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Education Law in the Child Welfare System

This session provides an overview of federal and Colorado laws that promote stable and positive school experiences for children in the child welfare system. Topics include school stability, access to records, student discipline, and students with disabilities. Primary stakeholders include children, parents, caseworkers, judges, GALs, RPCs, CASAs, and educators.

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Education Law in the Child Welfare System

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  1. Education Law in the Child Welfare System Federal & Colorado Law

  2. Education Matters • Stable and positive school experiences: • Enhance children’s well-being • Help children make more successful transitions to adulthood • Increase their chances for personal fulfillment and self-sufficiency • Educational success is a potential positive counterweight to abuse, neglect, separation, and impermanence.

  3. Introductions • What’s your role? • What county do you work in? • What do you hope to learn in this session? • Specific issues coming up in your practice?

  4. Primary Stakeholders • Children • Parents • Caseworkers & DHS • Judges • GALs • RPCs • CASAs • Educators

  5. Topics • School stability • Colorado statutes • McKinney-Vento • Fostering Connections • Access to Records • FERPA • Students with Disabilities • Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act • IDEA • Student Discipline in General Education

  6. School Stability

  7. Overview of Statutes • When a child’s residence changes, there is often pressure to move the child to a new school, but there are some protections against this. Refer to Handout 3 – Fostering Connections Reference • Colorado Laws • Same school for remainder of semester (sometimes school year) for all CO students • Transfer procedures for students in out-of-home placement • Federal Laws: • McKinney-Vento: Same school/new school based on best interests for students who are homeless • Fostering Connections: Same school/new school based on best interests for students in out-of-home placement

  8. All children in Colorado can remain in their school until the end of the semester. • § 22-32-116, C.R.S. • Statute implies the district might have to provide transportationin some situations All Colorado Students

  9. CO – Elementary • Elementary students can stay in the same school for the rest of the year and reenroll if: • The child was included in the last October pupil count and has attended continuously since; and • The guardian sends a written request to principal; and • The principal finds there is space and approves the request. • Explicitly states no transportation after the end of the semester • This implies transportation for 1st semester.

  10. CO – Seniors • 12th graders: • Can stay in the same school for the rest of the school year • Same implication for district-provided transportation

  11. 42 U.S.C. §11431 et. Seq. • Children who are homeless stay in “school of origin” if in best interest • If not in best interests to stay in same school, right to immediate enrollment in new school, even without all records • Colorado implementation: §22-33-103.5(5) McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act

  12. McKinney-Vento – Same School • Homeless youth have the right to stay in school of origin if in best interests • School of Origin = the school attended when permanently housed or the school last enrolled • Status applies for school year or as long as homelessness continues • Transportation provided to stay in same school • School districts can share costs • School of choice pending dispute resolution

  13. McKinney-Vento - New School • Immediate and appropriate enrollment in new school, even without records • Enrolling school must contact previous school to request records • If child has no immunization records, enrolling school must arrange for immunizations • C.R.S. § 22-33-103.5

  14. Who is “Homeless?” • Children who lack a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residence, including: • Children living in emergency or transitional shelters • Children abandoned in hospitals • Unaccompanied homeless youth • Children “awaiting foster care placement” • No state or federal definition of children “awaiting foster care placement”

  15. P.L. 110-351, 42 U.S.C. 629 et seq. and 42 U.S.C. 670 et seq. • Affects many areas of child welfare law; we are just looking at educational stability • “Ensures” educational stability for children in out-of-home placements • 42 U.S.C. § 675(1)(G) Fostering Connections

  16. FC – What is “School Stability?” • Fostering Connections requires DHS to “ensure” that: • Youth stay in same school if in their best interests • If moving schools is in their best interests, immediate and appropriate enrollment in a new school

  17. FC – Same School • Stay in the same school if it is in their best interests • When changing residential placements DHS must: • Consider the appropriateness of the educational placement and the proximity of the current school • Coordinate with educational authorities to maintain child’s school placement if in child’s best interests • What are you seeing in your practice?

  18. FC – Same School & Transportation • Transportation is an implied obligation of DHS • DHS must “ensure” school stability • Transportation is an allowable IV-E expense • Cost of transportation is not a permissible factor in determining the child’s best interests • DHS may provide transportation w/ Title IV-E funds • How to use IV-E funds is a county decision

  19. FC – Same School & Transportation • Act amends the definition of IV-E foster care maintenance payment to include "reasonable travel” to school of origin. • Now reimbursed at the Medicaid matching rate   • Previously, travel related expenses were an “administrative expense” with set 50% reimbursement • Makes no rate difference in CO b/c our Medicaid rate is 50%

  20. FC – New School • “immediate enrollment…with all records transferred…” • Ambiguous timing for records – Immediate and contemporaneous with enrollment? • Either way, enrollment must be immediate • What is “immediate” enrollment? • The ACF has declined to clarify what “immediate” means other than to say “without delay.” • What is “appropriate” enrollment?

  21. FC Implementation in Volume 7 • Requires CWs to: • Describe how new placement is in reasonable proximity to child’s school; • Coordinate with school districts; • Either 1) notify sending school of records transfer request as soon as possible; or 2) request the records themselves and provide to the new school; • Document efforts to maintain child in same school; and • Document reasons why remaining in same school not in child’s best interests.

  22. Fostering Connections vs. CO Implementation Fostering Connections C.R.S. § 19-3-213 CW “shall attempt to select a placement that allows the child to remain in the current school, or to transfer to a comparable educational situation.” Best interests? Preference for same school? • Stay in same school if in best interests • Transportation implied OR • Immediate enrollment in new school • Only if staying in same school is not in best interests

  23. Fostering Connections vs. McKinney-Vento Fostering Connections McKinney-Vento Homeless youth Obligates school districts Same school if in best interest School of student’s choice pending dispute Immediate enrollment Transportation must be provided by district(s) Title I (education) funds • Out-of-home youth • Obligates DHS • No reciprocal mandate on schools to “ensure” stability • Same school if in best interest • Immediate enrollment • Transportation implied by DHS • Title IV-E (SSA) funds for transportation

  24. Transportation – Your Experiences • What have you tried to secure transportation? What has worked? • People/agencies who could potentially provide transportation: • DHS (may be through private company) • School district (may be through private company) • Kin • Foster parents • Group home staff • Others?

  25. Best Interest Determinations • The ACF “encourages” development of a “standard and deliberate process for determining best interests” for school placement. • Since this is part of the case plan, the family should be included in determining best interests

  26. Discussion with Your Table Handout 4 - ABA Model Form • What factors should we consider in making best interest determinations? • See handout for ABA’s model best interest determination form • This should be completed with input from all needed parties, including parents • Would something like this work in your practice?

  27. What it does: • Address prompt enrollment and records transfer for out-of-home youth who are changing schools • Address need for reciprocal mandate for schools to coordinate with DHS What it does not: • Implement Fostering Connections – applies to school districts, not DHS • Provide protection for foster youth to remain in the same school if in their best interests C.R.S. §22-32-138 (HB 08-1019)

  28. CO – New school out-of-home placements • Creates child welfare education liaisons who: • Are designated by each school district or charter institute • Are responsible for: • Collaborating with child placement agencies, county departments, the state department to ensure proper school placement, transfer, and enrollment of foster children

  29. CO – New school out-of-home placements • When foster youth transfer to a new school: • Sending school must send educational records within 5 days of request. • Cannot delay/refuse request for any reason, including unpaid fines • Receiving school must enroll student within 5 days of receiving records. • Students must be enrolled even if they cannot meet usual requirements such as providing immunization records or compliance with dress code. • 14 days after enrollment to provide immunization records

  30. State and Federal Combined – New School • Fostering Connections: • “immediate enrollment…with all records transferred…” Ambiguous timing for records • C.R.S. § 22-32-138: • Sending school must transfer records within 5 school days, and receiving school must enroll within 5 school days of receipt • Combined: • Right to immediate enrollment, and records must be transferred in 5 school days

  31. Fee Waivers

  32. Fee Waivers • Applies to children who are in out-of-home placements: • C.R.S. §22-32-138: schools and districts must waive fees for students in out-of-home placements. • This includes, but is not limited to: • Extracurricular activities and programs before, during, and after school • Books and lab fees • Recently the Children’s Law Center has applied this statute successfully for waiver of full-day kindergarten fees.

  33. Fee Waivers • Children who have disabilities: • IDEA – does not waive fees, but note the “free” in FAPE. • If something is provided for in the IEP as special education related service, it should be free, even if a fee would apply to other students.

  34. FERPA Family Educational Rights & Privacy Act

  35. Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act • “FERPA” - 20 U.S.C. § 1232g and 34 CFR Part 99 • Protects privacy of educational records and • Parents have the right to review records • Within “a reasonable time” – max 45 days • Can be charged for copies unless fee effectively denies access • Requests for waiver of copying fees rarely denied • Rights pass to children when they turn 18

  36. FERPA • All records about the child that are maintained by the school. Including, but not limited to: • Grades, progress reports, test scores • Attendance • IEPs, evaluations, and all other related documents • Discipline records • Internal communication (e.g., emails) about the student • Law enforcement records maintained by the school • Does NOT include: • Notes in maker’s sole possession & sole access • Law enforcement records maintained by a law enforcement unit that may operate in the school.

  37. Uninterrupted Scholars Act • Amendment to FERPA: • Permits child welfare agencies to access education records without a court order when the agency has legal custody of the child • Allows child welfare agencies to share the information with people “engaged in addressing the child’s educational needs,” while still protecting confidentiality; and • When a D&N court orders access to records (such as to GALs), the school does not need to provide additional notice to the parent • 20 U.S.C. 1232g(b)

  38. Section 504 Of the Rehabilitation Act

  39. Section 504 • Prohibits discrimination against people with disabilities • Unlike IDEA, applicable to other government programs, not just education. • “Disability” means impairments that substantially limit major life activities (walking, talking, learning, working, seeing, breathing) • Services under Section 504 are implemented by school districts.

  40. Section 504 • Non-Discrimination: • Provides equal access to a free appropriate public education: • The provision of regular or special education and related aids or services to meet the needs of students with disabilities as adequately as the needs of students without disabilities • EQUAL ACCESS vs. affirmative right to FAPE

  41. Section 504 • Eligible students have a “504 Plan” with accommodations that do not fundamentally alter the program. • Ex: • Insulin administered by trained personnel • Access to large print materials or Braille • Extra time on exams; quiet space for exams • Directions given one at a time; check for understanding • 504 plans can include special education services as well as accommodations.

  42. Discipline Under Section 504 • Generally, IDEA discipline protections also apply under Section 504. • Mainly through case law and OCR guidance, not statute • No placement change (long-term suspension or expulsion) for behavior that is a manifestation of the disability • One key difference: IDEA eligible students continue to receive FAPE if long-term suspended; students only eligible under 504 only receive educational services if general education students would as well. • Affirmative right to FAPE vs. Equal Access to FAPE

  43. Individuals with Disabilities Education Act

  44. Free Appropriate Public Education (FAPE) • Special education and related services that: • Have been provided at public expense, under public supervision and direction, without charge • Meet the standards of the Colo. Dept. of Education • Include an appropriate preschool, elementary school, or secondary school in Colorado • Are provided in conformity with the Individualized Education Program (IEP)

  45. IDEA – Sources of Law • 20 USC §1401 et seq • See also 34 C.F.R. §300.00 et seq • State implementation: • 22-20-101 et seq, C.R.S. • 1 CCR 301–8. Rules for the Administration of the Exceptional Children's Educational Act

  46. IDEA – 2 Parts • Part C: 0 – 3 years old • Early Intervention Services through an Individualized Family Service Plan (IFSP) • Most challenging piece – transition to Part B • Part B: 3 – 21 years old • 3-5 years old – Preschool • 5-21 years old – K-12 • Special Education and Related Services through Individualized Education Program (IEP)

  47. Child Find • School districts have a duty to identify children with disabilities. • Many referral sources for evaluating a child 0-3: • Pediatricians • Caseworkers • Parents • GAL/CASA • Referral for all children 0-3 who are “the subject of substantiated case of child abuse or neglect” • Only the “parent” or someone from the school district can refer a child 3-21 for an evaluation for Part B services.

  48. IDEA Part C Children ages 0-3

  49. Part C Eligibility • Responsibility for Child Find Evaluation is on the public school district where child is living. • Assessment completed by Early Intervention Multi- Disciplinary Team • Evaluation AND initial IFSP must be completed within 45 days • State Early Intervention Colorado • (888) 777-4041, www.eicolorado.org

  50. IFSP for Children 0-3 Years Old • IFSP: Individualized Family Service Plan • Reviewed at least every 6 months, with a meeting at least annually • If parents consent, the district may use an IFSP instead of an IEP for children ages 3-5. • IFSP for children 3-5 must promote school readiness • Part B procedures still apply for children 3-5

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