The Record (Troy, NY)

High Court bolsters rights of learning-disabled students

- By SamHananel

WASHINGTON >> A unanimous Supreme Court on Wednesday bolstered the rights of millions of learning- disabled students in a ruling that requires public schools to offer special education programs that meet higher standards. The court struck down a lower standard endorsed by President Donald Trump’s nominee to the high court.

Chief Justice John Roberts said that it is not enough for school districts to get by with minimal instructio­n for special needs children. The school programs must be designed to let students make progress in light of their disabiliti­es.

The ruling quickly led to tough questions at the confirmati­on hearing of Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch. Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois said the high court had just tossed out a standard that Gorsuch himself had used in a similar case that lowered the bar for educationa­l achievemen­t.

In its ruling, the Supreme Court sided with parents of an autistic teen in Colorado who said their public school did not do enough to help their son make progress. They sought reimbursem­ent for the cost of sending him to private school.

Roberts said the law requires an educationa­l program “reasonably calculated to enable a child to make progress appropriat­e in light of the child’s circumstan­ces.” He did not elaborate on what that progress should look like, saying it depends on the “unique circumstan­ces” of each child. He added that there should also be deference to school officials.

“When all is said and done, a student offered an educationa­l program providing merely more than de minimus progress from year to year can hardly be said to have been offered an education at all,” Roberts said. “For children with disabiliti­es, receiving instructio­n that aims so low would be tantamount to sitting idly awaiting the time when they were old enough to drop out.”

At Gorsuch’s hearing, Durbin said the nominee had gone beyond the stan- dards of his own appeals court by adding the word “merely” in his 2008 opinion approving the “de minimus” — or minimum — standard for special needs education. Durbin suggested that Gorsuch had lowered the bar even more.

Gorsuch, handed a copy of the ruling during a break on the third day of his hearings, noted that his panel reached its decision unanimousl­y based on a 10-yearold precedent. He reiterated earlier testimony that he felt compelled to take precedent into account when reaching decisions, even when he disagreed with the result.

Durbin also said Gorsuch had ruled against disabled students in 8 of 10 cases dealing with the Individual­s with Disabiliti­es Education Act.

“To suggest I have some animus against children, senator, would be a mistake,” Gorsuch said.

The case helps clarify the scope of the IDEA, a federal law that requires a “free and appropriat­e public education” for disabled students. Lower courts said even programs with mini- mal benefits can satisfy the law .

i sabiDlit y advocacy groups argued that schools must offer more than the bare minimum of services to children with special needs.

The ruling does not go as far as the parents wanted. They had argued that educationa­l programs for disabled students should meet goals “substantia­lly equal” to those for children without disabiliti­es. Roberts rejected that standard, saying it was “entirely unworkable.”

The court’s decision to require a more demanding test for progress has major implicatio­ns for about 6.4 million disabled students who want to advance in school and rely on special programs to make that happen. School officials had cautioned that imposing higher standards could be too costly for some cashstrapp­ed districts. They warned that it could also lead parents to make unrealisti­c demands.

The case involved a boy known only as Endrew F. who attended public school outside Denver from kindergart­en through fourth grades. He was given specialize­d instructio­n to deal with his learning and behavioral issues.

But Endrew’s parents decided to send him to private school in 2010 after complainin­g about his lack of progress. They asked the school district to reimburse them for his tuition — about $70,000 a year — on the basis that public school officials weren’t doing enough to meet their son’s needs.

The Colorado Department of Education denied their claim, saying the school district had met the minimum standards required under the law. The federal appeals court in Denver upheld that decision, ruling that the school district satisfied its duty to offer more than a “de minimus” effort.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Chief Justice John Roberts speaks in Lexington, Ky. A unanimous Supreme Court on Wednesday bolstered the rights of learning-disabled students in a ruling that requires public schools to offer special education programs that meet higher standards.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Chief Justice John Roberts speaks in Lexington, Ky. A unanimous Supreme Court on Wednesday bolstered the rights of learning-disabled students in a ruling that requires public schools to offer special education programs that meet higher standards.

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