time autistic-support class until January 24, 2011. Then, under an inclusion plan issued by the school district as part of its mainstreaming efforts under IDEA, 2 F.C. began transitioning out of the full-time support classroom to a general classroom of twenty to twenty-three students. By the end of first grade, out of a school day of six hours and five minutes, F.C. spent two hours and twenty minutes (about 38 percent) in the general classroom without one-on-one support. 3

Initially, F.C.’s second-grade IEP recommended he continue attending the autistic-support classroom for most subjects. But in June 2011, F.C.’s IEP team changed his second-grade IEP dramatically. Under the revised IEP, F.C. would receive all of his academic subjects in the general second-grade classroom without one-on-one paraprofessional support, except for writing instruction, which he would receive in a learning-support classroom. This meant that 87 percent of his total school day would be in the general classroom without one-on-one support. This IEP was implemented at the start of F.C.’s second-grade year.

*860 Early into second grade, F.C.’s behavior started to regress. F.C. had trouble staying on task and his classroom interruptions began to impede his learning and that of other students. By January 2012, F.C. had not “complete[d] a task without some type of support.” In response to F.C.’s problems integrating into the general classroom, F.C.’s IEP team updated his IEP in January 2012. For the first time, F.C.’s IEP team checked a preprinted box on the IEP indicating that he “exhibit[s] behaviors that impede[] his/her learning or that of others.” 4 Preprinted language on every IEP states that if this box is checked, “[t]he IEP team must develop a Positive Behavior Support Plan (PBSP) that is based on a functional assessment of behavior and that utilizes positive behavior techniques.” It had not been checked on previous IEPs.

In April 2012, a new IEP was issued for F.C.’s third-grade school year (2011-12). There was no PBSP in this IEP. 5 Moreover, F.C.’s one-on-one paraprofessional support had an anticipated duration of November 2012, even though the anticipated duration for every other program modification was April 2013. The school district revised F.C.’s third-grade IEP in June 2012 to add a PBSP, 6 but the anticipated duration of F.C.’s paraprofessional support remained November 2012.

The parents refused to sign this IEP, viewing it as inadequate, and enrolled F.C. in the Stratford Friends School for the start of third grade. Stratford Friends is a small private school that educates students with language-based learning difficulties. F.C.’s third-grade class had eleven ’ children and two teachers and F.C. received significant individualized attention.

In April 2013, while F.C. was at Strat-ford Friends, the school district offered F.C. a new IEP that contained a transition plan and one-on-one individualized support for the remainder of third grade. F.C. remained at Stratford Friends for third grade.

II.

The parents filed an administrative due process complaint against the school district on December 5, 2012, claiming the school district had denied F.C. a FAPE for first grade (2010-11), second grade (2011-12), and third grade (2012-13). 7 They sought compensatory education for first and second grade at the public school and tuition reimbursement for third grade at Stratford Friends. The hearing officer determined the school district had provided F.C. with a FAPE during first grade, but not second or third grade. The hearing officer ordered the school district to provide F.C. with two hours of compensatory education for each school day of second grade and thirty minutes of compensatory speech and language instruction for each week school was in session during F.C.’s second grade. He also ordered the school *861 district to reimburse the parents for F.C.’s entire third-grade-year tuition at Stratford Friends.

The parents and the school district appealed the hearing officer’s order to the trial court. The court upheld the hearing officer’s determination that F.C. had not received a FAPE during second grade and affirmed the award of two hours per day of compensatory education. But it reversed the compensation award for speech and language instruction, finding F.C. “had met his remediation goals” in this area. The court also affirmed the hearing officer’s findings that the school district had failed to offer F.C. a FAPE for third grade and that Stratford Friends was an appropriate placement. The school district appealed.

The parents subsequently filed a motion for attorneys’ fees and costs on July 9, 2014. Finding the parents “[were], overall, very successful” on the merits of their claims, the trial court awarded the parents $139,629.34 for their reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs. The school district appealed.

III.

Contrary to the school district’s assertions, the court applied the correct legal standard. 8

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Bluebook (online)
636 F. App'x 857, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norristown-area-school-distric-v-f-c-ca3-2016.