School Board v. Price

19 Fla. Supp. 2d 215
CourtState of Florida Division of Administrative Hearings
DecidedAugust 13, 1985
DocketCase No. 85-1804E
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Fla. Supp. 2d 215 (School Board v. Price) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering State of Florida Division of Administrative Hearings primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
School Board v. Price, 19 Fla. Supp. 2d 215 (Fla. Super. Ct. 1985).

Opinion

OPINION

ELLA JANE P. DAVIS, Hearing Officer.

FINAL ORDER

This cause came on for hearing in Merritt Island, Florida before the Division of Administrative Hearings by its duly designated Hearing Officer, Ella Jane P. Davis on July 22, 1985.

EVIDENCE AND POST-TRIAL PROCEDURE

Petitioner School Board had admitted, without objection, Composite [216]*216Exhibit 1 (internally 1-1 through 1-17) and offered the testimony of Cynthia Ford, Director of Admissions and Exceptional Student Education. Mr. and Mrs. Price each testified on Respondent’s behalf and offered no exhibits.

No transcript was requested or provided. Both parties waived opportunity to file written proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law.

ISSUE

The issue in this cause was noticed as:

“Whether the IEP proposed for Derrick Price is appropriate?”

Prior to hearing, in its “Pre-Hearing Compliance Response,” the School Board requested that the style of this cause be reversed so that the burden of proof might fall upon the parents as Petitioners, upon the grounds that student Derrick Price had previously been staffed and placed in the emotionally handicapped program with the parents present and participating and had in existence at the present time an Individual Education Program (IEP).

Argument on this issue was heard prior to hearing on the merits and the request was denied. The issues as defined below are encompassed in the May 24, 1985 request (P-1-1) by Mr. and Mrs. Price for a Section 120.57(1) due process hearing. The issues to be determined are, therefore:

1. Whether the existing 1984-1985 IEP devised for Derrick Price was appropriate.
2. Was Derrick Price’s 10-day suspension beginning May 22, 1985 improper in light of his IEP?

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Mr. and Mrs. Price are active and concerned parents who genuinely worry that the suspension of their son, Derrick, for 10 days during the last two weeks of his three-year Middle School experience has damaged his self-esteem, self-image, and confidence just at a time his grades had taken an upswing in response to an otherwise effective Individual Education Program for the Emotionally Handicapped. The parents expressed concern that mere classification as an emotionally handicapped child in an IEP program comes across to Derrick as a type of discipline/punishment and lowers his self-esteem, but the parents have offered no evidence beyond their “feelings” to support this concept. They further express concern that graduation from an EH program will not allow Derrick to compete on equal footing in life [217]*217with those in a regular program. The record is devoid of direct, credible evidence to support this perception.

2. Derrick Price, bom November 13, 1971, came under consideration for specialized educational placement in the 7th grade (198301984 school year) due to disruptive and aggressive behavior.

3. All prestaffing conference procedures were complied with by the School Board. At the staffing conference, held June 6, 1984, the staffing committee reviewed all available data, determined that the student met the eligibility criteria for “emotionally handicapped,” determined the student’s present level of performance and affective, behavioral, and academic needs, recommended appropriate placement by completing the Notice and Consent for Placement Form, developed an IEP for the 1984-1985 school year, and developed a written summary of the findings and recommendations. However, for reasons never fully explained, the IEP was not implemented until August 27, 1984.

The IEP provided annual goals of 1) developing and improving self-related behaviors, responses and attitudes, 2) enchancing classroom functioning by improving class-related behavior, responses and attitudes, 3) continuing to develop competencies in all basic subject areas, with emphasis on math and language arts, and 4) increasing participation in mainstream classes, to be implemented by the educationally handicapped teacher. Mrs. Ford testified that these goals could have included some provisions for special disciplinary methods but did not.

Derrick started the 1984-1985 school year in a self-contained emotionally handicapped exceptional education program at Kennedy Middle School. He was gradually mainstreamed in 3 of his total 6 subjects.

Derrick completed the 8th grade (1984-1985 school year) with all passing grades and plans to attend 9th grade at a new senior high with a new principal for the 1985-1986 school year. Mrs. Ford anticipates that an annual review of Derrick’s IEP, complete with a new staffing conference and revised IEP for 9th grade will take place before the start of the 1985-1986 school year, probably between August 19 and 26, 1985.

4. The parents participated in the staffing conference on June 6, 1984 (P-1-5) and Mr. Price signed the appropriate Notice and Consent for Placement Form. (P-1-7)

Prior to entering the 1984-1985 school year with an IEP, Derrick had had a lot of behavioral problems resulting in a number of suspensions but also had passing grades in a regular school curriculum with above grade level reading and below grade level math perfór[218]*218manee. The Prices, by their testimony, acknowledge that they participated in the process leading up to the staffing conference, participated in the staffing conference, and agreed to the IEP as drafted. Mr. Price also signed various “addendums” thereto which thereafter gradually increased Derrick’s participation in mainstream classes and curriculum. It is not now the parents’ contention that Derrick is not emotionally handicapped but that oral representations were made to them by someone connected with the staffing conference committee that in addition to the 4 annual goals listed and in addition to the coursework to be covered, they were required to agree to the 1984-1985 IEP so as to prevent the School Board from suspending or expelling Derrick within/from the 1984-1985 school year.

5. Mrs. Ford, Director of Admissions and Exceptional Student Education, testified that merely being classified as an emotionally handicapped (EH) student and placed in an EH-IEP does not exclude a student from normal disciplinary procedures. She further testified that she knows of no one who would have made a representation to the Prices that there would never be a suspension applied for Derrick’s misbehavior. Mrs. Ford was not present at the June 6, 1984 staffing conference which was one occasion when such representation was supposedly made. Mrs. Ford represented that when Derrick’s IEP is annually evaluated at the next staffing conference on Derrick, provisions for less drastic discipline could, with the parents’ consent, be worked into a new 1984-1985 EH-IEP for Derrick. She stated that these provisions could have been arranged for the current IEP but were not. It is significant that part of the instructions provided on the observation forms leading up to the June 6, 1984 staffing conference specify:

“Attempts should be made in the beginning to give increments of consequence smaller than expulsion. Classroom exclusion should be a final step.” (P-1-13)

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19 Fla. Supp. 2d 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/school-board-v-price-fladivadminhrg-1985.