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When Two Laws Go Walking:IDEA and McKinney-Vento
Serving Students With Disabilities Experiencing
Homelessness
NAEHCY Annual ConferenceNAEHCY Annual Conference
November 2012November 2012
Patricia Ann Popp, Ph.D.Patricia Ann Popp, Ph.D.
Project HOPE-VirginiaProject HOPE-Virginia
Special acknowledgement to Patricia JulianelleSpecial acknowledgement to Patricia Julianelle
Legal Director, NAEHCYLegal Director, NAEHCY
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Mariela was living in School District A, which placed her in a nonpublic school pursuant to her IEP. She lost her housing and is staying
temporarily in School District B.
1. Is the nonpublic school Mariela’s school of origin under the McKinney-Vento Act?
2. How do we determine if remaining in the nonpublic school is in her best interest?
3. How does the IDEA requirement to educate Mariela in the least restrictive environment influence the determination?
4. If Mariela remains in her school of origin, which school district pays for her education?
5. Which district pays for her transportation? And with IDEA, McKinney-Vento, or district general funds?
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The Intersection of MV & IDEA
IDEA McKinney-Vento
This student is homeless: MV should take the lead
This student has an IEP: IDEA should take the lead
Who pays? Who pays?
No IEP from our LEA, no services (?)
Immediate enrollment without documents
Placement determined by IEP team
School of origin
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Scenario 1: Who Takes the Lead?
The Law MV takes the lead for rights and services
related to homelessness IDEA takes the lead for rights and
services related to a disability Beyond that, federal law does not assign
responsibility Practically, collaboration is essential
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Who Takes the Lead?The Practice
State level communication and collaboration State Advisory Panel (Part B) State Interagency Coordinating Council
(Part C) Informal meetings with colleagues
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Who Takes the Lead?The Practice
Gateways to collaboration: Compliance issues *Child find (1412(a)(3)(A), 1435; 300.103)
Cross-training Joint TA
http://www.k12.wa.us/HomelessEd/pubdocs/BriefFinal.pdf
*Virginia EC Example: MV-Head Start+ Task Force
First Mailing: Modified ParentPak
for young children Bookmarks Developmental
Wheels Description of State
EI and EC programs Children’s Books
To: EI ECSE Head Start Virginia Preschool
Initiative MV liaisons Shelters
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Who Takes the Lead?The Practice
Recent question: Can special education buses be used to transport homeless students without IEPs? Federal law does not prohibit IDEA funds may not pay for seats occupied
by students for whom transportation is not a related service per the IEP
State policies may address reimbursement via Medicaid or other funds
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Scenario 2: Who Pays?
The Law IDEA: the LEA that develops the IEP and
makes the placement pays for tuition (and transportation, if it is a related services on the IEP) *possible exception?
MV does not assign fiscal responsibility for tuition…
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Scenario 2: Who Pays?
The Law (cont.) However, when students remain in the
school of origin but are staying in another district:Tuition: neither IDEA nor MV assign fiscal
responsibility. USDE Guidance: SEA must decide (E-2)
Transportation: IDEA silent MV districts must split cost 50/50 in absence of
another agreement or policy
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Who Pays?The Practice
Check your state policies: Ask your IDEA colleagues what policies exist on: Paying for out-of-district placements Paying for transportation Resolving inter-district disputes
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Who Pays?The Practice
Develop state policies. Formal or informal Mutually-agreed upon Deal with school of origin, tuition and
transportation Deal with MV funds vs. IDEA funds Deal with inter-district disputes Consult your IDEA colleagues on sticky
issues on an on-going basis See sample draft policy
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Scenario 3: Immediate Enrollment
The Law: McKinney-Vento Immediate enrollment With or without documents With or without parent/guardian Attending classes and participating fully in
school activities
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Scenario 3: Immediate Enrollment
The Law: IDEA– students w/ IEPs If IEP is current, new LEA must
immediately provide appropriate services. 1414(d)(2)(C)(i); 300.323(e)
Appropriate means “services comparable to those described” in the previous IEP, in consultation with parents.
1414(d)(2)(C)(i);
300.323(e)
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Scenario 3: Immediate Enrollment
The Law: IDEA– students w/ IEPs (cont.) New LEA must promptly obtain child’s
records from previous school, and previous school must promptly respond to records requests
New LEA can adopt old IEP or develop new one
1414(d)(2)(C); 300.323(e),(g)
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Scenario 3: Immediate Enrollment The Law: IDEA– students in evaluation process
Clock continues when students change LEAs, unless
(i) the new LEA is “making sufficient progress to ensure a prompt completion of evaluations,” AND
(ii) “the parent and the LEA agree to a specific time when the evaluation will be completed.” 1414(a)(1)(C)(ii); 300.301(d)(2)
Also, schools must coordinate with prior schools “as necessary and as expeditiously as possible to ensure prompt completion of full evaluations.”
1414(b)(3)(D); 300.304(c)(5)
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Immediate Enrollment:The Practice
Anticipate mobility Inter-district communication Rapid records transfer Talk with parents and youth Interim IEPs Work with SEA special education
colleagues to develop procedures
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Scenario 4: School of origin vs. IDEA placement
The Law. MV: keep students stable in the school of
origin, as long as it is in the child’s best interest (Special education needs are best interest factors)
IDEA: special education placements must be “as close as possible to the child’s home, unless the parent agrees otherwise” and must be in the least restrictive environment LRE
300.116
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School of origin vs. IDEA placementThe Practice
Which school is in the child’s best interest?
Consultation on local level (liaison invited to IEP meetings; IEP team members consulted on best interest determinations)
Payment for transportation: is it a related service on the IEP?
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And keep in mind…
IDEA now specifically defines “homeless children” to include all children and youth considered homeless by McKinney-Vento.
1402(11); 300.19
Any state receiving IDEA funds must comply with the McKinney-Vento Act for all children with disabilities who are homeless.
1412(a)(11)(A)(iii); 300.149(a)(3)
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You Try: The Intersectionof MV and IDEA
Group I: How will you start (or continue) working with your IDEA colleagues?
Group D: How will you get information or develop policies about who pays in the sticky situations in your state?
Group E: What can you do at the state level to facilitate immediate enrollment at the local level?
Group A: What can you do at the state level to facilitate students with disabilities remaining in their schools of origin?
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Resources NASDSE (www.nasdse.org)
Project FORUM (www.projectforum.org) Project HOPE-VA (www.wm.edu/hope)
Information briefs NAEHCY and NCHE
IDEA overviewhttp://center.serve.org/nche/downloads/briefs/idea.pdf
Implementing IDEA for Homeless Studentshttp://center.serve.org/nche/downloads/briefs/idea_qa.pdf
IDEA/MV Problem-Solving Processhttp://center.serve.org/nche/downloads/briefs/nav_idea_mv.pdf
Resources (cont’d)
OSERS Q&A http://www2.ed.gov/policy/speced/guid/s
pec-ed-homelessness-q-a.pdf
NAEHCY Response http://www.naehcy.org/dl/response_oser
s.pdf
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Resources (cont’d) NECTAC
http://www.nectac.org/contact/ptccoord.asp Parent Training and Information Centers
(888) 248-0822 CEC (www.cec.sped.org)
CEC Today – March 2003 Free legal resources for students with disabilities
National Disability Rights Network (www.napas.org) Resources for parents of students with disabilities,
from USDE www.ed.gov/parents/needs/speced/resources.html
USDE Office of Special Education Programs www.ed.gov/offices/OSERS/OSEP