Case Information
*1 Bеfore: McKEE, Chief Judge, AMBRO, and HARDIMAN, Circuit Judges (Opinion filed: October 29, 2015) ________________
OPINION [*]
________________
*2
AMBRO, Circuit Judge
I.
This appeal presents a question about the scope of the “stay-put” provision of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (“IDEA”). J.F., a fourteen-year-old boy with learning disabilities, relocated with his family from New Jersey’s Westwood Regional School District (“Westwood”) to the Byram Township School District (“Byram”). He contends on appeal that the stay-put рrovision requires Byram to pay for him to remain at a private school outside of Byram during the pendency of a due process petition that he is pressing. We disagree. Byram’s obligation under the IDEA is to provide J.F. with services comparable to what he received from Westwood until it either implements the program designed for J.F. by Westwood or designs its own program. The District Court concluded that Byram hаs met its obligation, and we will affirm.
II.
Under the IDEA, protected students receive Individualized Education Programs (“IEPs”) consistent with their needs. See 20 U.S.C. §§ 1412(a)(4), 1414(d). At the time this dispute arose, the last IEP designed for J.F. was created by Westwood in May 2014 and placed J.F. at the Craig School, a private school outside of Westwood, for the 2014– 2015 school year. After the creation of the IEP but prior to the start of the 2014–2015 school year, J.F. and his pаrents relocated from Westwood to Byram. In June 2014, J.F.’s parents registered him with Byram. After reviewing J.F.’s IEP, Byram told J.F.’s parents that it could implement the program in-district. J.F.’s parents attempted instead to have *3 Byram fund J.F.’s placement at the Craig School. To that end, the parents sought mediation in July 2014 from the New Jersey Commissioner of Education. This request was converted into a due process petition. In connectiоn with these proceedings, J.F.’s parents invoked the stay-put provision of the IDEA and requested an injunction requiring Byram to fund J.F.’s placement at the Craig School for the duration of the case. An administrative lаw judge (“ALJ”) denied the motion, and the District Court upheld the ALJ’s determination. This timely appeal ensued.
III.
The IDEA’s stay-put provision, 20 U.S.C. § 1415(j), provides that during the pendency of a due process petition, unless there is an agreement otherwise, “the child shall remain in the then-current educational placement . . . .” J.F. argues that the Craig *4 School is his “then-current educational placement” because the only IEP in рlace at the time of the due process petition provided for his enrollment there.
If J.F. had not voluntarily relocated from Westwood to Byram, this case would
present a closer question. On the one hand, we have said that the “dispositive factor” in
determining the then-current placement is the IEP “actually functioning when the ‘stay-
put’ is invoked.”
Drinker v. Colonial Sch. Dist.
,
However, this is a very different case than either
Drinker
or
DeLeon
because both
of those cases involved changes initiated by the school district. By contrast, J.F.’s parents
unilatеrally relocated from Westwood to Byram. In these circumstances, the purpose of
the stay-put provision, which is to maintain the status quo in situations where the
school
district
acts unilaterally, is not implicated.
See, e.g.
,
Honig v. Doe
,
We hоld that when a dispute arises under the IDEA involving a transfer student, and there is disagreement between the parent and student’s new school district about the most appropriate educational plaсement, the new district will satisfy the IDEA if it implements the student’s last agreed-upon IEP; but if it is not possible for the new district to implement in full the student’s last agreed-upon IEP, the new district must adopt a plan that approximatеs the student’s old IEP as closely as possible. The plan thus adopted will serve the student until the dispute between parent and school district is resolved by agreement or by administrative hearing with due process.
We agree with this approach, except we conclude that the relevant test for a school district’s compliance is found not in the wording of the Ms. S. decision but instead in a provision that Cоngress added to the IDEA the year after Ms. S . See 20 U.S.C.
§ 1414(d)(2)(C)(i)(I) (“In the case of a child with a disability who transfers school districts within the same academic year, who enrolls in a new school, and who had an IEP that was in effect in the same State, the local educational agency shall provide such child with a free appropriate public education, including services comparable to those described in the previously held IEP, in consultation with the parents until such time as the local educational agency adopts the previously held IEP or develops, adopts, and implements a new IEP that is consistеnt with Federal and State law.”).
*6
Although the IDEA does not, by its plain terms, discuss whether the stay-put
provision imposes requirements above and beyond § 1414(d)(2)(C)(i)(I), we have
previously held, in the context of interstate transfers, thаt unilateral relocations by parents
can override the provision.
See Michael C. v. Radnor Twp. Sch. Dist.
,
In Michael C. , we held that the procedures set forth in a memorandum from the Office of Special Education Programs governing interstate transfers fixed a school district’s obligations and superseded the stay-put provision even though the memorandum did not specifically state that the procedurеs overrode § 1415(j). at 648–50. Although Michael C. had its roots in interstate comity concerns not present in intrastate moves, id. at 651 n.7, the key point for our purposes is that we held the stay-put provision yields to other procedures governing transfers. Congress explicitly provides those procedures for intrastate transfers in § 1414(d)(2)(C)(i)(I). We therefore hold that, because J.F.’s parents transfer here took place betweеn school years, we still apply the test in § 1414(d)(2)(C)(i)(I) because the transfer post-dated the creation of the IEP for the new school year. The situation therefore resembles a mid-year transfer.
unilaterally relocated him from Westwood to Byram, the stay-put provision is inoperative and Byram meets its obligation by complying with § 1414(d)(2)(C)(i)(I).
IV.
The question remains whether Byram has met its obligation under § 1414(d)(2)(C)(i)(I). The ALJ and the District Court both fоund that Byram offered services comparable to those provided for in the Westwood IEP. See JA 7–8, 198. J.F. disputes this conclusion but does not raise any new arguments on appeal, and we find no clear errоr. Of course, the requirements of § 1414(d)(2)(C)(i)(I) extend beyond the initial provision of comparable services and require the implementation of the existing IEP or the creation of a new one. J.F. maintains that this has not occurred. However, both the ALJ and the District Court found that J.F.’s parents refused to cooperate with Byram over any placement other than the Craig School. See JA 3 n.1, 198. We find no clear error оf fact. As a result, we cannot say under these circumstances that Byram failed to meet its obligation, and the District Court did not abuse its discretion in declining to grant an injunction requiring placement at the Craig School.
For these reasons, we affirm.
Notes
[*] This disposition is not an opinion of the full Court and pursuant to I.O.P. 5.7 does not constitute binding precedent.
[1] We have jurisdiction over the appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We exercise plenary
review of thе District Court’s legal conclusions and review factual findings for clear
error.
Blunt v. Lower Merion Sch. Dist.
,
[2] The Ninth Circuit’s test is similar, but not identical, to § 1414(d)(2)(C)(i)(I) and was based on regulatory guidance that predated thе codification. Additionally, although the
[3] We note that under our holding Byram does have the authority to determine J.F.’s placement pending the resolution of the dispute. But this is only triggered by J.F.’s parents’ unilateral dеcision to relocate. The “trade-off”—requiring compliance with § 1414(d)(2)(C)(i)(I) but not mandating placement at the student’s former school—of our approach is “considered necessary in those сircumstances where a child chooses to move to a new school district.” James Rapp, Education Law, § 10C.10[2][c][ii] (Matthew Bender & Co. 2015). See also id. (“Accordingly, while the new district is required to provide services cоmparable to those described in the previously held IEP, the IDEA does not compel allowing a student to continue at the student’s current brick-and-mortar placement.”) (internal quotation marks omitted).
