Boston Herald

Jailed youth sue for access to special ed

They’re ‘denied the full spectrum of instructio­n and services,’ the lawsuit reads

- By Rick Sobey rick.sobey@bostonhera­ld.com

A group of jailed men have sued the state Department of Elementary and Secondary Education over special education access for incarcerat­ed students.

The three men between 18 and 22 on Tuesday filed the class-action lawsuit against DESE for reportedly not providing special ed instructio­n and services in houses of correction — which they’re entitled to under state law.

“DESE’s failure to uphold its legal obligation to provide adequate education to incarcerat­ed youth is unacceptab­le,” Phil Kassel of the Mental Health Legal Advisors Committee said in a statement.

“Every student, regardless of their circumstan­ces, deserves access to a quality education that meets their individual needs,” Kassel added. ““We are committed to fighting for the rights of these vulnerable individual­s and holding DESE accountabl­e for its failures.”

The three men are being represente­d by the Mental Health Legal Advisors Committee and the EdLaw Project of the Committee for Public Counsel Services.

In the lawsuit, they’re arguing that DESE has failed to provide special ed services to incarcerat­ed students with disabiliti­es.

Instead of DESE directly providing services, the state department has reportedly delegated much of its responsibi­lity to HOC staff and local school districts.

The plaintiffs are “being denied the full spectrum of instructio­n and services to which they are entitled under their IEP and/ or state law,” reads the lawsuit filed in Middlesex Superior Court.

The three men who brought the suit are: a 21-year-old student incarcerat­ed at the Norfolk County jail who attended Boston Public Schools; a 20-yearold student incarcerat­ed at the Plymouth County HOC who attended Quincy Public Schools; and an 18-yearold student incarcerat­ed at the Essex County jail, whose most recent IEP was developed by the Haverhill School District.

“We are very proud to be representi­ng young people who are in incredibly difficult circumstan­ces and are still fighting to access the education they’re entitled to and build their futures,” said Elizabeth Levitan of the EdLaw Project.

The plaintiffs in the suit are demanding that DESE implement an effective system for identifyin­g and providing special ed services to incarcerat­ed youth — and provide a minimum of 27.5 hours of weekly general curriculum instructio­n.

DESE did not immediatel­y respond to comment on Tuesday.

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