Bridget Hayman
Director of Communications
April 17, 2018
Chicago – Tomorrow, Wednesday, April 18, the Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE) is expected to announce the findings of a General Counsel’s inquiry into whether Chicago Public Schools (CPS) routinely delayed or denied special education services to students with disabilities.
Advocates are demanding an independent monitor, $10 million in compensation for corrective action and compensation services for affected students. The inquiry was requested by a coalition of thirteen advocacy groups representing families, teachers, attorneys and people with disabilities.
In March, a special ISBE panel held three days of public hearings on CPS’s special education process. Advocate have recommended that ISBE take action in six key areas:
“We hope that ISBE will announce concrete steps to fix the problems raised during the inquiry,” says Amber Smock, director of advocacy for Access Living, one of the organizations who supported the inquiry and made recommendations. “The inquiry reflects a major potential turning point in protecting the civil rights of Chicago students with disabilities to a free and appropriate public education, in the least restrictive environment.”
Parents were active in the investigation process and applaud the process. “We are asking for transparency and state oversight of CPS following clear violations of special education law,” said Christine Palmieri, a parent of a child who experienced delay and denials of education services by CPS. “Our children deserve what is legally mandated to them and the opportunity to thrive. It is important to note that we are still uncovering the long-term effects of harmful CPS policies and procedures in all schools across the city.”
During the course of the inquiry, CPS also announced that it was changing its special education budgeting process, moving from a controversial school-based budgeting process that allowed special education funds to be moved to other purposes, to one that clarifies that special education dollars are to be used for special education. This is a partial victory for advocates, they say. Advocates have long said the school-based decision process was causing harm to students with disabilities.
The inquiry and recommendations are the culmination of decades of frustration with the CPS special education system, brought to a head by two developments.
One was a series of investigative stories last year by Sarah Karp of WBEZ-FM, the public radio station in Chicago. The stories covered the development of a CPS special education manual, which appeared to be designed for the purpose of denying services and supports for students with disabilities in order to save money. The other development was the illegal denial of transportation services to CPS preschool students with disabilities in the fall of 2017, which angered families and advocates in the early intervention field.
“In 1975, it became the law of the land that every child with a disability had a real right to public education,” said Marca Bristo, President and CEO of Access Living. “Over the last few years, it’s become very obvious that CPS was on a path to deny that right through the use of a secret procedural manual developed by budget analysts with zero input from teachers and families. That was the final straw for advocates.”
During the ISBE inquiry hearings, families and educators testified to many cases of denial of services, in some cases resulting in physical harm to children with disabilities. One father of an elementary school aged daughter with severe disabilities testified that although his daughter’s education team agreed that she needed a dedicated aide, CPS delayed services by requiring data collection. The student was denied her IEP that required a dedicated aide of CPS’s budgetary restraint on proper staffing, and the student suffered injuries at school, requiring medical attention.
The ISBE inquiry is also of national interest because it is rare that a state board of education will exercise its power of inquiry. ISBE’s findings and possible recommendations are of great interest to families, teachers, and advocates nationwide.
“As evidence in this investigation, dozens of parents submitted affidavits detailing egregious examples of how special education services for their children were systemically delayed and denied by CPS,” said Mary Fahey Hughhes of Raise Your Hand, a parents coalition supporting public education. “The families of CPS students who have special education needs deserve justice and we expect ISBE to come up with corrective action that remedies the gross abuses committed by CPS.”
The special education advocacy coalition includes: Access Living; the Shriver Center on Poverty Law; Chicago Principals and Administrators Association; the Chicago Teachers Union; Parents 4 Teachers; Ounce of Prevention Fund; Legal Council for Health Justice; Raise Your Hand for IL Public Education; Legal Assistance Foundation; Equip For Equality; Potter and Bolanos, LLC; Matt Cohen and Associates; 19th Ward Parents for Special Education, and Sharon Weitzman Soltman.