R. L. Ex Rel. Mr. L. v. Plainville Board of Education

363 F. Supp. 2d 222, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5137, 2005 WL 730242
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedMarch 28, 2005
DocketCIV.A.3:02 CV 16(CFD)
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 363 F. Supp. 2d 222 (R. L. Ex Rel. Mr. L. v. Plainville Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
R. L. Ex Rel. Mr. L. v. Plainville Board of Education, 363 F. Supp. 2d 222, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5137, 2005 WL 730242 (D. Conn. 2005).

Opinion

*224 RULING ON CROSS-MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

DRONEY, District Judge.

Plaintiff R.L. (“R.”) is a twelve-year-old girl attending the Plainville public schools. 1 R.L.’s parents (“Mr. and Mrs. L.” or “the Ls”), acting as her next friends, brought this suit against the Plainville Board of Education (“Plainville” or “Board”), seeking injunctive and declaratory relief pursuant to the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, 20 U.S.C. §§ 1400 et seq. (“IDEA”). 2 Specifically, the Ls appeal the decision of a due process administrative hearing officer, who ruled that the educational program offered to R. during the 2001-2002 school year satisfied the IDEA’S requirements that she receive a “free appropriate public education” in the “least restrictive environment” possible.

The plaintiff claims seven grounds for reversal of the administrative hearing officer’s decision, all of which allegedly violated the IDEA and Mr. and Mrs. L’s due process rights under that statute: 1) the hearing officer evaluated a modified version of R’s Individualized Education Program (“IEP”), not the version of the IEP that originally had been proposed to Mr. and Mrs. L.; 2) the hearing officer inappropriately applied the procedural requirements of the IDEA when she found that R. was being mainstreamed to the maximum extent appropriate; 3) the hearing officer, in determining that R. was sufficiently mainstreamed, failed to consider expert testimony offered by Mr. and Mrs. L. about how supplementary aids and services could increase R.L.’s mainstreamed time; 4) the hearing officer did not apply the correct legal standard in finding that the Board was not obliged to pay for an independent educational evaluation obtained by Mr. and Mrs. L.; 5) the hearing officer erroneously applied state and federal law in determining that the Board was not obliged to initiate a due process hearing after declining to pay for Mr. and Mrs. L’s independent educational evaluation; 6) the hearing officer improperly found that R.’s early dismissal from school on Friday afternoons did not violate her rights under the IDEA; and 7) the hearing officer inappropriately determined that the Board was not required to employ an independent outside expert to oversee and coordinate the provision of special education services to R. Mr. and Mrs. L. seek equitable relief in the form of a reversal of the hearing officer’s decision, as well as attorney’s fees.

The defendant argues that the administrative record belies the plaintiffs allegations and that the hearing officer correctly decided that R. was receiving a free appropriate public education. The parties have filed cross-motions for summary judgment.

I. Background 3

R. was born on October 15, 1992 with Sanfillipo syndrome, also known as muco-polysaccaridosis III (“MPS III”). Muco-polysaccharides are long chains of sugar molecules that the body uses to build con *225 nective tissue. Normally, one’s body continuously breaks down the used mucopoly-saccharides for disposal. An individual with MPS III, however, lacks one of the necessary enzymes to break down these chains. As a result, the incompletely broken-down chains remain stored in the body’s cells, where they cause progressive damage. That damage manifests itself in delayed development, hyperactivity, sleep disorders, hearing impairment, retinal degeneration, and either speech failure or degenerative loss of speech. As MPS III sufferers grow older, more and more cells are affected, and their symptoms worsen. The average lifespan of an individual with MPS III is about fifteen years.

Since her third birthday, R. has received special education services from the Plain-ville Board of Education. 4 Although at one point R. had a vocabulary of thirty to fifty words, she has since lost the ability to communicate verbally. In the time that Plainville has provided her services, R. has also shown some hearing loss (which has since stabilized and to compensate for which she uses hearing aids), stiffening of her joints, curling of her hands and feet, sleep disorders, and hyperactivity. The Connecticut Children’s Medical Center conducted a multidisciplinary Program for Evaluation of Development and Learning (“PEDAL evaluation”) on R. in the fall of 2000 (around the time of her eighth birthday); that evaluation concluded that R.’s overall mental functioning was at the level of a ten-month-old child. In regard to daily living skills such as dressing and grooming, she functioned at approximately a seventeen-month-old level. At the time of the evaluation, R. displayed limited fine motor skills and compromised gross motor skills: although she could walk independently on a flat surface, she could not get up and down from the floor or maneuver curbs without assistance, and she required supervision when climbing stairs.

Once R. entered the Plainville public schools, her yearly educational program was coordinated by a Planning and Placement Team (PPT). 5 The current dispute between the parties stems from a June 15, 2001 PPT meeting convened to write R.’s IEP for the school year beginning in September 2001 (when she was slated to enter the third grade). At the time of the June 2001 meeting, the PPT included as members Mr. & Mrs. L; Maureen Schiffer, Plainville’s Director of Special Education; Susan Steele, the teacher for the regular third grade class to which R. was assigned; Gloria Marshall and Ann Sullivan, R.’s special education teachers; Danielle King, R.’s supplementary speech and language pathologist; Susan Freeman, R.’s physical therapist; Lauri Susi, a specialist in the area of assistive technology retained by Plainville; Regina Albee, R.’s paraprofessional aide, who also served as Toffolon’s “case manager” coordinating the various components of R.’s educational program; Jeri Turkowitz, the Toffolon Elementary school psychologist; Lynda Faro, a representative of the Connecticut Department of Mental Retardation; and Karen Olson, *226 a representative of the Connecticut Board of Education and Services for the Blind.

After discussion among the PPT members at the June meeting, Maureen Schif-fer sent Mrs. L. a draft IEP for the 2001-2002 school year on June 21, 2001. See Administrative Record at Exh. B-l. The IEP included an evaluation of R.’s present levels of educational performance in seven categories (academic/cognitive; social/behavioral; communication; motor skills; vocational; self-help; and health and development) and then proceeded to list goals for R.’s progress during the upcoming academic year of improvement in all those categories via a list of short-term objectives. These objectives included items such as R. learning to “take books, papers, projects, etc.

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363 F. Supp. 2d 222, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5137, 2005 WL 730242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/r-l-ex-rel-mr-l-v-plainville-board-of-education-ctd-2005.