MEMORANDUM OPINION
This сase is before the Court on the defendants’ motion to dismiss the complaint, pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.Proc. 12(b)(6). The defendants allege that the relief sought by the plaintiffs is barred by the applicable statutes of limitation. For the reasons set forth below, the Court agrees and grants the motion to dismiss.
Factual Background
A. Allegations of Underlying Complaint
Plaintiff Amanda Richards is a resident оf Fairfax County, Virginia, who suffers from severe learning disabilities. Because of her disability and as a resident of Fair-fax County, Amanda is entitled under the Education for All Handicapped Children Act of 1975, as amended (renamed the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act but hereinafter referred to as the “EHA”), 20 U.S.C. §§ 1400-85, and under Virginia law, Va.Code Ann. §§ 22.1-213 to 22.1-221, to rеceive a “free appropriate public education” within the meaning of the EHA from Defendant Fairfax School Board (“FCSB”). Specifically, the plaintiffs (Amanda’s parents are also plaintiffs in this action) allege that when the defendants awarded Amanda her high school diploma on June 15, 1989 and informed Amаnda and her parents that their obligation to provide her with special education services had terminated, that they violated their duty under law to provide Amanda with a free appropriate public education. Essentially, they claim that Amanda was not ready to graduate and that the defendants оnly promoted her to discharge their obligation to continue her education.
Amanda and her parents further contend that the defendants failed to satisfy their duties, pursuant to 20 U.S.C. § 1415 and the Virginia Regulations Governing Special Education (the “Virginia Regulations”), to provide them with adequate notification and procedural mechanisms to challenge the change in Amanda’s placement and the concurrent cessation of her special educational benefits.
B. Summary of Events Relating to Statute of Limitations Dispute
The plaintiffs admit that they knew as early as August 1988 that Amanda was going to graduate in June of the following year. (Am.Compl. at para. 54). They allege, however, that they did not know at thаt time, or even upon being informed by the FCSB at the time of Amanda’s graduation that her benefits were being terminated, that high school graduation constituted a “change in educational placement” that triggered certain procedural safeguards under federal and state law.
The plaintiffs contend that they did nоt discover that their procedural rights had been violated until November 23, 1990, when they received a letter from the Assistant Secretary of the United States Department of Education which explicitly stated that high school graduation is considered a “change in placement” subject to certain EHA procеdural safeguard provisions. {Id. at para. 76).
On February 23, 1991, Amanda’s mother filed an administrative complaint with the Virginia Department of Education (“VA DOE”), pursuant to the Education Division General Administrative Education Regulations (“EDGAR”), 34 C.F.R. § 76.780 (and Section II.B.3 of the Virginia Regulations), against the Fairfax County Public Schools (“FCPS”). Plaintiff Patti Richards requested that the VA DOE “[immediately take whatever action is necessary to ensure that FCPS complies with all process and procedural safeguards required by state and Federal law and regulations in the matter of [Amanda’s] graduation.” {Id. at para. 79). The VA DOE, on June 20, 1991, issued a Letter of Findings stating that the FCPS had, in fact, complied with both state and federal law when it terminated special education benefits to Amanda in June 1989.
The plaintiffs brought this action on June 19, 1992.
Legal Analysis
A. The EHA and Parallel State Law Claims are Time Barred by the Applicable Statutes of Limitations
1. The EHA Claims are Time Barred
The appropriate period of limitations for actions brought under the EHA is one year.
Schimmel v. Spillane,
Federal law determines accrual of a federal action, even if the statute of limitations is borrowed from state law.
Cox v. Stanton,
The injury alleged in this case is premature denial of special education benefits and the failure to provide certain procedurаl safeguards prior to that denial. The plaintiffs knew of the facts that gave rise to this injury, whether or not they knew they were actionable, on June 15, 1989, when the FCPS informed Amanda’s parents that she would no longer receive special education services. On November 23, 1990, when they received a letter from the Assistant Secretary of Education informing them that the FCPS had not complied with federal law, the plaintiffs may have for the first time definitively learned that their injury was redressable at law, but they had long since known of the injury itself. This lawsuit was not filed until June 19, 1992, over three years from the date that the plaintiffs first learned “of the injury or the event that is the basis for their claim”—the denial of further benefits to Amanda. Thus, Claims for Relief 3 and 4 in the Amended Complaint are barred by the one-year statute of limitations set forth by Schimmel, supra, for evaluating the timeliness of EHA claims.
2. The Parallel State Law Claims are Time Barred
The plaintiffs also allege that the defendants failed to comply with the Virginia Regulations when they issued a diploma and ceased offering special еducation services to Amanda on June 15, 1989. The Regulations contain a one-year statute of limitations for filing a lawsuit in either federal or state court, after available administrative remedies have been exhausted. (Virginia Regulations at § 3.5A.llb). Since, as noted above, the plaintiffs chose not to exhaust thеir administrative remedies, this one-year period is properly measured from the time the cause of action accrued. Certainly, a party which fails to exhaust its administrative remedies should not be permitted to fare better under the statute of limitations than one who utilizes the administrative mechanisms put at her disposal to the fullest extent possible.
Under Virginia law, a cause of action accrues on the date that the party has a right to bring the asserted action.
Boykins Narrow Fabrics Corp. v. Weldon Roofing & Sheet Metal, Inc.,
3. Plaintiffs’ Attempts to Characterize This Action as an Administrative Appeal are Without Merit
Despite the plaintiffs’ admission in their Amended Complaint that they failed to exhaust their administrative remedies, they now assert that by writing a letter of complaint to the Virginia Department of Education requesting an investigation, pursuant to the Education Division General Administrative Education Regulations (“EDGAR”), 34 C.F.R. § 76.780, they have in fact adequately pursued administrative relief, such that the limitations period should have begun to run on June 20, 1991, when that complaint was resolved. This contention is without legal merit.
The EHA and Virginia Regulations create an extensive system for the administrative hearing of claims alleging the denial of a free appropriate public education. 20 U.S.C. § 1415; Va.Code Ann. § 22.1-214. These statutes рrovide for a formal, adjudicatory hearing before an impartial hearing officer, and the right of parties aggrieved by the outcome of the hearing process to appeal to federal or state court. Id. The plaintiffs elected not to avail themselves of these administrative procedures. Rather, over 21 months after Amanda’s graduation, they initiated an unrelated administrative complaint process pursuant to EDGAR. Not only is this procedure nowhere set forth in the EHA, but it is different in purpose, scope and procedure from the administrative relief provided for under the statute, and provides no statutory entitlement to sue a local school system, or its officials, in federal court.
The United States Supreme Court has held that the EHA is a comprehensive statute in which “Congress intended handicapped children with constitutional claims to a free appropriate education to pursue thosе claims through the
carefully tailored administrative and judicial mechanism set out in the statute.” Smith v. Robinson,
Neither of the plaintiffs’ theories, the one it pleaded and the one it advances now, rescue their claims from the applicable statutes of limitations. If, as their amended complaint claims, the plaintiffs did not exhaust their administrative remedies, the cause of action is time barred because it accrued on June 19, 1989, almost three years before the complaint in this action was filed. Resort to the procedures for initiating a complaint under the EDGAR procedures, which the plaintiffs now claim is sufficient to exhaust their remedies under the EHA, is not a suitable substitute
B. The Claim under the Rehabilitation Act is Time Barred
The plaintiffs contend that the two-year limitations period for personal injury actions in Virginia should govern their claim under the Rehabilitation Act, 29 U.S.C. § 794 (the “RHA”). (Mem.Opp. Def s Mot. to Dismiss at 28-30). The defendants argue that the Court should instead use the one-year limitations period contained in the Virginia Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, Va.Codе Ann. §§ 51.5-40
et seq.,
in accordance with the Western District of Virginia’s opinion in
Eastman v. Virginia Polytechnic Inst.,
The Court need not resolve this dispute. Even using the limitations period proposed by the plaintiffs, the claim is time barred. A cause of action accrues under federal law when the plaintiff knows or has reason to know of the
injury
which is the basis of the action.
Cox v. Stanton,
C. The Claim under Section 1983 is Time Barred
The parties agree that the applicable statute of limitations under Section 1983 is two years. They also agree that a claim under Section 1983 accrues when the plaintiff knows or should have known of the alleged injury, not when she becomes aware that such injury might be redressable under Section 1983. Thus, because the Court holds that their cause of action accrued on June 15, 1989, when Amanda’s parents were informed that their daughter would no longer receive special education at public expense, the plaintiffs’ Section 1983 claim is time barred, as well.
Conclusion
The Court is not without compassion for the plaintiffs in this case, but cannot allow them to circumvent the unyielding requirements of the applicable statutes of limitation by characterizing their cause of action as an “appeal” from a state administrative decision wholly unrelated to the administrative requirements of the EHA. Such a theory is contradicted by the plaintiffs’ contention in their complaint that they purposefully failed to pursue their administrative remedies under the EHA аnd, in any event, is without a sound basis in law. Thus, the defendants’ motion to dismiss is granted.
It is so ORDERED.
Notes
. The
Schimmel
Court borrowed the one-year statute of limitations from Va.Code Ann. § 8.01-248, which provides the limitations period for all personal actions when a specific time frame
. Severаl courts have held that district courts have the authority to grant relief in lieu of exhaustion if pursuit of administrative remedies would be "futile or inadequate.”
See Smith v. Robinson,
