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Policy No. 2162 Instruction EDUCATION OF STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES UNDER SECTION 504 OF THE REHABILITATION ACT OF 1973It is the intent of the District to ensure that students who are disabled within the definition of Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 are identified, evaluated, and provided with appropriate educational services. Students may be disabled under this policy even though they are not eligible for services pursuant to the Individuals with Disabilities Education (IDEA). Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 is a civil rights law which protects the rights of individuals with disabilities in programs and activities that receive federal financial assistance from the U.S. Department of Education. A child is a “qualified disabled person” under Section 504 if he or she (1) has a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities (such as caring for one's self, performing manual tasks, walking, seeing, hearing, speaking, breathing, learning, and working), has a record of such an impairment, or is regarded as having such an impairment; and (2) is between the ages of 3 to 21 years old. The District shall comply with the federal policies that require free appropriate public education, childfind, equal educational opportunity, confidentiality of information, parent involvement, participation in least restrictive environment, evaluations, placement, reevaluation, programming to meet individual needs, placement procedures, nonacademic services, preschool and adult education programs, disciplinary exclusion, transportation, procedural requirements, appropriate funding, accessibility, special issues related to drug or alcohol addicted students, special considerations for students having AIDS or HIV infection, and special issues related to ADD/ADHD students. A.
Free Appropriate Public Education B.
Childfind C.
Equal Educational Opportunity D.
Confidentiality Of Information E.
Parent Involvement F. Participation in the least restrictive environment 1. Academic setting. To the maximum extent appropriate to the needs of disabled students, the District shall educate disabled students with non-disabled students. In order to remove a child from the regular educational environment, the District must demonstrate that education of the student in the regular environment with the use of supplementary aids and services cannot be achieved satisfactorily for the disabled student. Whenever the District places a student in a setting other than the regular education environment pursuant to this paragraph, it shall take into account the proximity of the alternate setting to the student's home. 2. Non-academic setting. In providing or arranging for the provision of non-academic and extra-curricular services and activities, including meals, recess periods, and the services and activities set forth in 34 CFR 104.37, the District shall ensure that disabled students participate with non-disabled students in such activities and services to the maximum extent appropriate to the needs of the disabled student in question. G. Evaluations 1.
If a student needs or is believed to need special education or
related services, the District shall evaluate the student prior to placement
and before any subsequent “significant change in that placement.” a. Expulsion; b. Suspensions which exceed 10 consecutive days in a school year; c. Cumulative short-term suspensions which create a pattern of exclusion; d. Transferring a student to home instruction; e. Graduation from high school; and/or f. Significantly changing the composition of the student's class. 2. The District shall establish policies and procedures for evaluation and placement which assure that tests and other evaluation materials: a. Have been validated and are administered by trained personnel b. Are tailored to assess educational need and are not merely based on IQ scores c. Reflect aptitude or achievement or whatever else the tests purport to measure and do not reflect the student’s impaired sensory, manual, or speaking skills (unless the test is designed to measure these particular deficits) H.
Placement Procedures I.
Re-Evaluations J.
Programming To Meet Individual Needs K.
Non-Academic Services 1. Counseling Services. In providing personal, academic or vocational counseling, guidance, or placement services to its students, the District shall provide these services without discrimination on the basis of disability. The District shall ensure that qualified students with disabilities are not counseled toward more restrictive career objectives than are non-disabled students with similar interests and abilities. 2. Physical education and athletics. In providing physical education courses and athletics and similar programs and activities to any of its students, the District shall not discriminate on the basis of disability. As the District offers physical education courses and operates or supports interscholastic, club, or intramural athletics, it shall provide an equal opportunity for qualified students with disabilities to participate in these activities. The District may offer to disabled students physical education and athletic activities that are separate or different from those offered to non-disabled students only if separation or differentiation is consistent with the requirements of 34 CFR ñ 104.34 and only if no qualified disabled student is denied the opportunity to compete for teams or to participate in courses that are not separate or different. L.
Preschool And Adult Education Programs M. Disciplinary Exclusion 1. Students with disabilities are protected from being improperly excluded from school for disciplinary reasons. Certain disciplinary exclusions of disabled students from school constitute a significant change in the student's educational placement. Such disciplinary exclusions cannot be implemented until the District has satisfied the required change of placement procedures. 2. Qualified disabled students should be recognized as having a disabling condition before discipline is imposed on them, especially before imposing long-term suspension (a suspension of more than five days duration) or regular expulsion upon a qualified disabled student that could constitute a significant change of placement. The school principal or educational staff person responsible for the imposition of discipline must ensure that a group of qualified professionals determine whether or not there is a causal relationship between the student's misconduct and his or her disability. They are also to consider the appropriateness of the student's current placement and program. This determination will take into account the student' s current evaluation and Individualized Accommodation Plan (IAP), under Section 504. For students considered disabled under Section 504, there is no obligation to provide educational services during periods of long-term suspension or expulsion when the student's misconduct has been properly determined not to be disability-related or due to an inappropriate placement or program. When a student's misconduct is determined causally related to his/her disabling condition, procedures at d. below shall be instituted in lieu of either long-term suspension or expulsion. 3.
When a student poses an immediate and continuing danger to him
or herself and/or others (see WAC 180-40-295), an emergency expulsion of up
to ten (10) days may be used to alleviate immediate risk on the condition
that procedures at WAC 180-40-300, be modified to require the regular
disciplinary hearing be held within ten (10) school business days whether the
student or parent/guardian requests a hearing or not. The purpose of this
regular disciplinary hearing is to determine the nature of, and consequences
for, the misconduct. 4.
When a student has engaged in misconduct which is causally
related to his or her disability, aside from emergency expulsion (see c.
above), expulsion and/or long term suspension should not be imposed which
results in more than ten (10) lost school days (cumulative for the entire
school year, considering earlier short term suspension [if any] as counting
toward the cumulative total). 5. Students and their Parent/Guardian shall be notified of the results of the decision regarding the causal relationship of the misconduct and the student's disability and of their right to challenge this decision. Students/Parents/Guardians objecting to procedures outlined at a. through d. above shall be entitled to exercise their rights under Section 504 to file a grievance or initiate a due process hearing. See O. PROCEDURAL REQUIREMENTS, sub-section 7.c., following. 6. Students who are considered disabled under Section 504 are subject to the same disciplinary processes and results as non-disabled students for misconduct regarding the use, sale, or possession of drugs or alcohol at school. The extra due process requirements regarding change of placement do not apply. N.
Transportation O.
Procedural Requirements 1. Provide written assurance of non-discrimination whenever the District receives federal money. 2. Designate an employee to coordinate the District's Section 504 compliance activities. The Section 504 Coordinator for the District is the Secondary School Principal. 3. Provide grievance procedures to resolve complaints of discrimination; students, parents, or employees are entitled to file grievances. (The grievance procedures for the District are set out in the Procedure for Policy 3210, Nondiscrimination.) 4. Provide notice to students, parents, employees, unions, and professional organizations of nondiscrimination in admission or access to, or treatment or employment in, its programs or activities. Notice shall also specify the section 504 coordinator for the district. Notice shall also be included in the student/parent handbooks. 5. Annually identify and locate all Section 504 qualified disabled children in the District’s geographic area who are not receiving a public education. 6. Annually notify disabled persons and their parents or guardians of the District's responsibilities under Section 504. 7. Establish and implement procedural safeguards to be provided to parents or guardians with respect to actions regarding the identification, evaluation, or educational placement of persons who, because of disability, need or are believed to need special instruction or related services, that includes: a. Notice of their rights; b. An opportunity to examine relevant records; c. An impartial hearing may be initiated by either the parents/guardian or the school district, with opportunity for participation by the student's parents or guardian. The student/parent is entitled to have representation by legal counsel; and d. A review procedure. P.
Appropriate Funding Q. Accessibility 1. District's responsibility to make buildings accessible: facilities which were constructed prior to June 3, 1977, need not necessarily be made accessible so long as the program or activity, viewed in its entirety, is readily accessible to persons with disabilities. 2. District's options other than major modifications: the District can redesign equipment, reassign classes or other services to accessible buildings, assign aides to students, deliver services at alternate accessible sites, or alter existing facilities. So long as there are other methods which are as effective in achieving compliance, a District need not undertake structural changes to a building. 3. District recognition of unacceptable accommodations: carrying a student upstairs; segregating all students with mobility impairments due to inaccessibility of other buildings; having disabled students eat on a separate floor due to an inaccessible cafeteria; denying certain programs such as music, art, or assemblies because these programs are inaccessible. 4. District obligation for new buildings and additions: buildings or additions constructed since 1980 must be designed and constructed to allow disabled persons the ability to access and use them readily. 5. District's obligation when a building is altered: to the maximum extent feasible, all facilities which are altered after 1980 must be altered to allow accessibility and usability by persons with disabilities. 6. District recognition of the meaning of the phrase “to the maximum extent possible:” this provision covers the occasional instance where the nature of an existing facility is such as to make it impractical or prohibitively expensive to renovate in a manner that results in its being entirely barrier-free. However, in all of these instances, the alteration should provide the maximum amount of physical accessibility feasible. R.
Special Issues Related To Drug Or Alcohol Addicted Students S.
Special Considerations For Students Having Aids Or Hiv Infection T.
Special Considerations For ADD/ADHD Students
Cross Reference: Board Policy 2161 Education of Students with Disabilities Board Policy 3210 Nondiscrimination
Legal References: 34 CFR Part 104 Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 45 CFR Part 99 Family Education and Privacy Act PL 101-336 Section 512 Americans With Disabilities Act of 1990 WAC 392-168-120 Hatch Amendment
Adoption Date: June 30, 2008
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