Complaints
filed against the city Department of Education by parents of special education
students have skyrocketed since 2014 — sparking a “crisis” that leaves some
kids without essential service for months on end, a state-commissioned report
found.
The flood of
parents battling the public schools system for support is threatening to
overwhelm a dispute-resolution system suffering from too few hearing officers
and inadequate space to hold hearings, according to the external review
obtained by THE CITY.
Complaints
jumped 51% between the 2014-’15 and 2017-’18 school years, the report found.
That surge has continued into the current school year, with 7,448 complaints
filed as of late February — more than the total for the entire prior school
year.
The average
complaint was open for 202 days in 2017-’18, according to State Education
Department data.
Growing
complaints have caused a “crisis” that could “render an already fragile hearing
system vulnerable to imminent failure and, ultimately, collapse,” Deusdedi
Merced, of Special Education Solutions, wrote in a 49-page
report obtained through public disclosure law and provided to THE CITY.
“That it has
not yet collapsed is remarkable given the staggering numbers of due process
complaints filed in New York City.
The article next provides an example of a student who has never had his Individualized Education Plan adhered to in four city schools. This is no surprise.Special ed neglect is a legacy of former mayor Michael Bloomberg's small schools' policy, at least at the high school level. I have heard from multiple people in different schools that special education services are not sufficient because small schools in general can't possibly provide all of the necessary programs for the students in the small schools that have IEPs that call for varied services. It is also not uncommon from what I have heard to "dump" special education students into general ed settings with inadequate support.
The City article addresses some of this further down:
“A
significant amount of time has been spent trying to get these cases to
settlement, so that process can sometimes take six to eight months itself,”
said Nelson Mar, a senior staff attorney at Bronx Legal Services.
He noted the
root of the problem is that public schools simply don’t have enough services to
cover the needs of many of the city’s 224,000 special education students.
New York
City logged more due process complaints than California, Florida, Texas and
Pennsylvania combined, according to 2016-’17 data collected by the state
Education Department.
“The reason
why you’re seeing these astronomical numbers is because they have never
addressed the fundamental problems with their delivery of special education
services,” said Mar. “There’s not enough programs and not enough staff to
provide services.”
Special education is another area where the NYC schools are shortchanging students and parents while putting teachers in impossible situations.
7 comments:
But NYCDOE has hundreds of teachers, social workers, guidance counselors and other staff who are in the infamous atr pool not on staff and vilified by the press in the past now just wasting away. Yet the city will allow for kids to go without their services even though they have the staff to support them.
The school I am in has two guidance counselors, one social worker in the teachers lounge sitting ducks as atrs. The staff treats them like somehow they are inferior yet these people are highly skilled, experienced educators. Yet the looney 22 year old thinks that the atrs sitting in the teachers lounge are somehow inferior to a 22 year old know nothing. Its truly hysterical and really a shame how poorly run the nycdoe is.
Another reason to opt out.
Mulgrew says ATR down to only 600, lowest in years. Is he right or wrong?
Mulgrew also says 239 people opted out.
He said the same thing when there was over 2500.
Wait till June,
I will bay at moon
I work so hard
You old ingrates with Delaney cards
You’ll see
When Eva whips you till you pee
My bank account is overflowing
While my teacher slaves are a toiling
Even if I go
You’ll never know -
The ease with which I myself am pleased
Your Beloved President,
Mike
A parent at my school complained and now all ICT classes have two teachers after years of not having the supports. She made things better for all the SWD students.
More parents should be aware of the child's IEP and regularly check that all services are being provided.
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