LYNWOOD SMITH, District Judge.
This action is before the court on the motion of petitioner, the Jefferson County Board of Education, for "Emergency Preliminary and Permanent Injunctive Relief, or, in the Alternative, for Emergency Stay of Administrative Order."
The bedrock issue in this case is whether excluding J.B. from participating in the commencement ceremony at Clay-Chalkville High School ("CCHS") will deprive him of an entitlement under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act ("IDEA") to a Free Appropriate Public Education ("FAPE"). See 20 U.S.C. § 1401(9) (defining "free appropriate public education" as used in the statute). The hearing officer below decided that it did.
Respondent has presented to this court numerous, ardent arguments regarding J.B.'s reformation since his expulsion from CCHS during October of 2009 for possession of a pistol on school property, and the importance to him of participating in the graduation ceremonies. More compellingly, the mother of the minor student, S.B., has fervently advocated the entitlement she contends her son has earned not to be punished "repeatedly" for the same, past mistakes. These arguments do not fall on deaf ears, but this court is not a roving commissioner on questions of whether parties are given what they deserve. Instead, the basis of the hearing officer's jurisdiction below, and accordingly the basis of this court's review of the decision that officer rendered, is whether the decision not to allow J.B. to participate in commencement ceremonies deprives him of a FAPE. This court holds that it does not, and that the hearing officer fatally erred in several respects: i.e., (1) graduation, at least in this instance, was not part of a FAPE, but was denied J.B. as part of a generally applicable disciplinary policy unrelated to his disability; (2) the hearing officer improperly reversed the burden of persuasion; and (3) there is no evidentiary basis for the hearing officer's determination that J.B. was deprived of a FAPE by not being returned to CCHS for his last semester of high school. As that decision was in error, petitioner's motion is due to be granted.
The court will not state the facts in great detail, as they already are part of the administrative record admitted and discussed below. However, a brief summary of the relevant facts is in order.
J.B. attended Clay-Chalkville High School for the first two years of his high school career. On October 29, 2009, he was removed from school after police discovered a handgun (with the serial number filed off) tucked into his waistband, and following his attempt to place the weapon in the purse of another student, and his offer to sell the "glock" to another student.
Towards the end of the one-year expulsion, in September of 2010, J.B.'s mother contacted the Jefferson County Director of Exceptional Children, and stated her belief that "Rushton ha[d] been a blessing"; she requested that J.B. be "allowed to continue receiving services at Rushton School for the remainder of the academic year and upon completion of all academic requirements, [be] allowed to participate in the commencement ceremony as a senior at [CCHS]."
Subsequently, J.B.'s IEP was revised, as required, on December 17, 2010. It again indicated that his mother was concerned about J.B.'s participation in graduation exercises.
After that decision was made, J.B.'s mother requested an IEP meeting, stating that denying him graduation from CCHS was a violation of his rights under the
20 U.S.C.A. § 1401(9) (emphasis supplied).
"Whether an IEP provided FAPE is a mixed question of law and fact subject to de novo review.... To the extent this issue involves the interpretation of a federal statute, it is a question of law... review[ed] de novo." C.P. v. Leon County School Bd. Florida, 483 F.3d 1151, 1155-56 (11th Cir.2007) (citations omitted). "[T]he district court judge conducts an entirely de novo review of the ALJ's findings and has discretion to determine the level of deference it will give to the ALJ's findings." Id. at 1156 n. 4 (citations omitted).
Based upon the court's independent review of the record before the hearing officer, the relevant law, and the decision of the hearing officer, the court finds three reasons why the hearing officer's determination is flawed. Each of these reasons, independently, would be reason to grant the injunction against enforcement of that decision sought by petitioner, the Jefferson County Board of Education.
In the brief time within which this decision was required to be rendered, the court was only able to locate two decisions discussing whether participation in commencement exercises is part of the FAPE guaranteed students under IDEA. Both of
Id. at 205-06 (emphasis added). Because the IDEA itself is silent as to commencement exercises, the Second Circuit reasoned that there was no basis upon which a court could order a school to permit a child to participate in such a ceremony. Id. This court finds that reasoning persuasive.
The only other case uncovered in the court's search for relevant authorities, an unpublished District Court decision, is even more emphatic: "[B]eing barred from graduation ceremonies obviously did not deny [the student] a FAPE." Board of Education of Arlington Heights Sch. Dist. No. 25 v. Illinois State Board of Education, No. 98 C 5370, 2001 WL 585149, at *9 (N.D.Ill. Mar. 19, 2001).
In addition to these persuasive authorities, the statutory and regulatory citations relied upon by the hearing officer themselves indicate that, because the basis for J.B.'s exclusion from graduation exercises was not related to his disability, that exclusion did not deny him a FAPE. It is undisputed in this action, at least as far as the record indicates, that J.B.'s disciplinary infraction, bringing a gun to school, "was not a manifestation of his disability."
Globally, the principal Congressionally articulated policy basis for IDEA is the national policy of "ensuring equality of opportunity, full participation, independent living, and economic self-sufficiency for individuals with disabilities." 20 U.S.C. § 1400. More specifically, the regulations upon which the hearing officer relied also evidence a concern with ensuring that individuals with disabilities are afforded equal,
Section 290-8-9-.10 of the Alabama Administrative Code regulations implementing the state's IDEA program state that "[e]ach student with a disability who successfully completes his or her IEP must be awarded a graduation certificate and afforded the opportunity to participate in public agency activities related to graduation." Ala. Admin. Code § 290-8-9.10(9)(e). However, that same provision goes on to state that "[i]t is the intent and desire of the State Board of Education that graduation activities and procedures for awarding the standard, advanced or any other diploma or graduation certificate to an eligible student, including a student with a disability, be integrated and identical with no distinctions/differentiations made in regard to the way the exit document is awarded or presented." Id. at subsection (g) (emphasis supplied).
Thus, all of the implementing regulations dictate that the student with disabilities be treated equally, with no distinctions between the treatment afforded him and non-disabled students because of his disability. Failure to do so would presumably deprive the student of a FAPE.
All of the uncontroverted evidence indicates, however, that a non-disabled student in J.B.'s same situation would not be permitted to return to CCHS, and would not be permitted to participate in the graduation ceremony. Accordingly, excluding J.B. from commencement exercises did not deprive him of equal opportunity to participate in that nonacademic activity. It therefore did not deprive him of a FAPE. The only basis for the hearing officer's determination to the contrary appears to be as follows: "The testimony by [a district official] that hypothetically, [J.B.] could have returned to Clay-Chalkville High School for his last semester but for `standard procedure' ... [indicates] that the proper setting could have been [CCHS] and if so, he would be now likely be [sic] scheduled to graduate as part of his class, arguably as part of his IEP in the form of an extracurricular activity."
The Supreme Court has made clear that, as a general rule, the person challenging a decision under the IDEA bears the burden of persuasion. Schaffer ex rel. Schaffer v. Weast, 546 U.S. 49, 56, 126 S.Ct. 528, 163 L.Ed.2d 387 (2005) (holding that burden of proof rested upon student challenging school's action under IDEA rather than on school); 78A C.J.S. Schools
Here, a central basis for the hearing officer's determination was that the school district had not provided clear evidence that graduation was not envisioned as part of J.B.'s IEP.
Indeed, all of the discussion of that issue revolves around the hearing officer's determination that the school district "could not provide testimony that the IEP team did not envision the graduation activity at [CCHS] as part of the IEP, nor did they provide documents to support that the activity was not part of the envisioned IEP."
The hearing officer's conclusion was that, ultimately, J.B. was entitled to return to CCHS at the end of his one year term of expulsion and, therefore, that once J.B. returned he, like all other students at the school, would be entitled to participate in commencement exercises.
It is undisputed that all discussions between the mother and school officials indicated that J.B. would not return to CCHS to complete his secondary schooling. True, as the hearing officer stated, it was not absolutely clear where he would go after completion of his one-year expulsion, but there is not even a scintilla of evidence that it was ever contemplated or discussed that he would return to CCHS.
There is, however, no basis whatsoever in the hearing officer's decision for concluding that Rushton did not substantively provide J.B. a high-quality education that satisfied the school district's FAPE obligations. Moreover, there is no suggestion in the record before the court that it was ever even argued that having J.B. complete his final semester at Rushton — notably at his mother's request — deprived him of a FAPE. Certainly, nothing in J.B.'s IEP contemplates his return to CCHS or indicates that Rushton was inadequate. Yet the hearing officer stated, as the central tenet of his order, that J.B. "would be due to be returned to [CCHS] as the proper educational placement and pursuant to his right to a FAPE and should now be returned to such setting in order to provide the FAPE he would be due."
The only arguable basis for that decision appears to be that it was "not clear to [the hearing officer] why the mother, or perhaps the IEP team as well, was not privy to more of a discussion as to the `standard procedure' in place that would prevent the child from returning to [CCHS] for the spring semester of his senior year after his
In accordance with the foregoing, the court finds that the hearing officer's decision that is challenged in petitioner's Motion for Emergency Preliminary and Permanent Injunction Relief was rendered in error and, therefore, petitioner's motion for emergency injunction relief against its enforcement is due to be, and the same hereby is, GRANTED. It is ORDERED, ADJUDGED, and DECREED that the implementation of the hearing officer's decision is hereby enjoined to the extent that it purports to direct or mandate that petitioner permit J.B. to attend the commencement exercises at Clay-Chalkville High School scheduled to occur on May 26, 2011 at 4:30 p.m. Further, as this decision ends the dispute between these parties over which this court would have present jurisdiction, the Clerk is directed to close this file. Costs are taxed as paid.