All posts by Jim Walsh

Suggestions for MLK Day….

We’re Zooming with the Dawg this Friday!! I hope you will join me, along with special guest Haley Turner. Among other things, we will talk about the firm’s upcoming HR Symposium. 

Today we honor Dr. King.  That means it’s a good day to re-read some of the reverend’s inspired writings.  The “I Have a Dream” speech gets the most attention, but I encourage you to also read Letter from a Birmingham Jail.  The Dream speech is inspiring with its aspirational vision of the future that Dr. King hoped for.  The Letter from the Birmingham Jail is more thought provoking, more challenging.  It’s unsettling in its blunt criticism of those who counsel endless patience with an unjust system. 

But I have one more recommendation for you.  Last year a Texas native published a book containing a series of short essays about her experiences growing up in East Texas, and specifically about being the first African-American student in the Conroe ISD.  This would be an excellent book study for a school faculty group, or as an assignment to students. The book, On Juneteenth, is a series of short essays by Dr. Annette Gordon-Reed who is now a professor at Harvard.  I hope you’ll take a look at it.

DAWG BONE: “ON JUNETEENTH”: WORTH YOUR ATTENTION.

Got a question or comment for the Dawg?  Let me hear from you at jwalsh@wabsa.com

Tomorrow: Toolbox Tuesday!!

Yet another Child Find case…

Middle school teachers will find this one interesting, particularly math teachers. The student had a hard time with math in 7th grade, and even harder in 8th. The school responded with one-on-one assistance from the teacher, and additional help from the school’s “problem solving team.”  The court also quoted the principal as saying that “the academic struggles of 7th graders in math are a ‘nationwide conundrum.’” 

The mother convinced the district court that the school should have referred her daughter for a special education evaluation sooner than it did. But the court also held that this was only a procedural error and it did not cause any substantive harm.  Thus the mother was not entitled to compensatory services or recovery of attorneys’ fees.  Why was there no substantive harm?   Because of the efforts of those general education teachers to help a student who was struggling with math. 

Math is difficult.  Not every kid who struggles with quadratic equations is showing signs of a disability.  Some are demonstrating natural resistance in the face of a difficult task. Some are showing signs of poor math instruction in earlier years. Math is progressive, so if you don’t get what they teach in 4th grade, 5th is going to be a real problem, and 7th grade math will be impossible.  So teachers should use their experience and good common sense to sort out the nature of the problem. If there is reason to suspect that a disability might be contributing to the problems, then it’s time to make a referral. 

This is a case where good common sense and helpful intervention by general education teachers proved decisive in subsequent litigation.  It’s J.N. v. Jefferson County BOE, decided by the 11th Circuit on September 10, 2021. It’s reported at 12 F.4th 1355, (11th Cir. 2021).

DAWG BONE:  GOOD ON THOSE GENERAL ED MATH TEACHERS!

Got a question or comment for the Dawg?  Let me hear from you at jwalsh@wabsa.com

Trouble in Paradise over a girl….

Texas is not the only state with a Paradise School District.  There is one in California also, and it’s the defendant in a case recently decided by the 9th Circuit.  There was indeed “trouble in paradise.” As is often the case the trouble involved two boys and a girl.  It seems that when Justin observed Cyrus talking with Faith at the football game he overreacted, “punching [Cyrus] several times in the face.  [Cyrus] was seriously injured by the assault.”

In the subsequent lawsuit—against the school, not Justin--Cyrus alleged that this assault occurred because he was a student with a disability, and the school should have protected him better.  The school should have prevented this kind of disability based harassment. 

Cyrus did not have much evidence to support that theory.  Cyrus had never reported any kind of bullying, nor had he or his parents requested assistance in dealing with the complex social relationships of high school. School officials were unaware of any signs of danger.   Due to his ADHD Cyrus had a plain vanilla 504 plan that called for extra time to complete assignments and help in staying organized. It’s unlikely that Justin knew anything about Cyrus’s 504 status, and he freely admitted after the incident that “the attack was motivated by jealousy.”  Cyrus was talking to Faith. Faith was talking with Cyrus.  Justin was not OK with that. It may be Paradise, but it was still high school.

So how does something like that end up with claims of disability discrimination and a failure to prevent harassment?  The sole basis for Cyrus’s case was a series of “Dear Colleague Letters” issued by the Department of Education during the Obama Administration.  But the 9th Circuit  held that the DCLs did not create binding law, and did not say what Cyrus alleged that they said. The DCLs did not alter the legal precedents that require proof of intentional discrimination or deliberate indifference in order to recover damages. There was no evidence of that here.

It’s Csutoras v. Paradise High School, decided by the 9th Circuit on September 7, 2021. The case is cited at 12 F.4th 960 (9th Cir. 2021).

DAWG BONE: IT MAY BE PARADISE, BUT IT WAS STILL HIGH SCHOOL.

Got a question or comment for the Dawg?  Let me hear from you at jwalsh@wabsa.com

Tomorrow: huzzah for math teachers.

Plaintiff is too old to recover attorneys’ fees? Really???

Cases go on the Dawg’s Sheesh-O-Meter when I utter an auditory “What??” upon reading the court’s decision.  So here is the first entry of the new year.   A 20-year old plaintiff was the prevailing party in his suit against the state Department of Corrections for its failure to provide FAPE while he was incarcerated.  He incurred over $72,000 in attorneys’ fees. He will not recover them even though he was the prevailing party.  The court denied the claim for attorneys’ fees because the statute speaks of “a prevailing party who is the parent of a child with a disability.”  He’s not the parent, and so he’s out of luck.

Sheesh.  The kid is a hero. He took on a state agency with a righteous cause and he won.  He won because the DOC failed to live up to its legal responsibilities.  I have a suspicion that New York is not the only state where the DOC fails to provide appropriate services to those inmates who need special education.   Prevailing parties are allowed to recover attorneys’ fees because they should not have had to employ an attorney in the first place. If the state had done what it was supposed to do, the plaintiff in this case would not have incurred a big legal bill.  So he should get reimbursed.  Instead, the court issues a pinheaded decision that ignores the other part of IDEA that says that the rights of the parents transfer to the adult student.  I say it again: Sheesh!

It’s J.S. v. New York State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, decided by the federal court for the Western District of New York.  It’s published in Special Ed Connection at 79 IDELR 165.  (W.D.N.Y. 2021).

DAWG BONE:  IF IT GOES UP ON APPEAL THAT ATTORNEYS’ FEE BILL WILL GO UP AS WELL. 

Got a question or comment for the Dawg?  Let me hear from you at jwalsh@wabsa.com

Tomorrow: two boys and a girl at a football game.  Uh Oh. 

Toolbox Tuesday!! Another instance of qualified immunity

“Qualified immunity” has been in the news of late.  There was an editorial in the local newspaper a few weeks ago encouraging Congress to do away with it altogether. This obscure legal doctrine protects governmental officials from personal liability for injuries they cause as long as they did not violate legal standards that are “clearly established.”  The move to abolish qualified immunity picked up momentum after George Floyd’s death while in police custody, and most of the news stories about qualified immunity are about law enforcement officials using physical force.  Many police officers have avoided personal liability in court cases by establishing that what they did was not obviously and clearly a violation of settled standards. 

Qualified immunity does not just protect police officers. It also protects school administrators who make judgment calls that might later be second guessed by a judge. For example, the Supreme Court ruled that an assistant principal in Arizona went too far when he ordered the strip search of a 13-year old girl in pursuit of a prescription pill. But the Court also held that the A.P. could not be held personally liable for this unconstitutional search because the law about strip searches was not “clearly established.”  Safford USD #1 v. Redding (2009). 

Principals would be wise to occasionally remind staff members that they do face personal liability if they violate legal standards that are clearly established.  This reminder should be particularly emphasized with campus police officers or SROs who sometimes use physical force with students.  We have a good example in a recent decision from a federal court in Ohio.  The court denied qualified immunity to an SRO who marched an 11-year old to the office in handcuffs, which remained on the boy for 15 to 20 minutes.  The SRO faces potential liability for unconstitutional seizure and disability discrimination. 

I have to think that it didn’t help the SRO’s cause that his explanation of the incident to the mother was contradicted by school surveillance video. 

In our firm’s Toolbox Training we talk quite a bit about physical restraint, when it should be used, and how it should be documented.  If you are interested in this one-day training program focusing on appropriate discipline of students with disabilities, let me hear from you. Today’s case is M.P. v. Monroe Local Schools, decided by the federal court for the Southern District of Ohio on September 30, 2021. It’s reported in Special Ed Connection at 79 IDELR 219. 

DAWG BONE: QUALIFIED IMMUNITY APPLIES TO BAD JUDGMENT CALLS, AS WELL AS CASES INVOLVING PHYSICAL FORCE.

Got a question or comment for the Dawg?  Let me hear from you at jwalsh@wabsa.com

Tomorrow: our first Sheesh-O-Meter case of 2022!

The State of the Union….How is yours?

Sometime this month President Biden will deliver his State of the Union address.  I’ve noticed that many school districts have borrowed the concept of the “State of the Union” address.  Some superintendents now deliver an annual State of the District speech.   I expect that most of these school district events are similar to what we hear from the President each year. It doesn’t matter whether the President is a Democrat or a Republican, you can count on four messages in the SOTU address: 

  1. Things are good.
  2. Things can be better.
  3. I know what we need to do.
  4. Follow my lead.

Mrs. Dawg and I borrowed the “State of the Union” concept a long time ago.  We established a tradition of each writing a “State of the Union” letter around the first of the year.  In that letter, we write honestly about the state of our little two-person union. What is working? What is not? What can we do better?  What are our hopes for the upcoming year?  We go to a nice restaurant. Being in a public place usually ensures that there will be no major blow up.  Usually.  After ordering, we open our letters and read them. Then we talk.  I’m happy to report that we already had our State of the Union date for this year.  I got my contract renewed. 

It’s a healthy tradition. As with most (all?) of the tools that have kept us happily together for 48 years, she gets the credit for this. But I was the one who dubbed it “the State of the Union.” 

You might want to try this.  And if you find the concept useful, you might want to expand it beyond your family to your co-workers. After all, you spend a lot of time with the people you work with, and they become, in many ways, another family.   You and the people you work with are a “union”—dedicated to serving the kids and the families in your school district. 

So the Dawg’s gentle suggestion is to give this a try.  Get with some of the key people you work with and write up a “State of the Workplace Union.”   What is working? What is not?  What can you do better? 

The start of a new year is a great time to have a good talk about such things. 

DAWG BONE:  THE ANNUAL “STATE OF THE UNION”—BORROW THE CONCEPT!

Got a question or comment for the Dawg?  Let me hear from you at jwalsh@wabsa.com

Tomorrow: Toolbox Tuesday!!

Menorahs come in many sizes and formats.

Ms. Lyons is the mother of four in the Carmel USD in California. She has sued the district alleging that the district subtly and sometimes not so subtly favors Christianity over other religions, leading children of other faiths to feel excluded, “less than.”  The opening salvo in her suit was an effort to force the district to allow her to display a six-foot inflatable menorah next to the Christmas tree at the tree lighting ceremony that was sponsored by the PTA.  The court did not issue the TRO (Temporary Restraining Order) that she sought.  That is by no means the end of the litigation. 

To get the TRO Ms. Lyons faced a steep burden of proof and the court held that she simply didn’t get there.  In a short opinion, the court held that the tree lighting ceremony did not amount to a government endorsement of a particular religion, and there was nothing about it that infringed on anyone’s freedom of religion.  The court noted a Supreme Court pronouncement from 1989:

The Christmas tree, unlike the menorah, is not itself a religious symbol…..Although Christmas trees once carried religious connotations, today they typify the secular celebration of Christmas. 

Reading this case (Lyons v. Carmel USD, 2021 WL 586554) made me think about the middle school choir concert I attended last month.  For the second half of the program the kids were wearing symbols of the season—snowflakes, reindeer antlers, and a lot of Santa hats.  After about 50 Santa hats walked onto the stage, out came a tall, good looking boy wearing a very large menorah hat.  As he was the next soloist, he took his place in the front of the stage, calling more attention to himself and his silly hat.  While the hat was ridiculous, the kid wore it with panache. The audience erupted in laughter and applause. 

What would have happened if the choir director had told this student that he could not wear this hat?  I’m quite sure that the student would have a legitimate free speech claim.  It was clear that the choir director had allowed students to choose their own seasonal symbols. Predictably, most of them honored Christmas, but it was a student choice, and thus the one student who chose to honor Hannukah had a right to do so.

DAWG BONE: CONTEXT MATTERS.

Got a question or comment for the Dawg?  Let me hear from you at jwalsh@wabsa.com

Teacher’s appeal of nonrenewal fails…for a surprising reason

Consider this sequence of events:

April 13, 2021: the board votes to give Mr. Marshall notice of proposed nonrenewal of his teaching contract.

April 14, 2021: the district delivers the notice to Mr. Marshall. Teachers have 15 days in which to request a hearing to challenge the proposed nonrenewal.

April 18, 2021: Mr. Marshall requests a hearing.  The law requires that this hearing be held within fifteen days of the request, which would be May 3rd.  The district wants to extend the deadline, which can happen when the parties agree to it. But Mr. Marshall does not agree. 

May 3, 2021: the deadline for the hearing comes and goes, with no hearing.

May 11, 2021: the board votes to rescind its April 13th action, but at the same meeting, again votes to give Mr. Marshall notice of proposed nonrenewal. 

May 18, 2021: The district delivers the second notice to Mr. Marshall.  Mr. Marshall does not request a hearing, thinking he doesn’t need to.

June 8, 2021: the board votes to nonrenew Mr. Marshall’s contract.   There was no hearing because Mr. Marshall did not request a hearing within 15 days of the second notice. 

Waddyathink, Loyal Daily Dawg Readers?  Is that kosher?  According to Commissioner Morath, it is.  The Commish held that there was nothing wrong with how the district handled this situation. Mr. Marshall goofed by not making a timely request for a hearing after the second notice arrived. Key Quotes:

[Mr. Marshall] cites no school law that prohibits [the district] from rescinding a nonrenewal notice and issuing a second notice, even one that contains the same nonrenewal bases. 

While atypical, a school board might rescind and reissue a notice of proposed nonrenewal to, inter alia, cure a procedural defect or to provide additional time for a nonrenewal hearing.  Although [Mr. Marshall] claims his request for a nonrenewal hearing should have carried over from the initial, rescinded notice to the second notice, he cites no school law that so provides.

This clever move by the school district would only work if the relevant notice to the teacher can still be provided by the 10th day prior to the last day of instruction.  Fortunately for the district, they began the nonrenewal process in April and were still able to get a second notice to the teacher in time to meet that deadline.

It’s Marshall v. Spring ISD, decided by the Commissioner on October 14, 2021.  It’s Docket No. 044-R10-06-2021.

DAWG BONE: NOT READY TO HOLD THE HEARING?  CONSIDER THIS MOVE.

Got a question or comment for the Dawg?  Let me hear from you at jwalsh@wabsa.com

Tomorrow: Christmas trees and menorahs….

Why didn’t they look in the backpack?

I don’t know where the kid in Michigan had the gun that he used to kill four people at Oxford High School last November.  But from the news accounts I’ve read, it seems certain that he had the gun with him at school that entire morning.  I expect you have also read about this case. School counselors were concerned about the student to the point that they met with the parents and asked them to take the boy home and get him into counseling.  The parents refused to do that.

The gun had to have been in the boy’s backpack, or locker, or someplace where he hid it. But it had to be at the school.  Lawsuits have already been filed, so I’m sure we will learn more about what really happened, what the counselors and administrators knew or did not know, and what they did or did not do. 

For today, let’s just remember the basics about searching a student’s belongings.   This issue has been to the U.S. Supreme Court in the case of New Jersey v. T.L.O. SCOTUS held that the 4th Amendment does apply in the school setting. This means that school officials cannot just willy nilly poke into backpacks, cell phones, and purses out of curiosity.  On the other hand, they don’t need a warrant or “probable cause” like the police do.  They need a reasonable basis for a suspicion that the search will turn up something that violates school policy. 

The courts ask two questions in a 4th Amendment case. Was the search justified at the inception? And was it reasonable in scope?   To satisfy that standard, I have long suggested that administrators ask themselves two questions before initiating a search: what am I looking for? And why do I think I might find it where I’m looking?  There should be sensory data to support your answers to those questions, meaning something that you saw, or heard, or smelled. 

“Reasonable in scope” means that you look only in those places where the item might be found, and that you don’t go on the proverbial “fishing expedition.” But one thing we can discern from the case law is that a search for a firearm can be more intrusive than a search for something less dangerous. The reasonableness of the search is, in part, measured by the urgency of the situation. Nothing is more urgent than preventing a school shooting. 

As the litigation goes forward, I will be very interested to learn if any search of this student took place. And if not, why not.  From the news accounts I’ve read, it sounds like there was ample justification to look into the backpack and locker, and to question the student closely.  But news accounts are not the same as testimony and evidence in a court case, so we will keep an eye on this case as it moves forward.

DAWG BONE: JUSTIFIED AT INCEPTION.  REASONABLE IN SCOPE.

Got a question or comment for the Dawg?  Let me hear from you at jwalsh@wabsa.com

Tomorrow: notice of nonrenewal sent twice…hearing requested once.

Toolbox Tuesday!! A case of physical restraint….

First, a promotional message!  Next Tuesday, January 12, our firm is offering a webinar that will address some of the legal issues that arise in connection with manifestation determinations and other legal requirements under IDEA.  Here are the specifics:

Title: ATV THEFTS, MDRs AND MORE: UPDATE ON DISCIPLINE
Date and Time: Tuesday, January 12, 2022: 10:00a.m.
Presenters: Jennifer Carroll and Lindy French

I’m sure that Jennifer and Lindy will explain why they will be discussing the theft of an ATV.  Loyal Daily Dawg Readers may remember our discussion of that issue last year!  This is sure to be a lively and practical session, as well as an easy and cost effective way for you to get training for your staff. Sign up at www.walshgallegos.com

Now, for the Toolbox Tuesday content: The parent of an elementary aged student with mental impairments sued the assistant principal and two teachers alleging that they “forcefully and brutally physically assaulted” the girl.  The federal court in South Carolina dismissed all claims, citing the affidavits filed by the educators. 

In the Toolbox training that our firm offers we suggest that physical restraint is something that should not be included in a student’s BIP. BIPs are supposed to identify the positive behavior interventions, supports, and strategies that the school will use to teach, encourage, and support behavior improvement.  Physical restraint does not fit that description.  Physical restraint is an unfortunate but necessary response to an emergency.  The court’s opinion in this case does not mention if the student had a BIP, but it’s likely that she did since she had a history of disruptive  and violent behavior.  That’s what the A.P. and teachers included in their affidavits. They stated that they felt that restraint was necessary for the student’s own safety, as it looked like she was about to leave the building.  The student’s history of non-compliant and disruptive behavior was a factor, leading the educators to believe that they needed to act forcefully to prevent greater harm.  The court found that belief to be reasonable under the circumstances.

It’s important for educators to thoroughly document the “what, where, who, when, why, and how” when restraint is used. The documentation should address the before, the during, and the after.  There should also be follow up every time restraint is used. What can we do proactively to prevent the need to lay hands on the child in a forceful way? 

This one is Taylor v. Aiken County School District, decided by the federal court in South Carolina on September 10, 2021. It’s reported on Special Ed Connection at 79 IDELR 154.

DAWG BONE: DOCUMENT THE BEFORE, THE DURING, AND THE AFTER. AND THEN FOLLOW UP.

Got a question or comment for the Dawg?  Let me hear from you at jwalsh@wabsa.com

Tomorrow: that Michigan school shooting