GRABER, Circuit Judge:
After the Garden Grove Unified School District ("District") repeatedly failed to provide a free appropriate public education to student C.B., as required by the Individuals with Disabilities in Education Act ("IDEA"), 20 U.S.C. §§ 1400-1482, his aunt and guardian ("Guardian") enrolled C.B. in a non-public program, the Reading and Language Center ("Center"). Guardian sought reimbursement for the full cost of sending C.B. to the Center. An administrative law judge ("ALJ") found that C.B. received significant educational benefits from attending the Center. But, because the ALJ found that the Center did not meet all of C.B.'s educational needs, he awarded only half of the reimbursement
C.B. is eligible for special education and related services because of autism and attention deficit disorder. In 2006, the District concluded that he has "unique needs in reading comprehension, math, math applications, written communications strategies, pre-vocational, psychomotor (gross motor skills), socialization, fine motor skills, and social skills communication." The District completed an individualized education plan ("IEP") and, in accordance with it, assigned C.B. to various specialized services designed to meet his unique needs.
Guardian submitted a letter of dissent, explaining why the services were inadequate to meet the child's needs. She told the District that she would be obtaining supplemental private services and seeking reimbursement.
C.B. began receiving supplemental services at the Center in November 2006. Under California law, the Center is a nonpublic agency but not a certified nonpublic school. Its certification allows it to provide only language-based services. It cannot provide certain educational services that C.B. needs, such as instruction in arithmetic.
In the summer of 2007, the District proposed a new IEP for the coming school year. Guardian rejected the proposal, again objecting that it was inadequate to meet C.B.'s needs for several specified reasons. C.B. continued his instruction at the Center. Beginning in the summer of 2007, C.B. attended the Center exclusively and no longer attended public school. Guardian paid for all instruction at the Center and provided private transportation for C.B. to and from the program. While at the Center, C.B. showed "significant growth" in many learning areas and in social development.
Through Guardian, C.B. filed a request for a due process hearing in 2007. Guardian identified a number of issues for resolution and sought full reimbursement for tuition at the Center, as well as for transportation costs incurred by Guardian.
The ALJ found that the District had failed to provide a free appropriate public education to C.B. Turning to the services offered by the Center, the ALJ held that the Center was an appropriate placement while C.B. was receiving supplemental and summer instruction. The ALJ therefore awarded full reimbursement for tuition and transportation for the 2006-07 school year and the summer of 2007. But the ALJ drew a different conclusion as to the 2007-08 school year. For that period, the ALJ held that, because the Center could not provide a comprehensive program to meet all of C.B.'s unique educational needs (e.g., the Center could not instruct him in arithmetic), the equities justified only partial reimbursement.
Guardian then filed this action on C.B.'s behalf, challenging the ALJ's award of partial reimbursement for the 2007-08 school year and seeking full reimbursement for that period. The district court rejected the ALJ's conclusion, and the District's argument, that reimbursement is warranted only when a private placement provides the full range of educational services that a disabled student requires. Because C.B. received educational benefits from all services that the Center provided, the district court awarded full reimbursement to Guardian for the cost of obtaining
In Florence County School District Four v. Carter, 510 U.S. 7, 114 S.Ct. 361, 126 L.Ed.2d 284 (1993), the Supreme Court set minimum criteria that must be met before a guardian may obtain reimbursement for the unilateral placement of a child in a private school. A parent or guardian is "entitled to reimbursement only if a federal court concludes both (1) that the public placement violated the IDEA, and (2) that the private school placement was proper under the [IDEA]." County of San Diego, 93 F.3d at 1466 (citing Carter). If either criterion is not met, the parent or guardian may not obtain reimbursement. Id. If both criteria are satisfied, the district court then must exercise its "broad discretion" and weigh "equitable considerations" to determine whether, and how much, reimbursement is appropriate. Carter, 510 U.S. at 15-16, 114 S.Ct. 361 (internal quotation marks omitted).
Here, it is undisputed at this stage of the proceedings that the public placement violated the IDEA, so the first absolute requirement of Carter is met. The second question is whether the placement at the Center was "proper."
The district court found (as had the ALJ) that the Center met some, but not all, of C.B.'s unique educational needs and that it provided significant educational benefits. The District argues that, because the Center could not meet some of C.B.'s additional needs (such as instruction in arithmetic), the placement was not "proper" within the meaning of the IDEA. We disagree.
The Supreme Court has answered the District's legal argument in this regard. Carter held that reimbursement was warranted even though the private school "fail[ed] to meet state education standards." 510 U.S. at 14, 114 S.Ct. 361. In other words, the private school could not provide the student with all of the necessary educational benefits, but reimbursement was available nonetheless. Id. at 15-16, 114 S.Ct. 361.
The Second Circuit has rejected the District's argument even more explicitly and more forcefully:
Frank G. v. Bd. of Educ., 459 F.3d 356, 365 (2d Cir.2006) (emphasis added) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
In conducting our de novo review of the "proper" test, we give weight to the ALJ's findings. County of San Diego, 93 F.3d at 1466. There is no real dispute about the facts, though. As the ALJ found, and as all parties appear to agree, the Center delivered many, but not all, of the special education services that C.B. needed.
The remaining question is whether the district court's balancing of the equities went beyond the bounds of its discretion. The district court gave great weight to the fact that C.B. received significant benefits in important areas of his special educational needs. The District argues that, despite that reasoning, the district court abused its discretion by not reducing Guardian's reimbursement commensurate with the missing elements of C.B.'s special educational needs. We see nothing in the statute or precedents that mandates that result.
Essentially the District is suggesting perverse financial incentives. If Program A provides 80% of a child's special educational needs and the parent or guardian selects Program A, the District would require a court to dock the parent or guardian by (say) 20%; but if the parent or guardian adds Program B, which offers the remaining 20% of appropriate programming, the District would be content to reimburse all of Program A plus all of Program B. Equity surely would permit a reduction from full reimbursement if Program A provides too much (services beyond required educational needs), or if it provides some things that do not meet educational needs at all (such as purely recreational options), or if it is overpriced, but equity does not require a reduction in reimbursement just because a parent or guardian cannot afford to give the child everything (or cannot find a program that does).
In this case, while the Center did not satisfy all of C.B.'s needs, everything that the Center provided was proper, reasonably priced, and appropriate, and the program benefitted him educationally. Accordingly, the district court did not abuse its discretion by awarding full reimbursement.