Yankton School Dist. v. Harold Schramm

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 22, 1996
Docket95-3343
StatusPublished

This text of Yankton School Dist. v. Harold Schramm (Yankton School Dist. v. Harold Schramm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yankton School Dist. v. Harold Schramm, (8th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

__________

95-3343 __________

Yankton School District, * * Appellant, * * Appeal from the United States v. * District Court for the * District of South Dakota. Harold and Angie Schramm, * * Appellees. * __________

Submitted: May 17, 1996

Filed: August 22, 1996 __________

Before MAGILL, ROSS, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges. __________

MURPHY, Circuit Judge.

Harold and Angie Schramm sought transition services for their orthopedically impaired daughter, Tracy, to assist her passage from high school to independent living at college. The district court1 determined that the Yankton School District continued to be responsible for providing Tracy with services under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), 20 U.S.C. § 1400 et. seq. The court also awarded the Schramms attorney fees and costs as the prevailing parties. The school district appeals from the judgment. We affirm with one modification.

1 The Honorable Lawrence L. Piersol, United States District Judge for the District of South Dakota. I.

Tracy Schramm is now eighteen years old and will be a senior this fall at Yankton High School. She was born with cerebral palsy and has been classified as orthopedically impaired since the third grade. As a result of her impairment, her hand strength is weak, her right hand is stiff and lacks dexterity, her hand-eye coordination is limited, she writes and types slowly, and she uses a walker for short distances and a wheelchair for longer ones. She cannot function independently in her personal life. She needs help in getting dressed, putting on her shoes, pouring beverages, cooking, and cleaning. She cannot drive a car. Although she has learned to play the saxophone, she cannot play at certain speeds.

Due to Tracy's orthopedic impairment, she entered the school district's special education program in the fall of 1979 as a preschool student. From that time she began to receive special instruction and related services tailored to her needs through an individualized education program (IEP). Her last written IEP, dated May 10, 1993, included only adaptive physical education, physical therapy, and transportation. Yankton School District has provided her with several additional services, however, not specified in her IEP. These include assistance in moving between classes, getting on and off the school bus, going up and down stairs in the school building, carrying a lunch tray, and setting up the saxophone she plays in the band. The school district has also provided Tracy with shortened writing assignments, photocopies of her teachers' class notes, computers for certain classes, special instruction on how to type with one hand, and four separate sets of text books for her home and school use so that she need not carry books from one location to another.

These services and specialized instruction have enabled Tracy to participate in the regular classes at school. She has earned grades in the "A" range by studying four to five hours a night,

2 five nights a week. In addition to her class work, Tracy has participated in the school band, newspaper, and a public speaking program. She hopes to attend college and study civil engineering and computer science.

In March 1994, two weeks before Tracy's sixteenth birthday, the school district met with Tracy and her mother to discuss providing transition services under IDEA. Transition services include instruction, community experiences, and training in daily living skills that prepare students about to leave high school for independent living, postsecondary education, and community participation. See 20 U.S.C. § 1401(a)(19). Because of Tracy's desire to attend college away from home, she wanted specially designed instruction in driver's education, self-advocacy, and independent living skills such as cooking and cleaning. The Schramms received limited information from the school district but signed a transition plan that placed nearly all responsibility for Tracy's transition planning on them.

In early June 1994, at the end of Tracy's ninth grade school year, the Schramms learned that the district planned to dismiss Tracy from its special education program under IDEA. Tracy's parents wrote a letter to the Yankton High School Principal, Dr. David Bitter, expressing their disagreement with the planned dismissal. Shortly thereafter, Tracy and her parents met with Dr. Bitter and other school personnel to discuss the matter. Physical education was not provided beyond the ninth grade, and the district informed the Schramms that Tracy had satisfied its requirements in that area. Since Tracy's last IEP had offered special education only in physical education, the district felt Tracy no longer had special education needs under IDEA. On the addendum attached to Tracy's IEP that day, Tracy's mother wrote that the Schramms disagreed with the district's decision and believed that Tracy remained eligible for special education. Nevertheless, the district dismissed Tracy from its special education program under

3 IDEA.

Two weeks later, the South Dakota Advocacy Services, a publicly funded legal services group which had been working with the Schramms during the past year, wrote a letter on their behalf to the school district. The letter explained the Schramms' disagreement with the district's decision that Tracy was ineligible for special education under IDEA. It stated that Tracy would have many transition needs requiring specialized instruction, which the district had failed to consider properly. For these reasons, the Schramms requested an impartial due process hearing.

A due process hearing was held before a state appointed hearing examiner on August 22, 1994. See 20 U.S.C. § 1415(b)(2). The examiner determined that Tracy remained eligible for IDEA benefits because the specially designed instruction and related services not included in the May 1993 IEP were in fact necessary as a result of her orthopedic impairment. In addition, the examiner stated that the transition services Tracy needed because of her impairment also constituted a type of special education. The examiner concluded that Tracy should receive the requested transition services and that the district's March 1994 transition plan improperly shifted responsibility for such transition planning to Tracy's parents. Finally, the examiner noted that he was inclined to award attorney fees to the Schramms but believed he lacked the authority to do so.

The school district appealed the examiner's decision to the district court. See 20 U.S.C. § 1415(e)(2). Following a hearing in August 1995, the court held that Tracy qualified for a free appropriate public education under IDEA. Yankton School District v. Schramm, 900 F. Supp. 1182 (D.S.D. 1995). It based Tracy's eligibility under IDEA on its finding that her orthopedic impairment necessitated the specially designed instruction and related services she had been receiving from the school district.

4 It ordered these to be included in her IEP for the 1995-96 school year, and at least annually thereafter. The district court also found that Tracy's impairment adversely affected her educational performance because she would not be able to benefit from regular classroom instruction without the instructional modifications and related services that made it possible for her to achieve.

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