| Legislative Notice 14 |
May 12, 1997 |
S. 717 - Individuals with Disabilities Education Act Reauthorization
Calendar No. 46
Reported from the Committee on Labor and Human Resources, without amendment, May 7,
1997 by unanimous vote. S. Rept. 105-17.
NOTEWORTHY
- The Senate began consideration on Monday, May 12, 1997. At the present, there are 17
cosponsors of this bill, 10 Republicans and seven Democrats.
- The House is scheduled to consider its companion bill (H.R. 5) on Tuesday, May 13,
1997 under suspension of the rules.
- The bill requires a "maintenance of effort" on the part of states to ensure that more dollars
will actually go to students in the classroom.
- The bill provides relief from IDEA funding mandates by giving schools more flexibility
to actually reduce their own IDEA funding levels AFTER Federal appropriations reach
$4.1 billion.
- To limit the mounting costs of IDEA litigation, States are required to offer voluntary
mediation to parties involved in IDEA disputes. Further, the bill eliminates attorneys'
fees for Individual Educational Plan hearings and for mediation prior to due process
hearings.
- The bill allows discipline of disabled children found carrying a weapon or possessing,
using or selling a controlled substance while at school or a school function for the same
amount of time that a child without a disability would be, but for not more than 45 days.
- The Administration strongly supports passage of S. 717. See page 6 for Administration
Position.
BILL PROVISIONS
Title I -- Amendments to Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)
Part A -- General Provisions
Section 603: Creates an Office of Special Education Programs within the Department of
Education's Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services. This office will have the
principal responsibility for administering and carrying out this Act.
Part B -- Assistance for the Education of Children with Disabilities
Section 611: FUNDING FORMULA
- The current funding formula is maintained until part B of the IDEA reaches
$4,924,672,200. When this threshold is reached, yearly child counts based on disability
will no longer determine a State's allotment. Thereafter, a State's allotment will be based
on the following:
(1) the amount the State received in the year prior to the threshold amount being reached; and
(2) the State's proportional share of funds that exceed that previous year's appropriation, based
on 85 percent on the State's census data for children from 3 through 21, and 15 percent on the
State's poverty rate.
Section 612: STATE ELIGIBILITY
- Clarifies current law so that States, to receive part B funds, must make available a free
and appropriate public education to all children with disabilities, including those children
with disabilities who have been suspended or expelled from school.
- States must conduct child find activities. This includes the identification of children in
private schools and a process to determine which children are in need of special education
and are receiving it, all while attempting not to label children as disabled.
- To the maximum extent possible, children with disabilities are to be educated with
children who are nondisabled. Special classes, separate schooling, or other removal of
children with disabilities from the regular classrooms should occur only when the severity
of the disability is such that education in regular classes cannot be achieved satisfactorily.
- To the extent consistent with State and Federal law, funds provided under IDEA may be
used for services at private and parochial schools.
- Reimbursement for private school placement may occur if parents give notice of their
intent at the most recent Individualized Educational Planning (IEP) meeting or written
notice ten days before they transfer the child to the private school.
- The maximum amount of money to provide special education for children in private
schools is limited to a proportional amount between Federal part B IDEA funds and the
number of disabled students in private schools within a State.
- Parents may be reimbursed for the cost of a private educational placement when a due
process hearing officer or judge determines that a public agency had not made a free
appropriate public education available to the child, in a timely manner, prior to the
parents enrolling the child in that placement without the public agency's consent.
Previously, the child must have had received special education and related services under
the authority of a public agency.
- Clarification is made so that health services provided to Medicaid-eligible children with
disabilities are not disqualified for reimbursement by Medicaid agencies because they are
provided services in a school context in accordance with the child's IEP.
- States must maintain current levels of expenditures for special education and related
services for children with disabilities from one year to the next. Waivers for exceptional
or uncontrollable circumstances such as a natural disaster or a precipitous and unforeseen
decline in the State's financial resources are allowed. Failure to maintain previous levels
of spending will result in reductions of the IDEA monies equal to the same amount by
which the State reduced funding from the previous year.
- States are required to determine if there is a disproportionate number of long-term
suspensions and expulsions of disabled children and if so to take appropriate action.
Section 613: LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCY ELIGIBILITY
- Local Educational Agencies (LEAs) are required to submit an application only once to
State Educational Agencies (SEAs), instead of once every three years as under current
regulations.
- LEAs are required to maintain current efforts for the education of children with
disabilities. Exceptions are provided for the following:
(1) voluntary departure, by retirement or otherwise, or departure for just cause, of special
education personnel who are paid at or near the top of the agency's salary scale;
(2) a decrease in the enrollment of children with disabilities;
(3) the end of an agency's responsibility to provide an exceptionally costly program to a child
with a disability because the child has left the agency's jurisdiction, no longer requires such a
program, or has aged-out with respect to the agency's responsibility; and
(4) the end of unusually large expenditures for equipment or construction.
- In any year in which amounts authorized under part B exceed $4.1 billion, an LEA may
treat, as local funds, up to 20 percent of the funds it receives under part B that
exceed the amount it received in the previous fiscal year, effectively permitting local
schools to reduce the level of local expenditures for special education and related
services.
- Where charter schools are within an LEA, the bill directs LEAs to serve children with
disabilities attending charter schools in the same manner as it serves children with
disabilities in its other schools and directs LEAs to provide part B funds to charter
schools in the same manner they provide such funds to other schools.
Section 614: EVALUATIONS, ELIGIBILITY DETERMINATIONS, INDIVIDUALIZED
EDUCATION PROGRAMS and EDUCATIONAL PLACEMENTS
- Parents must provide informed consent before the initial evaluation of a child, but that
such consent shall not be construed as consent for placement for the receipt of special
education and related services. If a child's parents refuse consent for evaluation, an LEA
may continue to pursue an evaluation by using the mediation and due process procedures
also provided in the bill, except to the extent that it is inconsistent with State law relating
to parental consent.
- Reevaluations are to be conducted if conditions warrant a reevaluation or if the child's
parents or teacher requests a reevaluation, but at least once every three years. Informed
parental consent also must be obtained for reevaluations, except that such informed
consent need not be obtained if the LEA can demonstrate that it has taken reasonable
steps to obtain consent and the child's parents have failed to respond.
- The bill requires that if the determinant factor for such a child's eligibility under IDEA is
lack of proper instruction in reading or math or limited English proficiency, they
should not be eligible. The intention is to avoid improperly including children in special
education programs where their actual educational difficulties stem from another cause.
- An IEP must include an explanation of the extent, if any, to which a child with a
disability will not participate with nondisabled children in the regular class and in the
general education curriculum including extra-curricular and non-academic activities.
- Beginning at age 14, a child's IEP must include a "transition service needs" statement
that focuses on how the child's educational program can best create a successful transition
to life after secondary school. This is to augment, and not replace, the current "transition
services" requirement where children receive instruction, community experiences, the
development of employment and other post-school objectives and, when appropriate,
independent living skills and a functional vocational evaluation.
- LEAs are required to review a child's IEP at least once per year to determine whether the
annual goals of the child are being achieved.
Section 615: PROCEDURAL SAFEGUARDS
- The bill simplifies the content and process of delivering notices to parents about their
child's rights.
- The bill specifically excludes the payment of attorneys' fees for attorney participation
in IEP meetings, unless such meetings are convened as a result of an administrative
proceeding or judicial action.
- To encourage early resolution of problems, the bill requires States to offer mediation as
a voluntary option to parents and LEAs as an initial process for resolving disputes.
However, the bill requires that a State's mediation system may not be used to delay or
deny a parents right to due process.
- The bill allows for a disciplinary change of placement or suspension for any child with
a disability for not more than 10 school days. If found carrying a weapon or possessing,
using or selling a controlled substance while at school or a school function, the bill also
allows for a child with a disability to be disciplined for the same amount of time that a
child without a disability would be, but for not more than 45 days.
- If a child's actions are not a manifestation of his or her disability, then the bill allows the
same disciplinary procedures that apply to children without disabilities.
- If parents disagree with a determination that the child's behavior was not a manifestation
of the child's disability, the parents may request an expedited hearing.
Section 619: PRESCHOOL PROGRAM
- Under a new formula, no State will receive less than it received in fiscal year 1997.
Beginning in fiscal year 1998, all new appropriations above the FY 97 level will be 85
percent based on the general population of children aged 3 through 5, and 15 percent on
the poverty rate in the State. The formula also includes the same minimum and
maximum allocation provisions that apply to the new formula under the Grants to States
program.
Part C -- Infants and Toddlers Early Intervention Program
- The bill permits a State to use its part C funds for initiating, expanding, or improving
collaborative efforts related to at-risk infants and toddlers, including: establishing
linkages with public and private organizations, services and personnel for identifying and
evaluating at-risk infants and toddlers; referring those children to other (nonpart C)
services; and conducting periodic follow-ups on each referral to determine if the child's
eligibility under part C has changed.
- Part C of the IDEA is authorized for $400,000,000.
Part D -- National Activities for the Education of Children with Disabilities
Current law authorizes nineteen funded and unfunded discretionary programs. This legislation
consolidates these programs into four broad areas.
Subpart 1: STATE PROGRAM IMPROVEMENT GRANTS
- The bill establishes new State Program Improvement Grants to assist in personnel
training.
Subpart 2: COORDINATED RESEARCH, PERSONNEL PREPARATION, TECHNICAL
ASSISTANCE AND SUPPORT AND DISSEMINATION OF INFORMATION
- The bill retains the authority, substantially unchanged from current law, to fund the
Parent Training and Information Centers. However, the bill does add authority to fund
local parent organizations, referred to in the bill as "community parent resource centers."
ADMINISTRATION POSITION
"The Administration strongly supports Senate passage of S. 717 as a major step towards ensuring
high-quality educational opportunity for all students. Reauthorization of the Individuals with
Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) reaffirms and strengthens this commitment to children with
disabilities and their parents. This legislation is the product of comprehensive bipartisan
negotiations involving both chambers of the Congress and the Administration, with broad public
input from many individuals and organizations. It places a strong emphasis on teaching and
learning, and will do much to help improve education results for the 5.8 million children with
disabilities who are served under the IDEA."