D.A., through his mother L.A., brought suit against the Houston Independent School District (“HISD”) and two school officials, alleging that D.A.’s rights under various federal laws were violated because two of its schools failed to test him timely for special education. They sought declaratory relief, compensatory and punitive damages, for violations of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (20 U.S.C. § 1400 et seq.) (“IDEA”), § 504 of the Rehabilitation Act (29 U.S.C. § 794) (“§ 504”), the Americans with Disabilities Act (42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq.) (“ADA”), the Age Discrimination Act (42 U.S.C. § 6104(f)), the Texas and United States Constitutions, and 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The district court granted summary judgment for the defendants. We affirm principally because appellants have not furnished proof of intentional discrimination as required by § 504 and the ADA, and § 1983 offers no additional cause of action for D.A.
I.
BACKGROUND
D.A. attended HISD as a pre-kindergarten student from 2005 until he withdrew *452 from the district in January 2008. In prekindergarten, D.A.’s teacher noticed that he had trouble completing work and following directions. He was not tested for special education while in pre-kindergarten and was advanced to kindergarten. In kindergarten, he was still unable to complete his work. L.A., D.A.’s mother, wanted him to have special education testing. A substitute teacher for D.A.’s kindergarten class recommended special education testing, but the school counselor agreed only to conduct a speech therapy evaluation. When D.A.’s regular teacher returned, she had no trouble understanding D.A.’s speech. The school officials decided not to test D.A., but they failed to inform his mother of the decision.
Despite warning that D.A. might have to repeat kindergarten, his teacher promoted him to the first grade. She believed there would be more testing and special education opportunities for D.A. in the first grade. The school had a practice of waiting until the first grade to test children for special education, in order to give them a chance to develop.
In first grade, D.A. immediately misbehaved and performed below grade level. His teacher referred him for special education testing. D.A. was removed from class to help him do his work. Eventually, L.A. had to sit with her son during class. A private speech pathologist who had been treating D.A. since kindergarten wrote to the school to express concern about D.A.’s psycho-educational problems. In October 2007, two months into the school year, the Intervention Assistance Team (“IAT”) first met to consider D.A.’s needs and decided that a special education evaluation was premature because his teacher had not sufficiently documented D.A.’s problems. The IAT reached the same conclusion again on December 5. L.A. wrote several letters to the school requesting that D.A. be tested. The school evaluation specialist collected updated documentation from D.A.’s teacher and a psychologist and submitted the documents to a Committee of Evaluation Specialists, which ultimately determines whether a student’s behavior warrants a special education referral. The IAT met before Christmas but delayed D.A.’s referral until after the holidays. On January 31, 2008, before any testing had occurred, L.A. withdrew D.A. from the HISD. D.A. entered the Conroe Independent School District where he was immediately recommended for special education testing.
L.A. filed an IDEA claim with the Texas Education Agency, which held a due process hearing in April 2008. A special hearing officer determined that HISD violated IDEA by failing to refer D.A. to an eligibility screening in October 2007. During the proceeding, L.A. requested that HISD fully test D.A.’s suspected disabilities, but the hearing officer ruled this claim moot because D.A. had left HISD and was already being tested for special education in the other district. The hearing officer rejected for insufficient proof the medical expenses allegedly incurred on D.A.’s behalf and concluded that monetary damages were unavailable under IDEA.
D.A. appealed the administrative decision to the district court, requesting declaratory relief, compensatory and punitive damages. D.A. asserted claims under IDEA, § 504; ADA, the Age Discrimination Act, the Texas and United States Constitutions, and 42 U.S.C. § 1983. In a comprehensive and thoughtful opinion, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of the appellees. The district court held that the plaintiffs IDEA claim for compensatory damages was not moot, but it affirmed the hearing officer’s findings that the plaintiff lacked any evidence to support claims for compensatory relief. The court rejected liability under the ADA *453 and § 504 because plaintiffs failed to demonstrate that the school’s actions were motivated by bad faith or gross misjudgment. The district court dismissed the plaintiffs Age Discrimination Act claim for failure to exhaust the proper administrative remedies. The district court concluded that § 1983 cannot be used as an additional vehicle to redress violations of the ADA, § 504 or the IDEA. The plaintiffs constitutional claims were also dismissed. D.A. has appealed, contending that genuine issues of material fact exist concerning the district’s liability and that the district court applied incorrect legal standards when interpreting the statutes.
II.
DISCUSSION 1
The district court’s grant of summary judgment on the non-IDEA claims is reviewed
de novo.
Summary judgment is appropriate when, viewing the evidence and all justifiable inferences in the light most favorable to the non-movant, there is no genuine issue of material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
See Bridgmon v. Array Sys. Corp.,
A. § 50k and ADA Claims
D.A. contends that the record reveals genuine material fact issues concerning whether, paraphrasing § 504:
[he] was excluded from participation in, denied the benefits of, and subject to discrimination at school included, but [not] limited to being excluded from the classroom activities, learning, work assignments and lunch, being denied the benefits of receiving special education testing, speech testing, speech therapy, special education and free appropriate public education, and being subject to discrimination regarding his disability, race and age.
The district court, he asserts, erroneously heightened the standard for a district’s liability under § 504. Because this court has equated liability standards under § 504 and the ADA, we evaluate D.A.’s claims under the statutes together.
Hainze v. Richards,
A student may assert claims under IDEA as well as § 504 and the ADA.
Marvin H. v. Austin Indep. Sch. Dist.,
Exactly what remedies remain under § 504 and the ADA for children whose parents are dissatisfied with the school’s determinations under IDEA are unclear. This court applies issue preclusion where the legal standards underlying such claims are not significantly different.
See Pace,
Further constraining the viability of claims under the disability non-discrimination laws is this court’s long-established rule that:
[A] cause of action is stated under § 504 when it is alleged that a school district has refused to provide reasonable accommodations for the handicapped plaintiff to receive the full benefits of the school program.
Marvin H,
That a court may, after hearing evidence and argument, come to the conclusion that an incorrect evaluation has been made, and that a different placement must be required ... is not necessarily the same thing as a holding that a handicapped child has been discriminated against solely by reason of his or her handicap.
The state hearing officer found that the school violated IDEA by failing to test D.A. for special education needs in October 2007, two months before the final testing decision was made. Because this was the only violation found, it could be contended that D.A. may not seek to recharacterize the district’s other pre-referral and preintervention actions, which the hearing officer did not impugn, as discriminatory violations of § 504 or ADA.
See Indep. Sch. Dist. No. 283,
What is preserved for review is that even though the hearing officer’s findings may suggest an untimely diagnosis of D.A.’s psycho-educational problems, the error reflects no more than negligence. The district’s actions, including its prereferral attempts to use a disciplinary strategy with D.A., were found “well intended” by the hearing officer. The district court properly relied on the hearing officer’s determination that the district delayed evaluating D.A. because the professionals believed that behavioral interventions would be successful and that the classroom teacher had not properly documented his behavior. Further, construing the facts in the light most favorable to D.A., we, like the district court, find no fact issue as to whether HISD officials “departed grossly from accepted standards among educational professionals.” D.A.’s mere disagreement with the correctness of the educational services rendered to him does not state a claim for disability discrimination.
Marvin H.,
B. Age Discrimination Act Claims
Strange as it may seem, D.A. could file a claim under the Age Discrimination Act, which provides that “no person ... shall, on the basis of age, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under, any program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance.” 42 U.S.C. § 6102.
Under the Age Act, however, a plaintiff must exhaust his administrative remedies before filing an action in the district court. See 42 U.S.C. § 6104(f); 34 C.F.R. § 110.39 (Department of Education enforcement regulations). Appellant did not fulfill any of the exhaustion requirements. Instead, L.A. contends that she only became aware of the Age Act claim at the *456 IDEA administrative hearing and that fulfilling both the IDEA and Age Act filing deadlines would have been impossible. Her sworn testimony, to the contrary, was that D.A.’s pre-kindergarten teacher told her that HISD probably would not test D.A. because of his young age. L.A. thus knew of the alleged age discrimination two years before the IDEA hearing. Despite this, appellant argues that L.A. did not know that age was a motivating factor in HISD’s decision to delay testing because the pre-kindergarten teacher gave her a “pretexual reason” [sicjthat young children need time to develop before special education testing occurs. Whether right or wrong, the policy behind HISD’s alleged discrimination does not excuse D.A. from the exhaustion requirement.
C. § 1983 Claims
Section 1983 provides a cause of action when a person has been deprived of federal rights under color of state law.
Doe v. Dall. Indep. Sch. Dist.,
1. Based on alleged IDEA violations
In
Smith v. Robinson,
2. Based on alleged § 501 and ADA violations
D.A.’s argument that he can use § 1983 as a method to enforce alleged violations of rights under the ADA and § 504 is fore
*457
closed by this court’s decision in
Lollar v. Baker,
3. Based on alleged constitutional violations
Appellants argue that HISD violated D.A.’s constitutional rights by requiring him to show greater evidence of special needs than it required of non-black children. Appellants believe that because HISD has a history of over-identifying black children as requiring special-needs education, the district is now over-correcting by holding black children to a higher showing.
There is no actual evidence of the asserted over-correction. The only “evidence” D.A. points to is a statement by HISD’s counsel during the closing argument before the hearing officer that HISD was concerned about over-identifying black children. This is not sufficient, not only because arguments by counsel are not evidence, but also because it establishes only that HISD was concerned about over-identification, not that HISD actually treated black children differently.
III.
For these reasons, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Although this case was filed to challenge the rejection of D.A.'s IDEA claim by the administrative hearing officer, the appeal relies only on the other statutory claims. The appellant’s argument concerning the district court’s adverse decision on the IDEA claim raises two points, mentioned only in passing. Because appellant neither briefs nor seeks relief under IDEA in this appeal, he has abandoned any such claim.
Weaver v. Puckett,
. See Child Find, 34 C.F.R. § 300.111(a) (2006).
.
See, e.g., Rowley,
. The court also correctly observed that D.A. has failed to offer proof of monetary damages either before the hearing officer or in court.
. This provision was originally codified at 20 U.S.C. § 1415(f), but is now at § 1415(7).
. Before the addition of § 1415(7), we held that violation of EAHCA may not be enforced through § 1983 because the EAHCA provided the exclusive remedy.
Marvin H.,
