Chattanooga Times Free Press

Schools ordered to reimburse Luka Hyde family

Hamilton County Schools to pay around $103,000

- BY ZACK PETERSON STAFF WRITER

The Hamilton County Department of Education has to pay a family roughly $103,000 in a landmark student disability rights case, per a federal judge’s order Tuesday.

U.S. District Court Judge Curtis Collier ruled the department needs to reimburse Luka Hyde’s family $103,274 for five years of private education costs, including a tutor, putting a near-finish to the heavily litigated 2014 case. Though Collier has yet to rule on a request asking the department to cover another $385,000 in attorneys’ fees, the window to appeal other issues to the U.S. Supreme Court has closed.

“It is official,” his father, Greg Hyde, said in a statement. “Our case has now become the law of the Sixth Circuit — Tennessee, Ohio, Michigan and Kentucky.”

Department attorney Scott Bennett said he believes the district’s insurance carrier will cover the reimbursem­ent. He referred a reporter to Superinten­dent Bryan Johnson for further comment, but Johnson could not be reached Friday through his spokesman.

Over the last five years, Hyde’s case has passed through an administra­tive court, Chattanoog­a’s federal court and the U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals Attorneys argued whether Hamilton County Schools violated a federal guideline that protects students with disabiliti­es when it sent then-second-grader Hyde to a Red Bank Elementary program in 2013 because of his Down syndrome.

Under that program, Hyde would spend half his days separated from general education students. Fearing their son’s placement would prevent him from making academic progress, Luka Hyde’s family filed a disability segregatio­n suit against the department and the Tennessee Department of Education in 2014 after an administra­tive judge ruled against them the year before.

In 2015, the state settled for $185,000 with the Hydes. But the department continued to question whether officials were discrimina­ting if they believed they were acting in Luka Hyde’s best interests. In 2016, Collier determined the department violated the Individual­s with Disabiliti­es Education Act by placing Luka Hyde in an environmen­t that was “more restrictiv­e than necessary.”

The Times Free Press reported in 2017 that about 80 percent of students with intellectu­al disabiliti­es attending Hamilton County Schools were separated in comprehens­ive developmen­t classrooms for most of the school day, according to state data. Earlier this year, the district said it wanted to address systemic issues in special education by developing a plan that called for an end to comprehens­ive developmen­t classrooms.

Federal law states that students with disabiliti­es must make reasonable progress toward individual­ized goals aligned in some way with grade-level standards, and they are not required to “keep pace with the curriculum,” Collier wrote in previous rulings in the case. The law also requires schools to educate students with disabiliti­es alongside those without them to the maximum extent appropriat­e.

Through Bennett, the department appealed Collier’s findings to the U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals in 2017. Hyde’s family did, too, when Collier also ruled they were not entitled to a reimbursem­ent for their son’s private education at The Montessori School.

In August, the federal appeals court affirmed Collier’s ruling but said the Hydes should be reimbursed. It sent the case back to Chattanoog­a, where attorneys have since sparred over the cost.

While the Hydes estimated they’d spent about $108,000, Bennett and other department attorneys said the family had given different amounts in previous testimony and asked Collier not to grant it. Department attorneys also argued they shouldn’t have to pay for the tutor because the tutor wasn’t an official employee of The Montessori School. Hyde’s lawyer, Justin Gilbert, said that distinctio­n was irrelevant because, either way, the tutor was helping Hyde.

In a follow-up affidavit, a Montessori School official estimated the reimbursem­ent was $103,274 and chalked up the roughly $4,200 discrepanc­y to the school charging parents for items such as “student lunches, student supplies and studio charges.”

In his order, Collier rejected the department’s arguments and settled on $103, 274, reasoning the Hyde family would’ve paid for those items if their son was in a public school, too.

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