NYC Asks Private School Families to Waive Lawsuit Rights for Special Ed Services
To receive the services, families have to sign a waiver relinquishing their rights to file a legal complaint against the city Education Department.
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After denying thousands of New York City students with disabilities critical services earlier this year, Education Department officials are now offering them a chance to restart those services 鈥 with a big catch.
Just weeks before the start of the school year, the city Education Department, for students with disabilities who attend private school and requested city-funded special education services to which they鈥檙e entitled under state law. The deadline had previously been loosely observed, and its newfound enforcement was part of a larger crackdown meant to rein in alleged fraud and ballooning costs.
While roughly 17,000 families filed on time, another 3,000 families missed the cutoff, losing out on services like tutoring or speech and occupational therapy.
Education Department officials promised to start restoring services for the late filers once they鈥檇 arranged services for families who met the deadline.
This week, officials took a step toward making good on that pledge, sending out letters to thousands of families who missed the deadline offering vouchers to cover the cost of special education providers.
But the offers come with a big asterisk.
To receive the vouchers, families have to sign a waiver relinquishing their rights to file a legal complaint against the city Education Department, according to the letter obtained by Chalkbeat. Families have two weeks to decide whether to sign it.
The proposal is already drawing sharp criticism from some lawmakers.
鈥淎fter failing to provide these services, [the city鈥檚] plan to dangle in front of parent and guardians their children鈥檚 badly needed educational support in exchange for being freed from legal liability is nothing short of outrageous,鈥 said Rita Joseph, Brooklyn City Council member and education committee chair, in a
Officials told Chalkbeat that asking families to waive their rights to sue the Education Department was the only way to restore the services without opening up the city to 鈥渉undreds of millions of dollars in liability.鈥
By offering the late filers services, the city is forfeiting its right to use the missed deadline as a legal defense, which creates massive legal exposure, officials said. The Education Department is unwilling to take that risk without the waiver since the city already spends north of $500 million a year on special education for private school students, officials said.
For families eager to restart services, the new offer poses a dilemma.
On one hand, accepting the offer may be the fastest route to restarting desperately needed services, according to special education lawyers who spoke with Chalkbeat.
But it means losing the option to force the city to retroactively cover the costs of the services they鈥檝e missed so far this school year, known as compensatory services. It also means families can鈥檛 force the city to supplement the value of the voucher if, as often happens, families can鈥檛 find a provider willing to accept the standard rate the city offers.
鈥淭hey鈥檙e kind of putting parents in between a rock and a hard place,鈥 said Jesse Cutler, a partner at Regina Skyer and Associates, a firm that represents families in special education cases. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 a case-by-case decision 鈥 you have to look at all the circumstances.鈥
Here鈥檚 what several lawyers said families should consider when weighing the offer from the Education Department:
How fast do you want to restart services?
For some families, the most important consideration might be how quickly they can resume services after months off, said Rebecca Shore, the director of litigation at Advocates for Children, a group that represents families pro bono in special education disputes.
鈥淚f the parent has already found a provider, and the provider accepts the voucher, it certainly can be a course that they should consider,鈥 said Shore. 鈥淚t would be probably the fastest course.鈥
Otherwise, families may need to file a legal claim called a due process complaint that is heard by an impartial hearing officer, a process that can take time to resolve.
鈥淲hat you鈥檙e looking at is several months, if not longer,鈥 Cutler said.
Plus, winning a favorable ruling from an impartial hearing officer isn鈥檛 guaranteed, and city officials would likely challenge a family鈥檚 legal claim by noting they missed the filing deadline, which is enshrined in state law.
Shore said a family still 鈥渃an have a claim鈥 against the city even if they missed the deadline. But she didn鈥檛 want to generalize about a family鈥檚 chances of prevailing because the outcome of a given case is highly dependent on the specific facts.
Education Department officials argued that families who missed the deadline 鈥渆ssentially have no legal recourse鈥 and therefore have little to lose by accepting the city鈥檚 offer.
Are you seeking 鈥榗ompensatory鈥 services?
One concrete thing that families would give up by accepting the Education Department鈥檚 offer and signing the waiver is the right to push the city to pay for compensatory services for this school year.
Normally, families can file due process complaints to try to force the city Education Department to pay for services to which their child was entitled but never received. By signing the waiver, families lose that option.
鈥淭hese students are entitled to services [in] September, October, November, December,鈥 said Shore. 鈥淕iving up their right to make-up services for that entire time period, again, is a parent鈥檚 consideration.鈥
Can you find a provider who accepts the Education Department鈥檚 voucher?
The last big variable is whether families are willing to give up the right to try to force the Education Department to pay a higher rate than the voucher offers.
The city鈥檚 voucher for special education tutoring services is worth $86 an hour, but many providers charge more than that, Shore said. To cover the difference, families often have to file a legal complaint against the Education Department seeking an 鈥渆nhanced rate.鈥
City officials have argued that the enhanced rate system is rife with fraud and say many providers are overcharging or collecting for services they don鈥檛 perform.
One of the conditions of accepting the Education Department鈥檚 new voucher offer, however, is waiving the right to seek an enhanced rate. That could put families in a tough spot, legal advocates said.
For families who don鈥檛 already have a provider lined up who accepts the Education Department鈥檚 rate, finding one in the middle of a school year would be a 鈥淗erculean feat,鈥 said M鈥橰al Broodie-Stewart, a lawyer at Staten Island Legal Services.
鈥淚t鈥檚 great if the family has a provider that is able to accept the Department of Education鈥檚 rate,鈥 Cutler said. 鈥淏ut there is a substantial and significant lack of providers citywide.鈥
Education Department officials said families unable to find a provider can contact their local Committees on Special Education for help. The Education Department also employs 19 itinerant special education teachers who work with private school families. But that鈥檚 a drop in the bucket of the roughly 20,000 students entitled to services.
Making matters even more complicated, the legal process for pursuing an enhanced rate is in flux. In past years, families have relied on due process complaints to compel the city to pay more than the standard voucher rate. The state鈥檚 Board of Regents passed a resolution this year empowering the city鈥檚 Education Department to set up its own system to adjudicate those requests. A lawsuit has temporarily put that resolution on hold, but it鈥檚 still unclear what the process will look like in the long term.
Education Department officials said they plan to post an FAQ on the city鈥檚 website to help parents decipher the waiver.
But Broodie-Stewart recommended parents consult a lawyer before making a decision.
鈥淭he average person may not fully understand what [the] legalese term of 鈥榬elease, waive and relinquish鈥 means,鈥 she wrote in an email. 鈥淵et they would be giving their rights away by signing this form.鈥
Chalkbeat is a nonprofit news site covering educational change in public schools.
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