ORDER ON PLAINTIFF’S APPEAL OF ADMINISTRATIVE DECISION
John Millay, a young man of Ethiopian descent who lives with his adopted family in Surry, Maine, petitioned Maine’s Division for the Blind and Visually Impaired (the “DBVI”) to pay for the expenses incurred by his adopted mother in driving him back and forth from Surry to Bangor, Maine during the course of a culinary arts program Millay completed as a client of the DBVI’s federally funded vocational rehabilitation services program. After a state Administrative Hearing Officer (“AHO”) declined to overturn the DBVI’s denial of Millay’s request, Millay brought this action under Section 102(c)(5)(J) of Title I of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973— codified at 29 U.S.C. § 722(c)(5)(J) — seeking judicial review of that determination. For the reasons that follow, the AHO’s decision is REVERSED.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
A. Millay’s Background and Disability
John Millay,
In June 2000, when Millay was either eleven or twelve years old, he was adopted by Joanne Millay,
B. Millay’s Early Involvement with the DBVI
At some point after leaving UMPI, Millay applied to receive vocational rehabilitation services — services to assist the disabled in finding employment — from the DBVI.
Among Job Corps’s offerings is a nine-to-twelve month, five-days-a-week pro
Brady’s case notes indicate that she and Millay formalized what is referred to in Title I as an “individualized plan for employment,” known as an IPE, documenting Millay’s career goal and the DBVI’s proposed program for Millay to achieve it.
At some point, though it is unclear from the record precisely when, Millay toured Job Corps’s Bangor campus and was shown a dorm room.
C. Millay’s Application to Attend Penobscot Job Corp Academy
On February 1, 2010, Millay applied to be admitted into Job Corps’s culinary arts program.
By April 17, 2010, neither Millay nor the DBVI had heard back from Job Corps about Millay’s application.
Millay and the DBVI had still not received any word from Job Corps about Millay’s application by July.
Around May of 2010, one of Millay’s sisters,
On July 22, 2010, Millay and Brady prepared and signed a new IPE, which identified Job Corps as a service that Millay needed to achieve his work goal, known in Title I parlance as an “employment outcome.”
Brady arranged for Millay to meet with Job Corps representatives again on Job Corps’s Bangor campus on July 27, 2010.
Kunz ... said he was an advocate for Yohannes to come but only as a commuter student____ [W]e were asking why is admissions taking so long____ Kunz said that we have a lot of people who are very nervous about having him on campus and we will not have him in the dorm. There are people who are even nervous about him being here in the day time. And I said well I’m not nervous about him being there in the day time. I mean he’s going to be fine. There will be a lot of people around. He said yes but we are not going to accept him as a residential student.57
By the last week of August, with the school year nearly underway, Millay’s admissions status at Job Corps was still in doubt.
C. Millay’s Admission Into Job Corps
On September 28, 2010, Brady wrote in her case notes that Job Corps had accepted Millay into its culinary arts program and given him a start date of September 27, 2010, but the entry does not indicate when Millay’s acceptance occurred and the record contains no written offer of admis
D. The DBVI Rejects Millay’s Request for Travel Reimbursements
Beginning in mid-September of 2010, Millay renewed his inquiries into whether the DBVI would reimburse him for his travel costs.
At that meeting, Brady informed Millay and Millay’s mother that the DBVI would not reimburse Millay for any of his travel expenses. Brady described the meeting in her case notes:
Johannes and I talked about his request for travel funding. I informed him that I could not justify use of funds for him to travel daily when he has the option to stay on campus full time at no cost. I explained that the purpose of DBVI is to assist him in accomplishing his goals by removing or adapting ... disability related barriers. The Job Corps program has on campus housing and encourages the students to stay on campus in order to get the fullest benefit from their program .... I explained that Johannes has the right to choose to stay where ever he wants, but that unless that choice is directly related to accommodating his disability it would not be a cost that DBVI would fund.65
Brady testified that she based her decision on Section 9 of the DBVI’s Rules Governing Vocational Rehabilitation Services for Individuals Who are Blind or Visually Impaired (the “2007 DBVI VRS Rules”),
Without the DBVI’s financial support for his travel costs, Millay and his sister
E. Confusion about Millay’s Status at Job Corps
Brady and Jones met with Job Corps personnel on October 27, 2010 to discuss Millay’s situation.
[We] cannot let a student in [to Job Corps] not knowing if [we] may subsequently need to spend unreasonable amounts of money so that the student can actually participate in the program ... [.] [F]unding is limited everywhere and [we] can’t afford to take risks.73
Sometime around December 3, 2010, Brady called Landry to ask her to send the DBVI an official notice of Millay’s admission into Job Corps’s culinary arts program.
Millay’s mother also testified that into October and November of 2010, Job Corps was not willing to admit Millay as a residential student because of concerns about his safety on campus:
The Job Corp itself expressed many concerns to me ... and to Yohannes that they did not believe it was safe.... Yohannes’[s] admission took more than ten months. It took more than ten months because as recently as October and November [of 2010] Job Corps personnel were telling Yohannes, me and [the DBVI] that they were not satisfied that he could be safe on campus.76
F. Millay Challenges the DBVI’s Denial of Travel Reimbursement Expenses
On November 19, 2010, Millay formally requested a due process hearing to challenge Brady’s denial of his request for travel reimbursement expenses.
*66 1. The Job Corps program provides on campus housing for all students at no charge, with a small stippend [sic] for living expensed [sic] given each week. There is no disability related reason that Johannes could not live on-campus.
2. Attendance is a highly important factor for students attending the Job Corps program. It is set up to reflect a real-world job, if the student misses class or is late for classes this is grounds for dismissal from the program. I am very concerned that if Johannes commutes daily from Blue Hill this will effectively ensure failure due to inevitable transportation/weather related problems.
3. At the time of denial, my understanding was that Johanneses] sister was also going to be enrolled in the program and also planned to live at home, so would be commuting to and from Bangor daily whether Johannes was in the car or not. Transporting Johannes would not create an additional cost to her. I felt that it was an unreasonable request to have DBVI pay a third party for an existing ongoing cost.
4. Also, as students each would be receiving a small travel stippend [sic] from Job Corps. This funding combined would likely cover most of the costs of the commute and should be used accordingly. (The exact amount of this stippend [sic] was never disclosed.)78
G. Dr. Gaffney’s Evaluation of Millay
On January 4 and 14, 2011, Millay met with licensed clinical psychologist Thomas J. Gaffney, who performed a detailed clinical assessment of Millay’s mental health.
H. Millay Begins Classes at Job Corps
Millay finally began classes at Job Corps as a commuter student in February of 2011.
During Millay’s first four weeks of class, he was tardy four times, though never by more than a couple minutes.
I. Millay’s Due Process Hearing
On February 28, 2011, over a month before his due process hearing, Millay sent a letter to the Office of Administrative Hearings of Maine’s Department of Health and Human Services requesting that subpoenas be issued to twelve individuals, including Sam Kunz and Kristin Wiggins from Job Corps and Dr. Gaffney.
AHO Hugh Hooper conducted Millay’s due process hearing on April 4, 2011.
Much of the substance of the witnesses’ testimony and the evidence entered into the record is summarized and considered above. Additional evidence concerning Millay’s PTSD was also admitted.
J. The AHO’s Decision
On May 6, 2011, the AHO issued a written decision, finding for the DBVI. The decision is based entirely on the AHO’s application of the 2007 DBVI VRS Rules and cites no other sources of law. It first finds that there is “no doubt” that “the most cost-effective means” for Millay to take classes at Job Corps is for him to live on Job Corps’s Bangor campus.
[A] [djecision in this matter must be based solely on the governing rules. Those rules are clear in that in order for the [DBVI] to pay transportation costs for Mr. Millay it must be necessary for him to incur travel expenses to complete his Job Corp[s] training. That simply is not the case here. While he has the right to commute, and his reasons for choosing to commute are understood, Mr. Millay can complete his Job Corps training by living on campus at no additional cost to the Division.107
E. Millay’s Graduation from Job Corps
Notwithstanding the AHO’s decision, Millay continued to attend the Job Corps
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On November 15, 2011, Millay filed a complaint (ECF No. 1) against the DBVI in this Court, claiming unlawful discrimination under the Maine Human Rights Act, the Americans with Disabilities Act, and Title V of the Rehabilitation Act. The DBVI responded by filing a motion to dismiss (ECF No. 7). On May 5, 2012, the Magistrate Judge issued a recommended decision (ECF No. 12) concluding that the Court should dismiss all the Plaintiffs discrimination claims, but that Millay was likely entitled to bring an appeal of the AHO’s decision under Title I of the Rehabilitation Act. Neither party objected to the Magistrate Judge’s recommended decision. Report of Telephone Conference and Order 1 (ECF No. 24).
Millay then moved for leave to amend his complaint (ECF No. 26) in order to withdraw his earlier claims and instead bring an appeal of the AHO’s decision. The DBVI opposed the motion (ECF No. 29), maintaining that Millay’s appeal was time-barred and that the relief Millay was requesting was unavailable under the Eleventh Amendment. The Magistrate Judge issued a recommended decision on September 21, 2012 (ECF No. 31), concluding that Millay’s claims were not time-barred and that he was entitled to seek injunctive relief and equitable reimbursement notwithstanding the Eleventh Amendment. On December 5, 2012, this Court adopted the Magistrate Judge’s recommendation (ECF No. 35). The following day, Millay filed his second amended complaint (ECF No. 36), the complaint currently before the Court. Millay seeks to have the Court reverse the AHO’s affirmation of the DBVI’s denial of his request for travel reimbursements and to award him injunctive relief, equitable reimbursement, prejudgment interest and costs, and any other appropriate relief available under Title I of the Rehabilitation Act.
STATUTORY AND REGULATORY BACKGROUND
Title I grants states federal funding to allow them to provide disabled individuals with “vocational rehabilitation services.” See 29 U.S.C. §§ 720(a)-(b), 723(a). To be eligible to receive grants, a state must submit a plan to the commissioner of the federal government’s Rehabilitation Services Administration outlining how it will develop “individualized plan[s] for employment,” or IPEs, for disabled individuals living in its borders. 29 U.S.C. § 721(a)(9)(A). This plan must also provide assurances that the state will provide the services called for by its clients’ IPEs. 29 U.S.C. § 721(a)(9)(B). If the Rehabilitation Services Administration commissioner approves a state’s plan, federal funding is available for about four-fifths of the cost of providing vocational rehabilitation services. 29 U.S.C. §§ 705(14), 721(a)(3), 730. State and local agencies pick up the rest of the tab, though the total amount of federal funding a state can receive each year is capped. 29 U.S.C. §§ 705(14), 721(a)(3), 730.
Under Title I, an individual is eligible to receive vocational rehabilitation services if he or she qualifies as an “individual with a disability” and “requires vocational
Title I prescribes a number of specific procedures for the development of an IPE. For instance, Title I requires the responsible state agency to “develop[ ]” and “implement! ]” an IPE “in a manner that affords eligible individuals with the opportunity to exercise informed choice” in choosing: (1) “an employment outcome”; (2) “the specific vocational rehabilitation services to be provided under the plan”; (3) “the entity that will provide the vocational rehabilitation services”; and (4) “the methods used to procure the services.” 29 U.S.C. § 722(b)(2)(B). Title I mandates that the IPE be reduced to a “written document” that is “agreed to, and signed by” the eligible disabled individual or a representative and “approved and signed by a qualified vocational rehabilitation counselor employed” by the responsible state agency. 29 U.S.C. § 722(b)(2)(A), (C). And Title I requires that this document include, among other things, “a description of the specific employment outcome that is chosen by the eligible individual,” “a description of the specific vocational rehabilitation services that are ... needed to achieve the employment outcome,” and “the terms and conditions of the [IPE], including, as appropriate,” the responsibilities of the state agency for facilitating the services. 29 U.S.C. § 722(b)(3)(A), (B), (E).
Title I also requires participating states to allow individuals to challenge determinations by state agents regarding the provision of vocational rehabilitation services in a “due process hearing” conducted by an “impartial hearing officer.” 29 U.S.C. § 722(c)(5). Title I provides that the officer presiding over this hearing must reach his decision by looking to the State’s rehabilitation plan, the substantive provisions of Title I, and applicable state regulations. Id. An individual dissatisfied with the hearing officer’s decision — or an agency’s subsequent administrative review of the decision, if there is one — may challenge it by bringing a civil action in either state or federal court. 29 U.S.C. § 722(c)(5)(J).
The State of Maine participates in the grant program established by Title I. The DBVI — a division of the Bureau of Rehabilitation, which is part of the Maine Department of Labor — is the state agency responsible for providing vocational rehabilitation services to blind individuals in Maine and promulgating rules to ensure they are provided fairly. 2007 DBVI VRS Rules § 1. The Rules supplement the relevant procedural provisions in Title I.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Section 722(c)(5)(J) provides for federal district court review of the results of due process hearings conducted by state AHOs under Title I of the Rehabilitation Act. 29 U.S.C. § 722(c)(5)(J). In conducting such a review, the Court “shall grant such relief as [it] determines to be appropriate” based on the “preponderance of the evidence.” 29 U.S.C. 722(c)(5)(J)(ii)(III).
The First Circuit has never discussed how district courts should apply § 722(c)(5)(J)’s standard of review. However, other courts considering the issue
The First Circuit described the IDEA standard of review in Sebastian M. v. King Philip Regional School District,
A district court reviews the administrative record, which may be supplemented by additional evidence from the parties, and makes an independent ruling based on the preponderance of the evidence. However, that independence is tempered by the requirement that the court give due weight to the hearing officer’s findings. As a result, a district court’s review falls somewhere between the highly deferential clear-error standard and the non-deferential de novo standard. We have characterized this intermediate level of review as one of involved oversight.
Sebastian M.,
Essentially, the district court reviews the administrative record as if it were “ ‘conducting] a bench trial based on a stipulated record,’ ” except that it also gives “due deference to the findings of the administrative hearing officer,” particularly to findings that are reasoned persuasively or fall within the unique policy expertise of the agency. Sebastian M.,
A district court should defer to a hearing officer’s determination such as the weight to be given expert testimony that involves analyzing fine-tuned matters within the AHO’s area of expertise, see Sebastian M.,
DISCUSSION
A. “Necessary” Services
1. The Legal Standard
The main substantive standard governing the sufficiency of the vocational rehabilitation services a state agency provides an individual under Title I comes from the statutory definition of “vocational rehabilitation services” itself. The Rehabilitation Act defines “vocational rehabilitation services” as follows:
[A]ny services described in an [IPE] necessary to assist an individual with a disability in preparing for, securing, retaining, or regaining an employment outcome that is consistent with the strengths, priorities, resources, concerns, abilities, capabilities, interests, and informed choice of the individual —
29 U.S.C. § 723(a) (emphasis added). Though Title I does not define the term “necessary,” the core legal issue in a case like this is whether the particular service the state agency refused to provide was “necessary” to achieve the employment outcome identified in the individual’s IPE. See Yochim v. Gargano,
Eighteen subsections appended to the statutory definition of “vocational rehabilitation services” provide specific examples of programming that may qualify as “necessary.” 29 U.S.C. § 723(a)(l)-(18). Among these subsections is § 723(a)(8), which lists “transportation ... that is provided in connection with the provision of any other service described in this section and needed by the individual to achieve an employment outcome,” and § 723(a)(17), which lists “services to the family of an individual with a disability necessary to assist the individual to achieve an employment outcome.” 29 U.S.C. § 723(a)(8), (17).
Guidance is also found in federal regulations promulgated under the authority of Title I. These regulations provide that a state agency providing vocational rehabilitation services “must ensure” that “travel and related expenses that are necessary to enable an applicant or eligible individual to participate in a vocational rehabilitation service” are “available to assist [a disabled client] in preparing for ... an employment outcome....” 34 C.F.R. §§ 361.48, 361.48(h), 361.5(b)(57). The regulations include illustrations of transportation expenses that would qualify:
Example 1: Travel and related expenses for a personal care attendant or aide if the services of that person are necessary to enable the applicant or eligible individual to travel to participate in any vocational rehabilitation service.
Example 2: The purchase and repair of vehicles, including vans, but not the modification of these vehicles....
34 C.F.R. § 361.5(b)(57)(i). The regulations caution, however, that these examples “are not intended to substitute for individual counselor judgment.” Id.
The 2007 DBVI VRS Rules provide further governing standards. Section 9 of the Rules mandates that the DBVI “provide ... any goods or services determined necessary for the individual to achieve an employment outcome.” 2007 DBVI VRS Rules § 9. But Section 9 also places expense-based limits on how the DBVI should furnish aid, requiring that “[s]er-vices that are of sufficient quality ... be
Supportive [sjervices [m]ay [i]nelude .... [transportation, including travel and related expenses that are necessary to enable an applicant or eligible individual to participate in a vocational rehabilitation service and achieve an employment outcome by the most cost-effective means possible.
2007 DBVI VRS Rules § 9(13)(B).
Title I does not discuss what role expense should play in how state agencies provide vocational rehabilitation services. In Buchanan v. Ives,
2. The Parties’ Positions
The Plaintiff contends that the AHO’s analysis of the question of necessity includes three errors, each of which requires the Court to reverse its decision. First, the Plaintiff contends that “there is no evidence ... that the Penobscot Job Corps was prepared to accept John Millay as a resident student,” so “it was absolutely necessary for Mr. Millay to reside at home and to commute to his classes.” Pl.’s Br. 12. Second, the Plaintiff argues that even if Job Corps was prepared to accept Millay as a residential student, commuting was still necessary, given Millay’s difficulty living in the dorms at UMPI and his ongoing struggle with PTSD. Pl.’s Br. 12. In a similar vein, the Plaintiff suggests the DBYI’s decision is at odds with language in § 723(a) which specifies that vocational rehabilitation services must be provided in a manner “consistent with the informed choice of the individual.” 29 U.S.C § 723(a); PL’s Br. 10-11. Third, the Plaintiff argues that the AHO engaged in an erroneous analysis of cost-effectiveness by assuming that the on-site living arrangements available at Job Corps were “free.” PL’s Br. 13. The Plaintiff contends that the appropriate cost-effectiveness analysis would take into account the full expenditure of government resources required to provide a particular vocational rehabilitation service, whether incurred by the state or the federal government. PL’s Br. 13.
The Defendant disagrees with the Plaintiffs assertion that Job Corps was not prepared to have Millay live on campus. Def.’s Br. 13. The Defendant also argues that the AHO correctly discounted concerns about Millay’s PTSD, given Dr. Gaffney’s own admission that further evaluation of Millay’s mental condition was still necessary and the bias demonstrated by his letter. Def.’s Br. 12-13. The Defendant answers the Plaintiffs “informed choice” argument by noting that this District has made clear that a state agency’s “rehabilitation counselor must make the final decision on eligibility and the scope of services provided” under Title I. Buchanan,
3. Applying the Standard
The Defendant does not dispute that Millay is disabled, that Millay’s July 22, 2010 IPE is valid, or that the IPE called for Millay to receive training in culinary arts at Job Corps. Instead, the parties dispute whether it was Millay’s choice to attend Job Corps as a commuter, as the Defendant asserts, or whether Job Corps only accepted Millay into its program on the condition that he commute, as the Plaintiff asserts.
Although Brady testified that Job Corps has “on campus housing available for all students,” and she seemed to believe that Job Corps had agreed to accept Millay as an on-campus student, the preponderance of the evidence, including her case notes, indicates otherwise. See, e.g., Hr’g Tr. 17, 19.
Job Corps’s admissions counselor Sam Kunz made it clear to Brady from as early as March of 2010 through September of 2010 that although he supported Millay’s application, he had to convince his superiors that Job Corps should accept Millay. Kunz appears to have been in agreement with the decision made by DBVI education specialist Jones and Millay at their July 27, 2010 meeting that Millay should begin Job Corps as a commuter student. Even Jones testified that the decision reached was to start Millay as a commuter student and see if he could work into becoming a residential student. Millay’s mother testified unequivocally that Job Corps had accepted Millay strictly as a commuter student based on its concerns that it could not guarantee Millay’s safety. Millay’s mother’s testimony on this point is corroborated by Brady’s case notes.
Brady’s notes describe the struggle within Job Corps and between Job Corps and the DBVI over whether Job Corps could accommodate a blind student. A clear picture emerges from a careful reading of the case notes: Job Corps had not accepted Millay as an on-campus student as of his September 27, 2010 start date.
Furthermore, Job Corps administrative services director Landry indicated in October and December of 2010 that Job Corps would not even consider enrolling Millay as a residential student until the DBVI and Job Corps had entered a memorandum of understanding about costs associated with accommodating Millay. When Brady asked for a letter of acceptance for Millay in December of 2010, Landry refused to provide it. Although neither side called any of Job Corps’s employees to testify, it was clearly Millay’s intention to do so. The omission is not fatal to Millay, in large part due to the detailed record created by Brady in her case notes.
The AHO found that “it is not necessary for ... Millay to commute” and that “it is [Millay’s] choice to live at home,” but failed to support these conclusions with citations to the record or persuasive reasoning. Admin. Hr’g Decision 4. More troublingly, the AHO’s decision makes no mention of Brady’s case notes except to report the bare fact that they were admitted into evidence. Brady’s case notes— contemporaneous observations of the events in question,
Giving both Brady’s case notes and the administrative hearing decision their proper weight, the “preponderance of the evidence” supports a different conclusion than that reached by the AHO: that, as of the fall of 2010 and early 2011, when the DBVI rejected Millay’s request for travel expense reimbursement and the AHO upheld its decision, Job Corps was prepared for Millay to attend its culinary arts program as a commuter but not as a residential student.
It is possible, of course, that Millay’s resistance to living on campus was communicated to Job Corps staff and influenced Job Corps’s decision not to admit Millay as a residential student. On the other hand, it is also possible that Millay’s resistance, in the first instance, was a result of information communicated to him by Job Corps staff — that they were not sure that they could safely accommodate his disability and that it might not be wise for someone so vulnerable to live among Job Corps’s harder-edged students. Either way, the crucial fact remains the same: at the time the DBVI rejected Millay’s request for travel reimbursement, the preponderance of the evidence in the record indicates that Millay did not have the “choice” to live on campus even if he wanted to, as Job Corps had by then made an independent decision to admit him only as a commuter.
With that factual predicate settled, this becomes an easy case. Millay’s IPE called for him to attend Job Corps’s culinary arts program. The only way Millay could take advantage of the services called for by his IPE was to travel each day from Surry to Bangor and back. Thus, this case can be distinguished from Title I cases where clients sought to have the state provide money for expensive services though cheaper options that satisfied their IPEs were readily available. Cf. Yochim,
Under Title I and the federal and state regulations promulgated under its authority, commuting was “necessary” for Millay to participate in the Job Corps program called for in his IPE, and the DBVI was obligated to reimburse Millay for his commuting expenses or provide him a more cost-effective way to get to and from school. See, e.g., 29 U.S.C. § 723(a); 34 C.F.R. §§ 361.48, 361.48(h), 361.5(b)(57); 2007 DBVI VRS Rules § 9; Schomstein,
Because the Court decides this case on the basis of the Plaintiffs first argument, it need not address the more difficult questions of whether Millay’s PTSD made it necessary for him to live at home rather than on Job Corps’s campus, whether the DBVI ran afoul of Title I’s “informed choice” provisions, whether the AHO committed reversible error by only considering the 2007 DBVI VRS Rules and not the text of Rehabilitation Act and applicable federal regulations, and how to properly analyze cost-effectiveness under Title I and the 2007 DBVI VRS Rules.
B. Relief
Section 722(c)(5)(J) provides that a district court hearing an appeal of a state agency’s final decision regarding the provision of vocational rehabilitation services “shall grant such relief as the court determines to be appropriate.” 29 U.S.C. § 722(c)(5)(J)(ii)(III). The Plaintiffs second amended complaint requests that the Court order the Defendant to pay equitable reimbursement for the Plaintiffs travel expenses, award prejudgment interest and costs, enjoin the DBVI and its employees from violating the Plaintiffs rights under the Rehabilitation Act in the future, and grant “such other and further relief as may be just and proper.” Second Am. Compl. 5.
The Plaintiff is entitled to equitable reimbursement equivalent to the amount he would have received from the DBVI had it not rejected his request that it pay his travel expenses. Millay v. Me. Dep’t of Labor, No. 1:11-CV-00438-NT,
The evidence in the record about Millay’s travel expenses is both conflicting and incomplete. Brady testified that Job Corps provides commuter students with a daily travel stipend of up to $5.70 per day, but it is unclear whether Millay ever received that stipend.
Earlier in these proceedings, the Plaintiff requested the opportunity to supplement the administrative record with a declaration from Millay’s mother detailing Millay’s travel expenses. PL’s Mot. to Supp. the R. with Inc. Mem. 1-2 (ECF No. 46). The Defendant objected to the request, Def.’s Objection to PL’s Mot. to Supp. the R. (ECF No. 47), and the Magistrate Judge denied the Plaintiffs motion, but only provisionally, noting that additional evidence “might prove appropriate at a later date ... if Millay prevails in this litigation.” Order Re: PL’s Mot. to Supp. the R. 2 (ECF No. 50). As the Magistrate Judge explained, “it is unnecessary to cross that bridge unless and until the court determines that the administrative hearing officer erred in failing to award transportation expenses....” Id. Given the Court’s decision here, that time has now come.
As discussed above, Section 722(c)(5)(J) provides that a district court reviewing a hearing officer’s determination on the administrative record “shall hear additional evidence at the request of a party.” 29 U.S.C. § 722(c)(5)(J)(ii)(II). Though the First Circuit has not construed this provision in Title I, it has interpreted nearly identical language in the IDEA several times, first in Town of Burlington v. Department of Education for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts,
In ruling on motions for witnesses to testify, a court should weigh heavily the important concerns of not allowing a party to undercut the statutory role of administrative expertise, the unfairness involved in one party’s reserving its best evidence for trial, the reason the witness did not testify at the administrative hearing, and the conservation of judicial resources.
The reasons for supplementation will vary; they might include gaps in the administrative transcript owing to mechanical failure, unavailability of a witness, an improper exclusion of evidence by the administrative agency, and evidence concerning relevant events occurring subsequent to the administrative hearing.
Id. at 790; see also Roland M. v. Concord Sch. Comm.,
Here, the Plaintiffs failure to introduce more evidence about his expenses at the due process hearing is neither pernicious nor surprising. At the time the hearing was held, Millay had only been taking classes at Job Corps for a number of weeks. He could not present evidence regarding his April 2011 to April 2012 expenses, because that evidence — which concerns expenses incurred after the due process hearing — did not yet exist. There is no suggestion that Millay withheld evidence from the AHO in any strategic way, nor does the additional evidence Millay offers deal with rehabilitational policy.
Because the Plaintiff has provided a “solid justification” for the additional evidence he offers, Roland M.,
Neither party has briefed whether the Plaintiff is entitled to prejudgment interest, injunctive relief, declaratory relief, or any additional equitable relief. The Clerk is directed to schedule a conference of counsel to discuss what further evidence and briefing may be required to resolve the outstanding issues in this case.
CONCLUSION
With due weight given to the AHO’s findings, the preponderance of the evidence demonstrates that the DBVI erred in failing to reimburse the travel expenses Millay incurred in traveling to and from Job Corps from February 2011 through April 2012. The AHO’s decision is therefore REVERSED. The Court DEFERS RULING on the amount of expenses the DBVI must pay and whether Millay is entitled to any further relief.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Documents in the administrative record variously report Millay's first name as "John,” "Johannes,” and “Yohannes.” The Court refers to him as "John Millay” or “Millay,” though some record documents quoted below refer to him by his other names.
. Hr'gTr. 11, 42-43.
. Id. at 43; Gaffney Letter 1.
. Hr’g Tr. 43, 59; Gaffney Letter 2.
. Hr’g Tr. 43-44, 65; Gaffney Letter 2.
. Hr'g Tr. 44; Gaffney Letter 2.
. Hr'g Tr. 46; Gaffney Letter 2.
. Hr’g Tr. 45; Gaffney Letter 2.
. For the sake of clarity, the Court refers to Joanne Millay as "Millay’s mother.”
. Hr’g Tr. 48, 54, 76.
. Id. at 49-50.
. Id.
. Id. at 78.
. See id. at 11.
. See infra pp. 69-71 (discussion of statutory and regulatory background).
. See id.
. Hr’g Tr. 10.
. Id.; Dep’t Ex. 1 ("Brady Case Notes”), 9/16/09, 1.
. Some documents in the record refer to Job Corps as "JobCorps” (with no space) or "Job Corp” (with no "s”). For the sake of clarity, the references are amended without comment where the Court quotes from these documents.
. Hr’g Tr. 12; Brady Case Notes, 9/16/09, 1-2.
. Hr'g Tr. 16, 51, 55-56; PL’s Ex. 1(a) at 1 (ECF No. 51-1).
. Hr’g Tr. 13-14.
. Id. at 16.
. Id. at 14, 16.
. Id. at 29, 38-39, 53-54, 79, 84.
. Brady Case Notes, 9/16/09, 2.
. Hr’g Tr. 31-32; Brady Case Notes, 10/7/09, 1.
. Gaffney Letter 3.
. Id.; see also Hr’g Tr. 14.
. See Brady Case Notes, 4/17/10, 1; Gaffney Letter 3.
. Brady Case Notes, 4/17/10, 1.
. Some documents in the record refer to Kunz as "Coombs” or "Kuntz.” For the sake of clarity, these incorrect references are amended without comment where the Court quotes from these documents.
. Brady Case Notes, 7/1/2010, 3.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id. at 7/1/2010, 2.
. Id. at 7/1/2010, 1-2.
. Id. at 7/1/2010, 1.
. Id. at 4/17/2010, 1.
. Id. at 4/22/2010, 1.
. See id. at 7/1/2010, 1.
. Id. at 7/1/2010, 1.
. Id.
. Id. at 7/21/10, 1.
. Id.
. The name of Millay’s sister is not found in the record. See Hr’g Tr. 43, 70.
. See Brady Case Notes, 8/3/10, 1; Hr'g Tr. 81.
. Hr'g Tr. 81.
. Dep’t Ex. 3 at 5 ("July 22, 2010 IPE”).
. Brady Case Notes, 8/3/10, 1.
. Id. at 8/3/2010, 2.
. Id. at 8/3/2010, 1.
. Id. at 7/22/2010, 1.
. Id.
. Id.
. The case notes entry describing a September 23, 2010 meeting with Brady, Millay and Millay’s mother states:
[Millay’s mother] stated repeatedly that the decision was made that [Millay] would be a commuter student (the decision made by Jeff Jones/DBVI and Sam Kun2/Job Corps and herself — I was not present at the meeting she talked about) and that I could not disregard that decision and force Johannes to live on campus.
Id. at 9/23/10, 2; see also Hr’g Tr. 23.
. Hr’g Tr. 77.
. Brady Case Notes, 8/25/10, 1.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id. at 9/23/10, 1; see also id. at 8/25/10, 1; id. at 9/15/10, 1.
. Id. at 9/15/10, 1.
. See id.; id. at 8/3/10, 1; Hr'g Tr. 81.
. See Brady Case Notes, 9/15/10, 1; id. at 9/23/10, 1.
. Id. at 9/23/10, 1.
. Def.’s Ex. 4. The Code of Maine Rules sections that make up the current DBVI VRS Rules, available on LexisNexis at 12-150-101 Me.Code. R. §§ 1-10 (LexisNexis 2013), incorporate amendments from January 15, 2013, after the AHO's decision in this case was handed down and after Millay completed the Job Corps program. Defendant's Exhibit 4 reproduces the rules as they existed from October 27, 2007 until January 15, 2013. Citations to the rules refer to the copy of the rules in that exhibit, as they are the version of the rules that govern Millay’s case.
. Hr'g Tr. 20; 2007 DBVI VRS Rules § 9(13)(B).
. Brady Case Notes, 9/23/10, 2-3.
. Id. at 11/1/10, 1; Hr’gTr. 81.
. Brady Case Notes, 11/1/10, 1-3.
. Id. at 11/1/10, 1.
. Id.
. See id. at 11/1/10, 2; id. at 12/3/2010, 2; Hr'g Tr. 82.
. Brady Case Notes, 12/3/10, 2.
. Id.
. Hr'g Tr. 77.
. Hr’g Officer Ex. 1.
. Brady Case Notes, 12/3/10, 1.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
. Gaffney Letter 2-3.
. Id. at 3-4.
. Id. at 4.
. Compare Hr’g Tr. 24 (Brady's testimony that Millay was in the fifth week of the program on April 4, 2011) with Hr’g Tr. 55 (Millay’s testimony that he was in the seventh week of the program on April 4, 2011).
. Hr'gTr. 81.
. Id. at 51-52; 80-81.
. Id. at 80-81.
. Pre-Hr'g Conference Tr. 16, 35. The transcript of Millay’s January 31, 2011 pre-hearing conference appears in the administrative record directly after the transcript of the due process hearing.
. Hr’g Tr. 24.
. Id. at 25; Claimant’s Ex. 4 at 1-2.
. Hr’g Officer Ex. 8.
. Hr’g Officer Ex. 9.
. Id.
. Claimant Ex. 1 at 2.
. Id. at 1.
. Hr’g Officer Ex. 11; Hr’gTr. 1.
. Hr’gTr. 1.
. Id. at 10, 31, 41, 70.
. Id. at 7-9, 65-69, see also Hr’g Officer Exs. 1-11 (documenting procedural history of case); Dep’t Ex. 3 (same); Claimant Exs. 1-2, 6 (same); Dep’t Ex. 1 (Brady’s case notes); Dep’t Ex. 2 (Millay’s July 22, 2010 IPE); Claimant Ex. 4 (Millay’s Job Corps student evaluations); Dep't Ex. 4 (DBVI regulations); Claimant Ex. 3 (DBVI procedural directive).
. Hr’g Tr. 47, 74.
. Id. at 87-89; Gaffney Letter 1.
. Admin. Hr'g Decision 4.
. Id. at 4-5.
. Id. at 5.
. Id.
. Id. at 5.
. Pl.’s Br. Ex. 1(a) (ECF No. 51-1).
. Id. An order issued by the Magistrate Judge (Kravchuk, J.) on April 2, 2013 granted Millay permission to supplement the administrative record in this case with the Job Corps Certificates, which document his graduation. Order Re: Pl.'s Mot. to Supplement the R. (ECF No. 50).
. Under the IDEA, states which receive certain federal funds must provide all age-eligible children a "free appropriate public education.” Lessard v. Wilton Lyndeborough Coop. Sch. Dist.,
. Brady testified that she creates her case notes by sitting down shortly after each meeting she conducts with a client and writing a
. Compare Hr’g Tr. 16 (Brady’s testimony) with Hr'g Tr. 93 (Millay’s mother’s testimony).
. Hr'g Tr. 16-17.
. Id. at 15, 27.
. Id. at 80.
. Id. at 81.
. Id. at 91-92.
. Claimant Ex. 3 at 1.
. Id. at 2, 4.
