Thе Waukegan School District of Illinois appeals the district court’s granting of a preliminary injunction preventing the expulsion of Rodiriecus L. from middle school, pursuant to the stay-put provisions of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, 20 U.S.C. § 1415(e)(3). We reverse and remand.
I. FACTS
Rodiriecus L. was born on June 7, 1981. In August 1993, after a juvenile adjudication where Rodiriecus admitted to robbery, guardianship of the child was transferred from his mother to the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) who placed him in a residential program. In October 1994, for reasons unrevealed in the record, Rodiriecus’s mother received custody of the child (although DCFS remained as guardian) and he was enrolled in the seventh grade at Abbott Middle School, in Waukegan, Illinois. In Rodiriecus’s first three months at the school, he was disciplined five times for acts described in the record as “insubordination” or “lack of respect” for othеrs. Each time, Rodiriecus was sent to the school’s “Alternative Learning Center” for a day.
On November 1, 1994, several teachers at Abbott Middle School reported that cash had been stolen from locked classrooms the night before. Also, a set of master keys to the classrooms was reported as missing from a desk in the principal’s office. In early January 1995, a number of additional thefts from locked classrooms occurred at the school. On January 25, 1995, a teacher and a security guard at the school discovered Rodiriecus in possession of a master key to the classrooms. After meeting with the school principal, Rodiriecus was turned over to the custody of the Waukegan Police Department. At the police station, Rodiriecus made a voluntary, written confession, admitting to taking the master key from the principal’s office after schоol in November and using the key to enter the classrooms at night to pilfer the teachers’ desks. The next day, January 26, the principal received the police report and suspended Rodiriecus from school for ten days. The principal recommended to the school board that they initiate proceedings to expel Rodiriecus for the remainder of the school year as punishment for the confessed thievery.
On February 15, Rodiriecus’s DCFS caseworker contacted the school board, suggesting that Rodiriecus might be disabled and suffering from an emotional disorder and that he should undergo a special education case study pursuant to the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act and Illinois Administrative Code. On February 16, Rodirie-cus’s attorney requested a due process hearing and demanded that Rodiriecus remain in school pending the results of the hearing. The loсal Waukegan school board initiated a
Eight days thereafter, on February 28, Rodiriecus L. filed suit in federal district court, seeking a preliminary injunction to compel the school district to allow Rodiriecus to return to school, pursuant to the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (“IDEA” or the “Act”). Rodiriecus asserted that under the Act, because he was being evaluated for special education purposes, the school district was prohibited from expelling him from school. The district сourt issued a temporary restraining order in March 1995 ordering the school district to allow Rodiriecus to return to school. After the court denied the school district’s motion to dissolve the temporary restraining order, the order was extended in effect through April and May to allow briefing for a preliminary injunction. In April 1995, the local school board held a “multi-disciplinary conference” and evaluated Rodiriecus, determining that Rodiriecus was not disabled and did not require special education. Although neither Rodiriecus nor the DCFS attended the conference, the school psychologist, the school nurse, three teachers, and a certified language pathologist all agreed that Rodiriecus was not disabled and thus not eligible for special education services.
However, despite the school board’s objection that Rodiriecus was not a disabled child eligible for coverage under the Act, the district court issued a preliminary injunction in May, ruling that the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act required that while Rodi-riecus was pursuing administrative remedies to determine whether he was eligible for special education, the school district was barred from expelling Rodiriecus from school. The school district appeals this decision.
II. ANALYSIS
Congress passed the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (the “IDEA”) to “assurе that all children with disabilities have available to them ... a free appropriate public education_” 20 U.S.C. § 1400(c).
As well as providing substantive rights for the education of children with disabilities, the Act also mandates that state educational agencies “establish and maintain procedures in accordance with [the Act] 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 by such agencies and units.” 20 U.S.C. § 1415(a).
Under the procedural rules of the Act, if the parents (or guardian) of a disabled child objeсt to some aspect of the child’s educational program, the parents are entitled to an “impartial due process hearing” before a local educational agency. 20 U.S.C. § 1415(b)(2). Local agency decisions may be appealed to a state educational agency, and if this forum proves unsatisfactory, the parents may bring a civil action in state or federal court. 20 U.S.C. § 1415(c), (e)(2).
Importantly, the Act mаndates that during the pendency of the often lengthy administrative and judicial appeals process, the disabled child is to remain in his or her then current educational program. This is the so-called “stay put” provision, which provides in full:
[D]uring the pendency of any proceedings conducted pursuant to this section, unless the State or local educational agency and the parents or guardian otherwise agree, the child shаll remain in the then current educational placement of such child.
20 U.S.C. § 1415(e)(3)(A). “The purpose of the stay-put provision is to give the child’s parents the choice of keeping the child in his existing program until their dispute with the school authorities is resolved.” Board of Educ. of Oak Park v. Illinois State Bd. of Educ.,
In Rodiriecus’s case, after the Waukegan school district instituted expulsion procedures, Rodiriecus’s guardian requested a disability evaluation and petitioned the district court for a preliminary injunction under the stay put provision to order the school district to keep Rodiriеcus in school. The district court granted the preliminary injunction, concluding that the stay put provision should apply to all children who request a disability evaluation; the school district appeals, arguing that Rodiriecus has never been diagnosed as disabled and therefore the stay put provision should not be applied.
Whether the stay put provision applies to a child not yet diagnosed as disabled is a question of first impressiоn in this circuit. The Ninth Circuit has held that a hearing officer may conduct a hearing regarding a child’s educational placement under the IDEA, even though the child has yet to be identified as disabled. Hacienda v. Honig,
If the stay put provision is automatically applied to every student who files an application for special education, then an avenue will be open for disruptive, non-disabled students to forestall any attempts at routine discipline by simply requesting a disability evaluation and demanding to “stay put,” thus disrupting the educational goals of an already overburdened and of times classified as a chaotic public school system. In fact, the emergence of this practice has been noted and criticized. See Omyra M. Ramsingh, “Disciplining Children with Disabilities under the Individuals with Disabilities Act,” 12 J. Contemp. Health L. & Policy 155, 172 (1995); Congressional Testimony of Boyd W. Boelje, President, National School Boards Assoc., before House Subcommittee on Select Education and Civil Rights, July 19, 1994 (“In some eases IDEA is manipulаted by students who do not even have a disability. The student neither has any history of requesting special education services nor any creditable basis for claiming a disability.”); Stuart Anderson, Why Schools Don’t Dare Discipline the Disabled, Weekly Standard, Feb. 19, 1996 at 29.
However, a per se rule that prevents application of the stay put provision to students not yet diagnosed with a disability is equally inflexible and inappropriate because there may arise circumstances where a truly disabled child, who has not bеen as yet identified by the school board or who has been misidentified, is improperly denied appropriate public education. In those situations, the stay put provision is necessary to keep the student in school until the hearing officer has resolved the dispute.
In applying a reasonable rule like the court in Steldt, we start with the proposition that the stay put order is a preliminary injunction. Bd. of Educ. of Oak Park,
In deciding whether to grant a preliminary injunction, a court must weigh four factors: (1) the movant’s likelihood of sucсess on the merits of his claim; (2) the irrepara-bility of the harm to the movant if the injunction does not issue; (3) whether the harm to the movant outweighs the harm to the non-movants; and (4) the public interest. Green River Bottling Co. v. Green River Corp.,
Although we agree with Steldt that a child must have some chance of successfully being declared disabled in order to apply the stay put rule, this is not an open-ended test that can be broadly applied, as was the ease in Steldt. We wish to make clear that parents of other young offenders should not conclude that they can use this approach to allow the hindsight opinion of some “expert” to qualify a delinquent child for preliminary protections under the Act. For a child not previously diagnosed as disabled, the statement of one social worker, teacher, or doctor excusing a child’s aberrant behavior because of some perceived problem should be considered insufficient to meet the standard of “staying put.” Rather, courts should defer to the policy makers at the Office of Civil Rights of the U.S. Department of Education who have issued an opinion letter after considering the problem setting forth the test that should apply in the future for the granting of injunctive relief under IDEA’S “stay put” provision: The student must he or reasonably should have been determined to be eligible through the administrative procedures of thе IDEA. OSEP Memorandum No. 95-16, 22 IDELR 531, 540 (OSEP, April 26, 1995). See generally Metropolitan School Dist. of Wayne Township v. Davila,
There is no doubt that the expulsion of a disabled child from school may result in irreparable harm. Steldt,
Applying the foregoing discussion to Rodirieeus L.’s case, it is apparent that the school officials had neither knowledge nor reasonable suspicion to base a rational decision that Rodirieeus L. was in fact disabled. In fact his academic performance, although not outstanding, did not raise their suspicions and they deemed it “average.” Neither the parent nor the guardian nor Rodirieeus requested any special education during his period of enrollment at Abbott Middle School. Indeed the record reflects that not one single individual, teacher, guardian, parent of school official, proposed or suggested that Rodirie-cus may be in need of special education. Only when Rodirieeus was presented with expulsion for his acts of alleged burglary did the child’s guardian (the DCFS) seek an evaluation and injunction to force the school district to allow Rodirieeus to remain in public school. It is interesting to note that even at the time the temporary restraining order was sought there was no request for special
There may very well be instances where disabled children, unidentified by the school district, are entitled to and indeed may need the protection of the IDEA. For instance, a child clinically diagnosed with an emotional or learning disorder, yet not receiving a special education program may be threatened with failing out of schoоl. However, this is not one of those instances. There is nothing in the record to indicate that Rodiriecus requires any special education. Indeed, until the expulsion proceedings, there was no request for an IEP or any form of special education.
The IDEA was intended to provide individualized public education for disabled children. The Act was not designed to act as a shield to protect a disruptive child from routine and aрpropriate school discipline. The stay put order issued by the district court for a student not identified by either the school district, school officials, social workers, or medical professionals as disabled was premature. The order is REVERSED and the case Remanded to the district court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. After the preliminary injunction was granted and the appeal taken, the hearing officer appointed by the Illinois State Board of Education held a hearing and, on July 27, 1995 ruled that Rodiriecus was not disabled and did not require special education. Rodiriecus appealed this adverse decision to a Level II administrative tribunal. See 20 U.S.C. § 1415(b). On December 21, 1995, after oral argument, the Level II hearing officer issued his decision, concluding that Rodi-riecus was not disabled and did not qualify for special education services. As provided fоr under section 1415 of the IDEA, Rodiriecus has appealed the decision of the Level II officer to federal district court.
The appellant school district seeks to supplement the record on appeal with a copy of the Level I hearing officer’s conclusion and the Level II officer's report as well as the accompanying documents submitted to the Level II officer to establish that Rodiriecus was not in fact disabled. However, the issue in this case is not whether Rodiriecus is disabled, but whether the district court properly issued a preliminaiy injunction to keep Rodiriecus in school when he had not previously been diagnosed as disabled or recommended for special education. Not only were the administrative materials not before the district court, but their conclusions are still in the process of appeal. See United States v. Hillsberg,
. The Act defines children with disabilities to mean "children with mental retardation, hearing impairments including deafness, speech or language impairments, visual impairments including blindness, serious emotional disturbance, orthopеdic impairments, autism, traumatic brain injury, other health impairments, or specific learning disabilities.” 20 U.S.C. § 1401 (a)(1) (A)(i).
. Occasionally there is a question as to whether the actions requiring discipline are related to the disability, but that question is not before the court today.
. We fail to understand the actions of the DCFS in this case. From our review of the record, there seems to be a pattern of obstruction and litigation spawned by the DCFS, a government agency, against the local school district. It has been over a year since the school district sought to expel Rodiriecus for the remainder of the 94-95 school year for the alleged commission of criminal acts. We think the DCFS tactics of delay and litigation hardly serve the best interests of the child or the school system and draw valuable resources away from the school district, resources that would be better spent in the care and education of our children.
