Ryan Van Damme, who is dyslexic, received an individually tailored educational program at the public schools of Mishawaka, Indiana. Near the end of Ryan’s seventh-grade year (in spring 1993), his parents objected to the school district’s plan for the next year. During summer 1993 Ryan attended Landmark School in Massachusetts, and toward the end of that summer his parents requested a hearing on the adequacy of the district’s plan. A hearing officer concluded that the district must provide Ryan with help from specialists (three 45-minute sessions per week with remedial reading instructors, two per week on “accommodation strategies”) and afford compensatory education during the summers of 1994 and 1995 to make up for its late start in supplying this assistance. The hearing officer concluded, however, that Ryan was not entitled to summer education as a norm and should receive most of his instruction via “main-streaming” in the public schools. Shortly after receiving this decision, Ryan’s parents removed him from the Mishawaka schools and sent him to Landmark School full time. They initiated this litigation seeking to compel Mishawaka to pay for Ryan’s education at Landmark.
After concluding that Mishawaka is responsible for Ryan’s education, see
Nonetheless, Ryan’s parents contend, they are entitled to reimbursement for the placement at Landmark because at the time they transferred Ryan from public to private school, Mishawaka was not providing him with an adequate education. Under the stay-put provision of the Act, 20 U.S.C. § 1415(e)(3) (1992 ed.), the parents’ objection to the proposed 1993 plan locked in place the 1992 plan — a plan that, the hearing officers determined, had flaws similar to those of the 1993 plan. (Amendments made to the Act in 1997 alter the stay-put rules, see § 1415(j), (k)(7); we need not explore the differences.) When Ryan was transferred to Landmark in January 1994, the school district was still using the 1992 plan, because both sides had filed administrative appeals from the initial hearing officer’s decision. Ryan’s parents invoke
Burlington School Committee v. Massachusetts Department of Education,
What the Court held in
Burlington
is that a district judge has the discretion “to order school authorities to reimburse parents for their expenditures on private special education for a child if the court ultimately determines that such placement, rather than a proposed IEP [individualized education program], is proper under the Act.”
In this case the district court concluded that reimbursement for private education is not “appropriate”, because the hearing officers and the judge believed that with extra sessions five times a week, education in the Mishawaka schools would satisfy the Act’s requirements — would indeed be preferable to education at Landmark School, for the Act prefers a “mainstreaming” approach while Landmark’s program separates its pupils from their non-disabled peers. The hearing officers recognized that the Mishawaka schools had fallen behind in providing extra services to Ryan and that compensatory enrichment was called for; but the hearing officers and the district court also concluded that Ryan did not need placement in Landmark either for summer sessions or for a full program. Given the discretion to which the Supreme Court referred, this reasoned (and reasonable) conclusion cannot be upset now.
One final issue remains: attorneys’ fees. Ryan’s parents contend that they have “prevailed” in this case and therefore are entitled to an award of fees despite the district court’s unwillingness to upset the hearing officers’ principal decisions. Plaintiffs recovered about $1,000 as compensation for private tutoring for Ryan in January and February 1994. On all other issues they lost, and $1,000 is paltry compared with the relief they were seeking. That implies, as the district court held, that plaintiffs did not prevail in the litigation. See
Fletcher v. Ft. Wayne,
Affirmed.
