An impartial review officer, acting under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (“IDEA”), 20 U.S.C. § 1400 et seq., found that the Providence School Department owed benefits to a special needs student, Ana C., for parts of the years 1990 through 1992. The School Department sought review in the United States District Court within thirty days of receiving that decision, consistent with the time periods contained in the state Administrative Procedures Act (“APA”). The district court dismissed the claim as untimely, finding that federal law borrowed a different state limitations period, one which uses issuance of a decision, not receipt of a decision, to trigger the thirty day period. 1 We reverse the dismissal.
I.
The essential facts are not in dispute. Ana C., a mentally retarded minor, is entitled to receive special educational services under the IDEA. Ana lived in Providence, Rhode Island from August 1989 to November 1992, and she was entitled to 230 days of special education services per year under the Rhode Island Board of Regents’ Regulations Governing the Special Education of Children with Disabilities (the “Regulations”).
Ana sought a hearing. On August 30, 1995, an impartial hearing officer for the Rhode Island Department of Education (“RIDE”) decided that, because Ana lived out of state, she could not receive the 150 days. The officer was not an employee of the school district or a member of the school committee, in accordance with 20 U.S.C. § 1415(b)(2) and section 7 of the Regulations.
Ana, then age fourteen, appealed the hearing officer’s decision pursuant to 20 U.S.C. § 1415(e) and section 9 of the Regulations. An impartial review officer reversed. As required by section 10 of the Regulations, that officer was not an employee of the Rhode Island Department of Education or a member of the Rhode Island Board of Regents. His decision, dated January 23,1996, awarded Ana compensation for 150 days of special education from the Department, despite her Pennsylvania residency.
The review officer’s decision was forwarded to the Office of Special Needs of the RIDE and was received on January 26,1996. The RIDE then forwarded the decision to counsel for Ana and to the School Department. Though the precise date of the forwarding is unclear, the School Department did not receive the decision until February 7, 1996.
The Providence School Department, pursuant to 20 U.S.C. § 1415(e)(2), filed its complaint challenging the final agency decision in the United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island on March 4,1996. Ana then moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground that it was filed forty-one days after the state review officer issued his decision. This, Ana argued, exceeded the thirty days from issuance allowed by law and was thus untimely.
Accepting the report and recommendation of a United States Magistrate Judge, the district court granted Ana’s motion and dismissed the School Department’s complaint. Although section 1415(e)(2) does not specify a limitations period, the Supreme Court has directed federal courts to “apply the most closely analogous statute of limitations under state law,”
DelCostello v. International Bhd. of Teamsters,
The School Department appeals, arguing that the most analogous state limitations statute is the Rhode Island APA, R.I. Gen. Laws § 42-35-15, under which the thirty day limitations period begins to run from the date of receipt rather than the date of issuance.
See Bayview Towing, Inc. v. Stevenson,
II.
This case presents a pure issue of law. Our review of a grant of a motion to dismiss is
de novo. Glassman v. Computervision Corp.,
In enacting the IDEA, Congress contemplated that there would be judicial review of the decisions of the review officer, but did
For similar reasons, the Rhode Island APA governs the limitations period for judicial review in this case. The Rhode Island APA, like the Massachusetts APA, confínes review to the record or, in cases of alleged procedural irregularity, to proof in court of those irregularities. R.I. Gen. Laws § 42-35 — 15(f). The reviewing court “shall not substitute its judgment for that of the agency as to weight of the evidence on questions of fact.”
Id.
§ 42-35-15(g). The court “may reverse or modify the [agency] decision if substantial rights of the appellant have been prejudiced” in a manner consistent with the usual grounds for reversal on judicial review of an administrative agency.
Id.
The character of the hearings under both the Rhode Island APA and the IDEA is essentially one of review.
Cf. Board of Educ. v. Rowley,
The district court focused on the provisions of R.I. Gen. Laws § 16-39-3.1. By its literal terms, that section is not a judicial review provision for an aggrieved party but a finality and enforcement provision for the prevailing party where no review was available or was sought:
Enforcement of final decisions — All final decisions made after a hearing by the commissioner of elementary and secondary education or the board of regents for elementary and secondary education, and which are not subject to further judicial or administrative review, shall be enforceable by mandamus or any other suitable civil action in the superior court for Providence County at the request of any interested party. All such decisions of the commissioner and board shall become final if judicial or further administrative review is not properly sought within thirty (30) days of their issuance.
Id. § 16-39-3.1.
Even assuming that section 16-39-3.1 is a judicial review provision, this section of Rhode Island law is not the most analogous to the federal scheme. The decision at issue was made by an impartial review officer (not by one of the officials listed). See Regulations § 10 (impartial review officer may not be the Commissioner or an employee of the Rhode Island Department of Elementary and Secondary Education); see also 20 U.S.C. § 1415(b)(2) (impartial due process hearing officer may not be an employee of the state educational agency). The decision was also subject to further judicial or administrative review.
As a matter of federal law, the administrative decision here is more similar to those governed by section 16-39-4, which expressly states that any aggrieved party may obtain judicial review “as provided in chapter 35 of title 42.” Chapter 35 of title 42 is the Rhode Island APA. Chapter 39 itself is concerned with “[p]arties having any matter of dispute between them arising under any law relating to schools or education.” R.I. Gen. Laws § 16-39-1. The federal district court for the district of Rhode Island had previously noted that section 16-39-4 applies to eases involv
In holding that the APA does not apply, the opinion in the trial courts relied on a different chapter of the education laws, chapter 60. Chapter 60 establishes the Board of Regents for Elementary and Secondary Education and defines its duties. Chapter 60 contains a provision exempting itself from the provisions of the APA. Rhode Island General Laws section 16-60-10 states that “the provisions of the Administrative Procedures Act, chapter 35 of title 42, shall not apply to this chapter.”
Federal law requires that we look to the most closely analogous statute of limitations, and the review procedures which have been applied to chapter 60 are not analogous to the review provisions of the IDEA Under section 16-60-10, review of decisions of the Board of Regents is by writ of certiorari.
Pawtucket Sch. Comm. v. Board of Regents for Elementary and Secondary Educ.,
Any party aggrieved by the findings and decision made under subsection (b) of this section [providing for first level of administrative review] who does not have the right to an appeal under subsection (e) [providing for impartial review of the hearing officer’s decision], and any party aggrieved by the findings and decision under subsection (c), shall have the right to bring a civil action with respect to the complaint presented pursuant to this section....
20 U.S.C. § 1415(e)(2) (emphasis added); see
also Doe v. Anrig,
The adoption of the district court’s position would pose another problem under federal law, which we describe, but which we need not resolve in light of our holding. Under that position, parents or school systems seeking to appeal from decisions by impartial review officers acting pursuant to the IDEA would effectively have less than thirty days within which to seek judicial review. That is because the finality provision of section 16-39-3.1 starts the clock running from the date a decision is issued. Here the parties did not receive the review officer’s decision until approximately fifteen days after the date of that decision, and thirteen days after it was received by the RIDE. Thus, about half of the thirty days had elapsed before the parties even knew of the decision. The delay occurred because the hearing officer forwarded the decision to the state Department of Special Education, which then forwarded it to the parties. Bureaucracies being what they are, some delay is inevitable. Whether less than thirty days to seek review would be inconsistent with the IDEA’S goal of parental involvement is a serious issue.
3
See, e.g.,
20 U.S.C. § 1415(b)(1)(D) (requiring school authorities to give parents notice of pertinent procedures);
see also Amann,
Finally, even if we were to choose the applicable statute of limitations based solely on the requirements of state law, it is far from clear that chapter 60 is applicable here. By its terms, this exclusion from the APA applies only to chapter 60, and not to the provisions of chapter 39 on which the Provi-
It may be true that, under certain circumstances, as a matter of Rhode Island law, review of decisions pursuant to chapter 39 is not governed by the APA. There is case law suggesting that judicial review of a Board of Regents decision is only available through a writ of certiorari.
See D’Ambra
v.
North Providence Sch. Comm.,
For these reasons, we hold that the Rhode Island APA, R.I. Gen. Laws § 42-35-15, including the statute of limitations and triggering event it sets forth, is the most closely analogous statute under state law and therefore applies to IDEA appeals from Rhode Island.
4
Because the School Department’s notice of appeal fell within the Rhode Island APA limitations period, the decision of the district court dismissing the case is reversed, and the case is remanded for prompt disposition. “The legislative history, statutory terms, and regulatory framework of the IDEA all emphasize promptness as an indispensable element of the statutory scheme.”
Amann,
Notes
. Because the enactment of the IDEA preceded the enactment of 28 TJ.S.C. § 1658, the IDEA is unaffected by that establishment of a four year statute of limitations for all federal causes of action lacking a specific limitations period. Id.
. The Department did not argue that the "issuance” of the decision was the date it was sent to the parties, rather than the date the review officer submitted it to the state agency to send to the parties. Accordingly, we do not consider that point.
. The parties advise us that the hearing officers are now told to mail their decisions directly to the parties. Even so, the mail takes time, which again cuts into the thirty day limitations period.
. In light of this ruling, the Rhode Island Department of Elementary and Secondary Education may wish to reconsider the language it uses on its notice of decision: "The Rhode Island Department of Education does not set a time frame to bring civil action, and defers that issue to the court in which appellant seeks jurisdiction.”
Cf. Spiegler v. District
of
Columbia,
