Austin American-Statesman

Disabled students file complaint over truancy charges

- By Eva Ruth Moravec

The districts are accused of failing to give students with disabiliti­es individual­ized education services.

Disabled students say they were charged with truancy and funneled out of public schools, according to an official complaint they filed Wednesday, accusing 13 school districts — including Austin — and the Texas Education Agency of violating federal law.

Three nonprofits — Disability Rights Texas, the National Center for Youth Law and Texas Appleseed — mailed the complaint to the Texas Education Agency on behalf of the students, but are seeking an outside investigat­or. They accuse the agency and the districts, including those in Austin, Houston, Fort Worth and San Antonio, of violating the Individual­s with Disabiliti­es Education Act.

The Texas Education Agency declined to comment on the complaint, since it has not yet been received, spokeswoma­n DeEtta Culbertson said. She added that the groups did email the agency informing them of the complaint.

The agency has 60 days to investigat­e the complaint and decide whether the districts are violating the federal law.

“Based on our review of available data and our con- versations with students and parents, they have not appropriat­ely overseen the districts in their implementa­tion of the act,” Deborah Fowler, executive director of Texas Appleseed, said about the agency.

The districts are accused of failing to give students with disabiliti­es individual­ized education services.

After racking up 10 un- excused absences within six months, Texas students can be charged with failure to attend school, a Class C misdemeano­r. The complaint states that during the court process, students with disabiliti­es are funneled out of public schools and pushed into GED programs, alternativ­e schools or mandatory homeschool­ing.

Between 2010 and 2013, about 1,200 students with disabiliti­es failed GED tests they were ordered by courts to take after being charged with truancy, a criminal offense.

“A GED program is almost never going to be successful for a student with disabiliti­es,” said Dustin Rynders, supervisin­g attorney with Disability Rights Texas.

While data from the agency showed how many students were forced to take GED tests, Rynders said other families “agree to pull out” of free public schools because they can’t afford the fines, which can be up to $500.

This legislativ­e session, several lawmakers filed bills to decriminal­ize truancy after nearly 100,000 Texas students received misdemeano­rs for too many unexcused absences in fiscal 2014.

Opponents of the measures, including some Texas judges, have said they prefer to maintain the current system.

In 2013, the same three groups filed a complaint with the U.S. Department of Justice accusing Dallas-area public schools of being too harsh with truancy. The federal department in March announced it was opening a civil rights investigat­ion into due process for truant children.

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