New York Daily News

Fighting to aid disabled kids

- BY BEN CHAPMAN

Parents of public school kids with disabiliti­es will join politician­s Thursday to push for new laws to fix troubled systems that have left about 39,000 children without legally mandated services.

City Council Education Committee Chairman Mark Treyger is holding the event to talk about four proposed laws he's introducin­g, including bills to force the Education Department to reveal where it's not providing needed help to disabled students. A separate resolution calls on the city to hire a compliance czar to oversee those services for disabled students in public schools.

The push comes in the wake of data published last November that revealed roughly 22% of more than 220,000 disabled public school children aren't getting the help they need — including tutoring, therapy and adaptive technology.

“We were never able to give her a fair show because the services weren't available,” Yuvania Espino of Manhattan said of her 9-year-old daughter, Mia, who has cerebral palsy and a muscular disorder — and won't graduate from Public School 138 in Harlem on time next year because she never had a specialize­d academic curriculum or access to a therapeuti­c gym.

“We're hoping that someone in a supervisor­y role can make sure these things happen,” said Espino, who will testify at Thursday's event. “These are problems that need to be fixed and not be put on the back burner.”

Education officials have been under fire for failing to adequately support students with disabiliti­es, and who lag behind their peers when it comes to reading, math and graduating on time.

And though Mayor de Blasio dedicated $300 million in additional funding in his latest city budget proposal to address the issue, experts say the money alone isn't enough.

“In addition to more resources, we need a clearer and empowered chain of command that will better ensure accountabi­lity for our students,” said Treyger, a Brooklyn Democrat who previously worked as a public school teacher.

Advocates for Children policy coordinato­r Randi Levine said children with disabiliti­es were three times more likely to fail state reading exams compared with their peers in 2018.

“Only 16.8% of students with disabiliti­es scored proficient — that's a 40-point gap compared to their nondisable­d peers,” Levine said. “The vast majority of kids with disabiliti­es are not being taught to read sufficient­ly.”

Education Department spokeswoma­n Danielle Filson said the city has improved some outcomes for disabled students, citing a graduation rate that's gone up to 50.4% in 2018 from 30.5% in 2012.

Filson also pointed out the department has a deputy chief academic officer charged with monitoring special education and student services.

“We are committed to meeting the needs of our students with disabiliti­es, and we've hired 4,300 more special education staff, and added and strengthen­ed programs across our schools,” Filson said.

 ?? COURTESY OF YUVANIA ESPINO ?? Yuvania Espino will speak at hearing for disabled students like her daughter Mia at City Council hearing Thursday.
COURTESY OF YUVANIA ESPINO Yuvania Espino will speak at hearing for disabled students like her daughter Mia at City Council hearing Thursday.

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