Plaintiffs-appellees Kevin W. Murphy (Kevin) and his parents, Janice and Kevin C. Murphy, brought this action under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), 20 U.S.C. § 1400 et seq., 1 to compel defendant-appellant Timberlane Regional School District (Timberlane) to provide Kevin with compensatory education for the two-year period during which he received no educational services due to the failure of the parties to agree upon an appropriate individual educational plan (IEP). The district court ultimately granted summary judgment against Timberlane, and Timberlane appealed. We affirm the district court judgment.
I
BACKGROUND
After incurring an accident-induced disability at an early age, Kevin was determined a disabled individual entitled to special educational services under the IDEA. 2 Several *1188 years later, the Murphy family moved to Plaistow, New Hampshire, which is within the Timberlane Regional School District. In September 1981, Timberlane placed Kevin in a special educational program at Charlotte Avenue School, a public elementary school in Nashua, New Hampshire. Although Kevin’s parents originally agreed to this placement, they soon expressed concerns to his teacher and to Timberlane’s special education administration that Kevin was regressing academically. In December 1981, after Kevin suffered a seizure at home, his parents decided not to return him to school. Kevin received no educational services from Timber-lane between January 1982 and January 1984, the two-year period to which the compensatory education claim at issue in this case relates. Finally, in January 1984, after a great many meetings and an abortive truancy proceeding against Kevin’s father, the parties came to an agreement on Kevin’s placement at Pinkerton High School, where he remained through the 1988-89 school year. 3
In the fall of 1988, Mr. Murphy and Tim-berlane officials had discussions concerning continuation of Kevin’s special education beyond his twenty-first birthday on July 9, 1989. Mr. Murphy later signed Kevin’s 1988-89 IEP with the understanding that Kevin would be provided special educational services beyond age twenty-one. On January 5, 1989, however, the Timberlane school board rejected a request by the Timberlane superintendent to fund continued special education for Kevin. On July 24, 1989, shortly after Kevin’s twenty-first birthday, George Wright, Timberlane’s representative on Kevin’s IEP team, notified the Murphys that Kevin would be discharged as a special education student.
Kevin is now twenty-five years of age and no longer entitled to a free public education under New Hampshire law. See N.H.Rev. StatAnn. § 186-C:9 (disabled “child shall be entitled to continue in an approved program until such time as the child has acquired a high school diploma or has attained the age of 21, whichever occurs first”); see also id. § 186-C:2 (similar). In August 1989, less than one month after Kevin had been discharged, the Murphys requested an administrative hearing. The Murphys maintained that Kevin was entitled to compensatory educational services beyond age twenty-one as a consequence of Timberlane’s failure to provide special education during the two-year period from January 1982 through January 1984. The Murphys specifically alleged that Timberlane had violated the IDEA by failing either to propose an IEP acceptable to all IEP team members or to initiate administrative proceedings to resolve the IEP impasse in accordance with N.H.Code Admin.R.Ed. 1125.01(b)(3)-b (“section 1125”). 4
The administrative hearing officer determined that the Murphys’ claim for compensatory educational services was barred by lach-es. The United States District Court for the District of New Hampshire granted summary judgment in favor of Timberlane, affirming the administrative decision. We vacated the district court decision and remanded for further findings relating to the laches defense.
Murphy I,
II
DISCUSSION
A. Laches
When Timberlane’s laches defense was before us in 1992, we explained that “[t]he equitable doctrine of laches is an affirmative defense that serves as a bar to a claim for equitable relief Vhere a party’s delay in bringing suit was (1) unreasonable, and (2) resulted in prejudice to the opposing party.’ ”
Murphy I,
Timberlane represented to the district court that “most of the primary actors” from the relevant period were unavailable, and that the “memories of critical witnesses had failed.” However, two of these “primary” witnesses (Kevin’s teachers: Martha Kadel and Claudia Libis)
testified
at the district court hearing. A third key witness, Nikolas Sarbanis, resides within the reach of the district court’s subpoena power, yet Timberlane did not produce him. Timberlane rested its “prejudice” showing relating to the other “primary” witness, former Timberlane Superintendent Robert Crompton, solely on its unsupported assertion that he was unavailable. The district court received testimony, however, that Crompton resides in Florida, and Timberlane made no proffer that he was either unable or unwilling to testify.
See Hoover v. Department of Navy,
The district court further found that Tim-berlane had failed to take reasonable steps to refresh its witnesses:
At the [district court] hearing, [six Timber-lane witnesses] testified on ... direct examination as to aspects of their involvement with Kevin’s special education program which they could not remember. On ... cross-examination [by the Murphys’ counsel], however, each acknowledged that [Timberlane] had not shown them relevant documents contained in the record of the instant case, such as transcripts of significant meetings concerning Kevin.
Murphy II,
After reviewing the entire hearing transcript with care, we are persuaded that the rejection of Timberlane’s claim of prejudice was well within the district court’s sound discretion.
See K-Mart Corp.,
B. The Timberlane Motion for Summary Judgment
Following the evidentiary hearing on its laches defense, Timberlane moved for summary judgment on the ground that the present action is time-barred. Reasoning from the absence of an express limitation provision in both the IDEA and the implementing New Hampshire statute,
see
N.H.Rev.StatAnn. § 186-C,
6
the district court ruled that laches alone could provide a temporal limitation on the Murphys’ compensatory education claim.
Murphy II,
(i) The “Borrowing” Methodology
The Supreme Court has described the federal “borrowing” praxis in broad terms: “[w]hen Congress has not established a time limitation for a federal cause of action, the settled practice has been to adopt a local time limitation as federal law if it is not inconsistent with federal law or policy to do so.”
Wilson v. Garcia,
[T]he nature of actions that can be brought under the [IDEA] as well as the Act’s goal of proper education of the handicapped child make the selection of state limitations periods on a case-by-case basis an imperative. The individual case must be characterized by considering the facts, the circumstances, the posture of the case and the legal theories presented.
Janzen v. Knox County Bd. of Educ.,
(ii) The Compensatory Education Claim
First, we must attempt to “characterize the essence of the claim in the pending case, and decide which state statute provides the most appropriate limiting principle.”
Wilson,
The peculiar procedural warp presented in this case seems to us sufficiently important to qualify as a defining feature of the limitation to be borrowed from New Hampshire law. The administrative hearing officer initially ruled that the Murphys’ hearing application was timely under the New Hampshire statute of limitations governing “personal actions” in general,
see
N.H.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 508:4, and therefore that the compensatory education claim should be addressed on the merits. Later, on reconsideration, the hearing officer ruled that the compensatory education claim was barred by laches. The Mur-phys filed a timely appeal to the district court from the administrative ruling on lach-es pursuant to 20 U.S.C. § 1415(e)(2), and the district court upheld the administrative ruling. On appeal, we vacated the district court decision and remanded to the district court for further proceedings.
Murphy I,
The district court convened an evidentiary hearing on laches, and presumably in light of the circumstances of the case — Kevin was approaching his mid-twenties by this point, the litigation had been pending for more than three years, and an extensive district court evidentiary record had already been generat
ed
— the
district court decided to adjudicate the Murphys’ compensatory education claim on the merits
rather than remand to the administrative hearing officer.
See
20 U.S.C. § 1415(e)(2) (courts sitting in review of administrative rulings may supplement the hearing record with additional evidence);
Pihl v. Massachusetts Dept. of Educ.,
This tortuous procedural trail is material to the present inquiry in at least two significant respects. First, in contradistinction to the “typical” IDEA action, this case does not concern the appropriate limitation to be applied to an appeal from a state administrative ruling to a federal district court under 20 U.S.C. § 1415(e)(2), but to the initiation of a request for an “impartial due process” administrative hearing under 20 U.S.C. § 1415(b)(2)
in the first instance. Compare, e.g., Amann,
Thus, the broad equitable considerations and finality concerns generated by the present action — where absent a compensatory education award there can be no “next year” for the disabled individual no longer eligible for free public education — are not ordinarily involved in an appeal to the district court under section 1415(e)(2).
Compare Amann,
(iii) The Appropriate New Hampshire Limitation
Timberlane advocates borrowing the four-year limitation applicable to “Actions to Recover For Bodily Injury” against local governmental units, including school districts.
See
N.H.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 507-B:7 (“RSA 507-B:7”) (amended to three-year period, effective in actions arising after May 17, 1989). An alternate candidate is the New Hampshire statute of limitations which formerly prescribed a six-year limitation on “personal actions” accruing prior to July 1, 1986. N.H.Rev.StatAnn. § 508:4 (“RSA 508:4”) (amended to three-year period, effective in actions arising after July 1,1986). As the present cause of action accrued before RSA 508:4 and RSA 507-B:7 were amended,
see infra
p. 1194, the pre-amendment versions govern.
See Gonsalves v. Flynn,
We think it clear that RSA 507-B:7 does not meet the threshold “like action” test,
see Campbell,
Moreover, certain extraordinary characteristics of the present compensatory education claim point up the appropriateness of the New Hampshire catch-all limitation applicable to “personal actions” generally. Prior to its amendment in 1986, RSA 508:4 stated:
“Except as otherwise provided by law,
all personal actions, except actions for slander or libel, may be brought only within 6 years
*1193
of the time the cause of action accrued.” Although we have found no precise definition of the term “personal actions,” the New Hampshire Supreme Court often has described RSA 508:4 as a “general statute of limitations,”
see, e.g., Petition of Keene Sentinel,
As an IDEA-based claim for compensatory education is similar to a civil rights action, the “borrowing” praxis also may be informed by relevant principles developed in the context of civil actions under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981 and 1983. The Supreme Court has identified a general preference for borrowing state limitations governing personal injury actions,
Wilson,
We next consider whether borrowing RSA 508:4 comports with the purposes underlying the IDEA and the New Hampshire implementing regulation.
See Wilson,
It seems to us no exaggeration to say that Congress placed every bit as much emphasis on compliance with procedures giving parents and guardians a large measure of participation ... as it did upon the measurement of the resulting IEP against a substantive standard.
Board of Educ. v. Rowley,
The core role of procedure in the IDEA setting is well illustrated by Timberlane’s failure to initiate the required administrative proceedings, see N.H.Code Admin.R.Ed. 1125.01(b)(3)-b; supra note 4, to end the IEP impasse in this ease. While parents and school officials dithered and debated, a disabled child with special educational needs *1194 lost day after irreplaceable day of educational opportunity mandated by law. We cannot overlook the reality that a central federal policy underlying the IDEA, and an important feature of the IDEA-implementing scheme adopted in New Hampshire, have both been blunted. Thus, absent a more particular limitation applicable to this extraordinary compensatory education claim, we think it appropriate to borrow the New Hampshire catch-all limitation applicable to personal actions generally. 11
In addition, the more abbreviated the limitation on compensatory education claims the greater the disincentive to parents to shed an adversarial posture and get on with the business of cooperating with school officials to further the special-education needs of the child.
See David D. v. Dartmouth Sch. Comm.,
Finally, as noted above, most IDEA cases involve the borrowing of state statutes of limitations for application to judicial appeals from administrative decisions.
See Amann,
(iv) Accrual
We turn now to the question of accrual, which is governed by federal law.
Hall,
Pinpointing accrual in the present case would pose a complex question, inasmuch as the Murphys’ action challenges an entire course of conduct by Timberlane.
Compare, e.g., Amann,
C. The Murphy Motion for Summary Judgment
As a threshold matter, two arguments advanced by Timberlane on the merits have been foreclosed by our recent decision in
Pihl v. Massachusetts Dep’t of Educ.,
1. Section 1125
The district court held Timberlane liable for failing to fulfill its section 1125 responsibility either to present an acceptable IEP or seek administrative enforcement. The district court simply applied our own straightforward construction of section 1125:
In New Hampshire, if the parents disagree with a proposed IEP and the local educational agency feels it would be in the best interest of the child to implement the IEP, the local agency is required to initiate administrative procedures to obtain permission from a hearing officer to implement the IEP. N.H.Code Admin.R.Ed. 1125.01(b)(3)-b. No such procedures were ever initiated by Timberlane.
Murphy I,
Timberlane’s primary argument on appeal is that an IDEA claim, a federal cause of action, cannot be premised on a violation of a state administrative regulation. 12 Its *1196 argument overlooks the IDEA framework and our ease law. The IDEA invests expansive discretion in the states to structure implementing procedures and enforcement mechanisms, thereby constructively incorporating duly promulgated state regulations:
[S]tate standards, be they substantive or procedural, that exceed the federal basic floor of meaningful, beneficial educational opportunity.... will operate to determine what an appropriate education requires for a particular child in a given state.
Id.
at 789 (footnotes omitted);
accord David D., 775
F.2d at 417 (1st Cir.1985) (it is “beyond cavil that the federal [IDEA] standard explicitly incorporates” certain state standards);
Doe v. Board of Educ. of Tullahoma City Sch.,
We emphasized in
Murphy I
that whereas “parents are entitled to request a hearing if they disagree with an IEP, state regulations impose upon Timberlane not only the right, but the
obligation
to do the same.”
2. Summary Judgment
Lastly, Timberlane claims that genuine issues of material fact precluded summary judgment as to whether: (1) Kevin’s parents were intransigent and at least partly responsible for interrupting Kevin’s education, and (2) the educational services Timberlane provided from 1985 to 1989 were “more than appropriate,” and thus compensated for the educational loss occasioned during 1982-84. The party resisting summary judgment “may not rest upon the mere allegations or denials of the ... pleading, but ... must set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial.” Fed. R.Civ.P. 56(e). There is no trialworthy issue unless there is sufficient competent evidence to enable a finding favorable to the opposing party.
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
A painstaking review of the entire record has not disclosed, nor does Timberlane identify, any evidence sufficient to generate a genuine factual issue as to either contention, *1197 even assuming their materiality. 14 Instead, consistent with its prior strategy, Timberlane elected to try to fend off summary judgment through recourse to Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(f), which permits a party to establish, by affidavit, that evidence which would demonstrate a trialworthy issue is for some valid reason unavailable. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 56; see also James W. Moore et ah, Moore’s Federal Practice ¶¶ 56.22-56.24 (1993). Timberlane relied entirely on its contention, unsubstantiated by the required affidavit, 15 that it needed “an opportunity to conduct discovery to reconstruct [the] chronology [of Kevin’s education] and to fill in critical gaps about events which occurred before, during and after the years in question[,]” and to “depose the out-of-state witnesses.”
The district court rejected Timber-lane’s Rule 56(f) initiative, on the ground that the evidence adduced at the hearing on the laches defense demonstrated that Timberlane had made no serious effort to present its putative evidence. The court accordingly ruled that Timberlane could not take refuge from summary judgment under Rule 56(f) since the memories of its witnesses were available for affidavit purposes in opposition to the Murphys’ motion for summary judgment. The Rule 56(f) determination is reviewed for abuse of discretion.
First Nat’l Bank v. Cities Service Co.,
In March of 1993, more than one month after the evidentiary hearing on the laches defense, the district court entered a scheduling order requiring the parties to submit “law and/or evidence” on the merits of the compensatory education claim — thereby plainly signaling its intention to proceed beyond the procedural defenses interposed by Timberlane. Shortly thereafter the Murphys filed their motion for summary judgment. Thus, although it had clear notice that the district court would proceed to the merits, Timberlane made the strategic decision to persist with its litigation position, viz., that it could not provide evidence because its witnesses (or their memories) were unavailable. The district court did not abuse its discretion by declining to credit or revisit the flawed premise underlying Timberlane’s Rule 56(f) motion.
III
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we uphold the district court order disallowing defendant-appellant’s defenses and affirm the judgment in favor of plaintiffs-appellees.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The IDEA formerly was known as the Education of the Handicapped Act. See Pub.L. 102-119, § 25(b), Oct. 7, 1991, 105 Stat. 607 (substituting "Individuals with Disabilities Education Act” for "Education of the Handicapped Act").
. We relate only the background necessary to an understanding of this appeal. For greater detail, see
Murphy v. Timberlane Regional Sch. Dist.,
As the court explained in Murphy I:
[The IDEA] requires ... participating states [to] adopt policies assuring all students with disabilities the right to a "free appropriate public education.” 20 U.S.C. § 1412(1). New Hampshire has adopted the required policies and attempts to comply with the requirements of the Act.
As defined by [the IDEA], the term "free appropriate public education" refers to the special education and related services that must be provided in conformity with an individualized education program (IEP). 20 U.S.C. § 1401(a)(20). An IEP is a statement of the educational program which must be written for each child and designed to meet each child's unique needs. 20 U.S.C. § 1401(a)(19). The IEP is developed by a team including a qualified representative of the local educational agency, the teacher, the parents or guardian, and, where appropriate, the student. Id. ... An IEP is appropriate under [the IDEA] if it provides instruction and support services which are reasonably calculated to confer educational benefits to the student. Board of Education v. Rowley,458 U.S. 176 , 203-07,102 S.Ct. 3034 , 3049-51,73 L.Ed.2d 690 (1982); Abrahamson v. Hershman,701 F.2d 223 , 226-27 (1st Cir.1983).
[The IDEA] further requires states to establish and maintain certain procedures "to assure that children with disabilities and their parents or guardians are guaranteed procedural safeguards with respect to the provision of free appropriate public education." 20 U.S.C. § 1415(a). Parents who believe that a pro *1188 posed IEP is inappropriate are entitled to an impartial due process hearing. 20 U.S.C. § 1415(b)(2). Any party aggrieved by the decision of the administrative hearing officer may appeal to either state or federal court. 20 U.S.C. § 1415(e)(2).
Murphy I,
. Although briefly placed in two different schools for evaluation, in June 1982 and October-November 1983, Kevin was not returned to a permanent educational setting until January 1984.
. Section 1125 states:
If the parent(s) inform the district of their disagreement, or if they fail to make a decision within the specified time frame, it shall be interpreted as disagreement with the decision or action proposed by the local school district's Special Education Evaluation/Placement Team. If the Local Education Agency feels its action or decision should, in the best interests of the student, he implemented, the Local Education Agency shall initiate its right of due process as specified in the Complaint and Impartial Due Process Hearing Procedures Section of the Standards to obtain the authority to implement its decision, (emphasis added).
. Because the district court conducted a preliminary hearing at which the parties were allowed to present evidence,
see
Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(d), "abuse of discretion” is the appropriate standard of review,
see Rivera-Gomez v. de Castro,
. New Hampshire has since adopted a limitations scheme specifically applicable to special education claims. See N.H.Rev.StatAnn. § 186-C:16-b (effective June 30, 1992).
. The thirty-day limitation borrowed in Bow appears to have been supplanted by a newly enacted limitation scheme, applicable exclusively in the special education context. The new provision prescribes a 120-day limitation on any "appeal from a final administrative decision in a special education due process hearing to a court of competent jurisdiction.” N.H.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 186-C:16-b IV.
. Even if the present claim were somehow considered tort-based, the required "borrowing" methodology does not encourage recourse to state limitations tailored to curtail public liability.
See, e.g., Wilson,
.
See James v. Nashua Sch. Dist.,
. We need not address any impact that amended RSA 508:4 (three-year period), or newly enacted RSA § 186-C:16-b, may have either on the present analysis or on earlier case law relating to “borrowing" in civil rights actions under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981 and 1983.
. The availability of compensatory education as a remedy under the IDEA — the one form of IDEA relief that holds any potential for redressing this deprivation — has only recently been recognized in this Circuit,
see Pihl,
. Timberlane also argues that section 1125 is invalid because it imposes on the school district obligations beyond those authorized either by the IDEA or the New Hampshire implementing statute. Neither argument is persuasive. First, the IDEA and its companion regulations merely es
*1196
tablish foundational requirements — states may impose more stringent procedural and substantive requirements.
See Burlington,
. Timberlane’s misconceptions about the IDEA are betrayed, as much as anything, by the contention that its institution of truancy proceedings should be considered the rough equivalent of the administrative adjudication required under section 1125. Even assuming that Timberlane had done something more than merely file the truancy petition, a coercive adversarial proceeding against a parent is no substitute for a substantive review of the special educational needs of the handicapped child.
. The first hurdle confronting Timberlane, of course, is that parental intransigence would not absolve the school district of its responsibility under section 1125. Indeed, section 1125 targets intransigence.
See Murphy I,
. Given that the district court had already rejected essentially these same contentions, advanced in support of Timberlane’s laches defense,
see supra
pp. 1189-90, the failure to comply with the Rule 56(f) affidavit requirement was no mere technical lapse.
See Hebert v. Wicklund,
