Appellant Christopher Amann is a child with learning disabilities who lives in Stow, Massachusetts. Appellant Richard Amann is Christopher’s father. Christopher began to attend public school in Stow in 1983. Because he suffered from learning disabilities, the Town was obligated under the Individuals With Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), 20 U.S.C. § 1400 et seq., to produce an “individualized education program” (IEP) for him, and to review and update the IEP annually.
See generally Amann v. Stow School System,
In 1990, at the request of Christopher’s parents, Stow came up with a new IEP that called for Christopher to return to the Stow public schools. The Amanns rejected this IEP and challenged its adequacy in a hearing before the Massachusetts Bureau of Special Education Appeals (BSEA). See 20 U.S.C. § 1415(b)(2) (requiring administrative “due process hearing” of complaints about IEPs). The BSEA hearing officer decided that Stow’s proposed IEP was legally adequate.
Section 1415(e)(2) of the IDEA authorizes parties aggrieved by agency decisions concerning the adequacy of an IEP to bring a civil action in either state or federal court, seeking "such relief as the court determines is appropriate.” The Amanns challenged the BSEA’s procedures and findings in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts. The district court affirmed the validity of the IEP, and we did the same on appeal.
Amann v. Stow School System,
As was its duty under the IDEA, see 20 U.S.C. § 1414(a)(5) (requiring annual review and, if appropriate, revision of IEP), Stow prepared a new educational plan to cover the period March 1991-March 1992. *931 This IEP, like its predecessor, called for Christopher to attend public schools in Stow. The Amanns rejected this IEP, too, and again sought review before the BSEA. In a decision dated September 9, 1991, the BSEA hearing officer ruled that Stow’s 1991-1992 IEP was adequate. On May 21, 1992, the Amanns filed this action in the district court. The district court dismissed the complaint as untimely. This appeal followed. We affirm.
I
The IDEA, like many federal statutes, does not set a time limit for lawsuits brought under its terms. “In such situations we do not ordinarily assume that Congress intended that there be no time limit on actions at all; rather, our task is to ‘borrow’ the most suitable statute or other rule of timeliness from some other source. We have generally concluded that Congress intended that the courts apply the most closely analogous statute of limitations under state law,”
DelCostello v. International Brotherhood of Teamsters,
The district court, relying on Judge Kee-ton’s decision in
Gertel v. School Committee of Brookline School District,
II
Except to suggest that the
Gertel
decision “set an improper precedent,” the appellants do not seriously contest the district court’s choice of a limitations period. The appropriate limitations period for IDEA actions, however, is a question of first impression in this circuit, and the issue has not elsewhere generated a harmonious judicial response. Several courts, like the district court here, have applied the short (generally 30-day) limitations periods found in state administrative procedure acts, ruling both that state administrative procedure laws are analogous to Section 1415(e)(2), and that their relatively brief limitations periods are consistent with the IDEA’S goal of prompt resolution of disputes over the educational placement of learning-disabled children.
Spiegler v. District of Columbia,
We conclude that the district court correctly borrowed Massachusetts’ thirty-day limitations period for actions under its Administrative Procedure Act. Since the arguments on both sides have been well-rehearsed in the cases cited — and since the appellants have offered only a perfunctory *932 challenge to the district court’s choice — we will attempt to state our reasons briefly.
The Massachusetts Administrative Procedure Act (APA) contains the “most analogous” state law cause of action to the civil action authorized by Section 1415(e)(2). Like the Massachusetts courts operating under M.G.L. c. 30A, § 14, courts reviewing agency decisions under the IDEA will rely primarily on the administrative record,
see Burlington v. Department of Education,
The short limitations period of the Massachusetts APA is fully consistent with one goal of the IDEA: the quick disposition of disputes about a handicapped child’s educational placement. “[S]peedy resolutions to the IEP and placement disputes that characterize § 1415(e)(2) actions are necessary for such resolutions to serve any substantively useful purposes,”
Bow School District v. Quentin W,
It is true that the thirty-day limitations period may to some extent frustrate a competing goal: parental involvement in enforcing the IDEA’S requirements. But the imposition of
any
statute of limitations will to some extent favor “policies of repose” over “substantive policies of enforcement,”
Wilson v. Garcia,
The potentially harsh effects of a short limitations period, moreover, are mitigated in this context by three factors which, taken together, so narrow any “inconsistency” with the goal of parental involvement as to permit application of the most analogous state law.
Cf. Occidental Life Insurance Co. v. EEOC,
First, the IDEA instructs school authorities to give parents notice “of all procedures available pursuant to this section.” 20 U.S.C. § 1415(b)(1)(D). Several courts have interpreted this provision to require notice of any applicable limitations period, in order to ensure that parents who go through the administrative proceedings without the aid of a lawyer do not lose their right to judicial review merely out of ignorance of the law.
See Spiegler,
*933
Second, the parents’ only obligation during the thirty-day period is to decide whether to sue under Section 1415(e)(2), a decision they need make only
after
the issues have been defined, the dispute has been heard, and a record has been created in the administrative forum. Thus, parents contemplating action under the IDEA — like parties considering action under the Massachusetts APA — do not bear the same preli-tigation burdens of factual investigation and legal research that face, say, a party who has just suffered or discovered an injury and is thinking about filing a lawsuit. Cf
. Burnett v. Grattan,
Finally, the IDEA requires that IEPs be reviewed and revised at least annually, 20 U.S.C. § 1414(a)(5), and, as the Amanns’ own experience shows, allows parents to begin litigating afresh over the merits of each new IEP. Parents who, despite notice of the limitations period, “sleep on their rights,” therefore, will lose no more than the educational placement for a single school year, and will not have to wait long for a new opportunity to participate in the development, implementation — and if needed, administrative and judicial review — of their child’s educational plan.
See Spiegler,
Ill
The Amanns contend that, even if thirty days is the right limitations period for IDEA actions in Massachusetts, the time bar should not have operated to deny them a lawsuit here. They give three reasons for this conclusion.
First, the Amanns argue that they received inadequate notice of the thirty-day limit. As we have already described, the IDEA directs the states to “fully inform the parents ... of all procedures available,” 20 U.S.C. § 1415(b)(1)(D), and some courts have held “that this requirement imposes a duty ... to give, at the time a final administrative decision is rendered, clear notice of the availability of judicial review and of the 30-day limitations period.”
Spiegler,
The Amanns concede that the BSEA gave them notice of the thirty-day limitations period at the time it rendered a decision. Attached to the September 9, 1991 decision was a document entitled “Effect of Decision and Rights of Appeal,” which stated:
Any party aggrieved by the Bureau decision may file a complaint in the Superior Court of competent jurisdiction or in the District Court of the United States for Massachusetts for review of the Bureau decision. 20 U.S.C. s. 1415(e)(2). Under Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 30A, Section 14(1), appeal of a final Bureau decision must be filed within 30 days of receipt of the decision.
We agree with the district court in
Ger-tel
that the notice given here, though “not a model of careful drafting ... was sufficient.”
Gertel,
The Amanns’ second argument is that the defendants are estopped from raising a limitations defense to this action, which challenges the 1991-92 IEP, by virtue of their failure to assert the limitations bar as a defense to the Amanns’ previous IDEA action, which challenged the adequacy of the 1990-91 IEP.
The simple response is that the defendants to the previous action could not have made a limitations defense. M.G.L. c. 30A, § 14(1) starts the limitations clock running upon “receipt of notice of the final decision of the agency or if a petition for rehearing has been timely filed with the agency, within thirty days after receipt of notice of agency denial of such petition for rehearing.” The Amanns filed a motion for a rehearing of the BSEA’s 1990 decision.
Amann v. Stow School System,
Finally, the Amanns say that the new limitations period should not be “retroactively applied” to their case. But the practice of making judicial decisions “fully retroactive, applying both to the parties before the court and to all others by and against whom claims may be pressed ... is overwhelmingly the norm, and is in keeping with the traditional function of the courts to decide cases before them based upon their best current understanding of the law.”
James B. Beam Distilling Co. v. Georgia,-U.S. -, -, 111 S.Ct.
2439, 2443,
The Supreme Court has, on occasion, made an exception to the rule of retroactivity. Under
Chevron Oil Co. v. Huson,
This is not such a case. The Supreme Court has declined to apply new limitations rules retroactively where to do so would be “to bar an action that was timely under binding Circuit precedent.”
Lampf Pleva, Lipkind, Prupis & Petigrow v. Gilbertson,
- U.S. -, -,
But the Court
has
applied new limitations rules retroactively where to do so would not “overturn[] the reasonable expectations of a party.”
Rowlett v. Anheuser-Busch, Inc.,
Here, as in Goodman, there was “no clear precedent” favoring a longer limitations period on which the appellants can claim to have relied while deciding whether to file suit under the IDEA between September 1991 and May 1992. This court had not then decided the limitations issue, the circuits that had done so were split, and the only existing decisional law among the dis *935 trict courts in this circuit pointed to a thirty-day limitations period.
As to the remaining
Chevron
factors, the appellants have not identified, and we do not see', how retroactive application would hinder the operation of the thirty-day limitations rule or the administration of the IDEA. This is not a case like
Linkletter v. Walker,
Because we affirm the dismissal on the merits, we again need not decide whether Mr. Amann, a non-lawyer acting
“pro se,”
was capable of representing his son on appeal.
See Amann v. Stow School System,
Affirmed.
