Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I feel bad for the people at Dept of Ed but I am not sure FCPS follows what they say. Having dealt with FCPS for years- I think they have been allowed to do whatever they want so not sure how this changes anything
I don’t think this will change much for wealthy states and districts, but people in poor, rural, or red states will be hit hard.
OP here. This is exactly it.
It's even to the detriment of wealthy states because a lot of the underpinnings for enforcement of IDEA and 504 come from DoEd. I can't tell you how many times I've threatened to file a federal complaint and then used the material from DOEd to buttress my argument with the school team.
They have a great website that explained all aspects of these laws (does it exist still?), and they do a lot of interpretation of regulations. People can write in and ask for interpretations, which then end up carrying the force of law (until someone, perhaps, challenges that interpretation in court). These are called "Dear Colleague" letters or OSEP letters. Look here to see examples of issues that are addressed by these OSEP letters:
https://www.wrightslaw.com/info/osep.index.htm
Basically, whatever the federal level does, wealthy states model often. But, moving forward, states will not have a unitary model to follow (or if they do it's likely to be a bad model). This means that kids who move state to state with IEPs will no longer have the same kind of transferability of IEP rights. (And, students move a lot.)
Gutting DoEd and OSEP also guts the info collection mechanism -- how many kids have IEPs, how much money is being spent, how effective are programs, etc. It's analogous to what Trump is doing by firing BLS people -- we can't know the economy is bad if we are not collecting stats about it in a neutral way. We can't know the access to and quality of special education if we don't have data about it.
If we don't have data about it, and we are losing the people who help define what the law means and create systems of complaints, then enforcement of the law becomes extremely difficult for everyone.
It is true, that overall wealthy states are likely to be better off than poor ones, but doing this harms kids and families everywhere.
(And, while it harms families, it really harms moms the most, because moms are the ones by and large who end up having to homeschool, tutor and scaffold kids through school, college and life, and if kids with special needs aren't getting special education at school, then it's moms who tend to fall out of the workforce to compensate for what isn't being provided at school, whether they teach it on their own or spend time driving kids around to private pay therapists and tutors. It also harms society at large, as a less educated special ed population is likely to be able to contribute less in terms of taxes and level of work contribution to society.)