defending an open enrollment appeal making & defending good (legal) decisions

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Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

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Page 1: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal

Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Page 2: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Parents May File Appeal

Parents may file an appeal within 30 days of the date the denial notice is postmarked or delivered to the parent.

DPI is required to affirm the school board’s decision unless the DPI finds that the decision was arbitrary or unreasonable.

Except when the resident district denied based on “best interests.” The DPI must allow the transfer if it finds the denial is not in the pupil’s best interests.

Page 3: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Step 1: Make a good decision. Step 2: Provide a complete record.

Step 3: Explain the decision.

Three Steps to Defend Appeal

Page 4: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Elements Of a Good Decision

State Law Wis. Stats. § 118.51 Wis. Adm. Code § PI 36 Court Decisions

School Board Policies Required in Wis. Stats. § 118.51 (4) Written criteria Written procedures

Implementation

Documentation

Page 5: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

School Board Policies

Wis. Stats. § 118.51 (4) requires school boards to adopt open enrollment policies.

Policies must specify approval/denial criteria.

Any change in school board policy must be made prior to the beginning of the application period to which the policy will apply.

School board policies must be followed exactly and consistently.

Page 6: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Policy Review

Are your policies current? Do they address new laws: Alternative applications?

Habitual truancy? Were all amendments adopted prior to the beginning of

the application period ?

Are there supplements to the policy? Regulations/administrative rules Written criteria not in policy or rules Other policies that may affect open enrollment

decisions (i.e. class size standards, truancy/attendance policy)

Are your policies internally-consistent?

Page 7: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

What Happens When An Appeal is Filed?

Page 8: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Parent Files Appeal With DPI

DPI Reviews Parent’s Appeal:

Is it timely? If no, appeal is not accepted. Within 30 days of postmark or personal delivery.

Is it complete? Name of pupil, name of district, signed... Must allege decision was arbitrary or unreasonable, as

it relates to the reason for denials.

If complete, proceed to process appeal.

If not complete, return to parent to remedy.

Page 9: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Notify District & Request Record

DPI sends letter:

Acknowledges (to parent) receipt of the appeal.

Notifies (district) that appeal has been received.

Instructs the district to send the record.

Establishes a briefing schedule.

Page 10: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Record Always Includes

Copy of the application. Copy of the notice of denial and any correspondence

sent with it. Proof of timely mailing – affidavit. Copy of open enrollment policy and any other policies

that affect the decision (such as class size standards).

Minutes (including relevant handouts) of any committee or school board meetings at which criteria were set and/or decisions made.

Copies of all relevant documentation. DPI submission form for appeal of space or undue

financial burden denials.

Page 11: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Timely Submission of Record

Send complete record by due date. Longer application period leaves less time

to process appeals. DPI will no longer request missing

information. Extensions will no longer be granted

automatically: Will need substantial reason for extending due

dates.

Page 12: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Should the District Submit a Brief?

Yes!

Page 13: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

A Brief Is Your Opportunity To: Explain your decision. Argue your case. Do not assume that your data speaks for

itself. Do not assume that DPI will interpret the

data the same way you do. Be clear and to the point. A clear explanation can sometimes make

the difference between being upheld and overturned.

Page 14: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Legal Advice

It is not required to have an attorney handle your appeal. However, having advice when the decision is made may: Help you appropriately handle your appeal yourself, or Ensure your attorney has what s/he needs to handle

your appeal.

Useful to have an attorney: Review your policies and criteria. Review how you implement your criteria. Provide advice about documentation. Provide advice/training in how to compile and submit a

record and write a brief.

Page 15: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

DPI Reviews Record & Briefs

Page 16: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Specific to “Best Interests”

Copy of the application, including the parent’s explanation.

The district’s explanation as to why the transfer is not in the pupil’s best interests.

Any evidence to support the school board’s decision.

Page 17: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Specific to Undue Financial Burden

Copy of PI 2092, Cost Estimate from Nonresident District Without completed PI 2092, may not deny open

enrollment.

Form PI 9414, Submission of record in undue financial burden appeal Form has been revised. Requests less data. Asks direct questions.

Page 18: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Note to Nonresident District:

Send an estimate even if there is no additional special education cost.

If you do not have a valid IEP, send a letter explaining that without a valid IEP, you cannot estimate the cost.

Page 19: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Specific to Expulsions

A copy of the expulsion order or notice of pending disciplinary proceeding that includes the reason for the expulsion or pending disciplinary proceeding.

Evidence that the school board reviewed the expulsion order to determine that the denial is permitted under the open enrollment law.

Page 20: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Specific to Special Education Referred for an Initial Special Education

Evaluation That Has Not Been Completed.

A copy of the referral and notice to parent. Evidence that the pupil has not been

evaluated or does not have a current IEP.

Page 21: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Special Education Not Available

A copy of the pupil’s IEP. A description and explanation of the special

education / related services required in the IEP that are not available in the school district.

Page 22: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Special Education Space Not Available A copy of the pupil’s IEP. A description of the special education /

related services required in the IEP. The district’s space/caseload criteria for the

special education / related services. Current staffing in the special education /

related services. Projected enrollment in the special

education / related services.

Page 23: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

New or Revised IEP

In addition to other documentation required for undue financial burden, special education not available or special education space not available:

Evidence that the decision was based on an IEP created or revised after the pupil began attending the nonresident school district.

Page 24: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Pupil does not have a valid IEP.

Use most recent IEP available. If IEP is not available, use most recent

evaluation available. If neither IEP nor evaluation is available,

must treat the application as a regular education application.

Page 25: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Specific to Space

DPI has created a new form PI 9422 for submission of the record in space appeals. Will require:

For all grades:

Criteria, data and procedures used to determine space availability, including.

Class size criteria and sections for each grade, or other criteria if not using class size.

Random selection procedures. Enrollment projections and how they were determined.

Page 26: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Number of spaces available, by grade.

Number of applications received, approved and denied. pupils who received guarantees and/or

preference. pupils selected randomly.

Did you allow any nonresident students to attend the district who are not: Open enrolled, Chapter 220, Attending under tuition waiver, or Whose tuition is paid by another school district. Explain.

Page 27: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Basics

Was application valid and timely? Was notice of denial timely? Did notice include reason for denial? Was appeal timely?

Page 28: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Policy Review

Does school board have a policy? Does policy permit the board to deny for

this reason? Is the policy in compliance with state

law? Does board have specific criteria in

policy, rule or other materials?

Page 29: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Implementation

Is district’s decision in compliance with state law?

Did the district follow its policy exactly and consistently?

Did the district follow all required procedures?

Did the district consider all factors prior to making its decision?

Was the school board’s decision arbitrary or unreasonable?

Page 30: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

If Record Is Incomplete

Without complete information, the DPI may be required to find the decision to be arbitrary.

Do not count on the DPI to ask for more information. We may, but are not required to, contact

the district to providing missing information or explanation.

Page 31: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

“Best Interests”

Page 32: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

“Best Interests of the Pupil”

The parent is assumed to be the best judge of the best interests of the pupil.

If the resident school board believes the transfer is not in the pupil’s best interests, the onus is on the district to provide evidence and argument that the parent, in applying for open enrollment, is not acting in the child’s best interests.

Page 33: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Undue Financial Burden

Page 34: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

The most common reasons for an undue financial burden denial to be overturned are:

The board jumped to denial without considering the proposed cost in light of its total economic circumstances.

The board may have made a decision that was neither arbitrary nor unreasonable, but did not provide adequate documentation and explanation on appeal (in spite of DPI requests for additional information).

Page 35: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

State Law

Wis. Stats. § 118.51 (12) (b) 1. and 2. May deny if the costs of the special

education / related services… As proposed to be implemented by the

nonresident district… Are an undue financial burden in light of:

Total economic circumstances, including revenue limit, ability to pay costs and per pupil special education costs for children

continuing to be served by the resident district.

Page 36: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Cost of Special Education

Actual, additional costs to provide special education / related services in nonresident district.

The nonresident district is required to provide an estimate by May 24, as long as the resident district has provided a copy of IEP. If the estimate is not provided, the

nonresident district may not charge additional costs.

Page 37: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Calculate Net Cost

Use only special education cost.

Subtract any savings as a result of the transfer: i.e. cost the resident district would no

longer have

Result is Net OE Special Education Cost This is what may be considered UFB.

Page 38: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Implemented by Nonresident District

Nonresident district determines how to implement IEP.

Not UFB simply because the nonresident district would implement the IEP differently than the resident district. i.e. individual aide.

Page 39: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Undue Financial Burden

Can be argued that any cost is a “financial burden.” However, burden must be “undue.”

Is not UFB simply because: The cost is a large $ amount. The resident district can provide the special

education. The resident district can provide the special

education less expensively.

Page 40: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Total Economic Circumstances Revenue limit

If district is eligible for TOS revenue limit exemption for the pupil, may not deny due to revenue limit.

Ability to pay Per pupil costs

Consider prior to denying application---not sufficient to justify after the fact.

Page 41: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Elements of Successful UFB Appeal

Actual additional cost is… Net OE Cost Is…. District will not have a reduction in expenses

if the student is not served in resident district…

District examined total economic circumstances, including…

Determined cost is an undue financial burden.

Provide data to support decision

Page 42: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Expulsion

Page 43: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

State Law & School Board Policies

Wis. Stats. § 118.51 (5) (a) 2. District may deny pupil who, based on

specified conduct, has been expelled in the current or two preceding school years or is the subject of a pending disciplinary proceeding.

May deny even if pupil has been permitted to return to school.

Decision may be appealed.

School board must adopt policy or may not deny for this reason.

Page 44: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Implementation & Documentation

Obtain a copy of the expulsion order or notice of pending disciplinary proceeding.

Ascertain if the expulsion was for one of the 4 specified reasons. 5 statutory reasons to expel a pupil, but may

not deny open enrollment under this statute if the expulsion was due to “repeated violation of school rules.”

If the district does not do this, the decision may be overturned.

Page 45: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Current Expulsion

Wis. Stats. § 120.13 (f) A school board is not required to admit a

pupil during the term of a pupil’s expulsion. Regardless of reason for expulsion. Denial for this reason is not an open

enrollment reason and is not appealable: Parent may file appeal, if denied for this reason,

appeal will be dismissed.

If both reasons are valid, deny for both.

Page 46: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Nonresident District Denials for Special Education Reasons

Page 47: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Referred for Spec Ed Evaluation

Page 48: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

State Law

Wis. Stats. 118.51 (5) (a) 6.

School board may consider whether the child has been referred to his or her resident school board under s. 115.777 (1) or identified by his or her resident school board under s. 115.77 (1m) (a) but not yet evaluated by an IEP team appointed by his or her resident school board under s. 115.78 (1).

This refers only to an initial evaluation.

Page 49: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Initial Evaluation

The statute refers to an initial evaluation. The statute does not specifically

encompass situations in which the child has already been identified and evaluated but does not currently have an IEP (due to private or home-schooling), though decisions that have cited this provision to deny students for lack of a valid or current IEP have been affirmed by the Department.

Page 50: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

No Valid IEP

If the child has been found to have a disability, but does not have a current IEP: Review the most recent IEP.

If no IEP is available, Review the most recent evaluation.

If no evaluation or IEP available, Must treat the application as a non-sped

application.

Page 51: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Parental Consent

Application must be handled as regular education if:

The child has been referred and the parent has refused consent for an evaluation.

An IEP has been developed and the parent has refused placement.

The parent has withdrawn consent for special education.

Page 52: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

A parent should never be encouraged to withdraw consent.

If a parent inquires about withdrawing consent, refer the parent to a special education director who can explain the consequences.

Page 53: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

SPED Not Available or No Space

Page 54: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

State Law

Wis. Stats. § 118.51 (5) (a) 4.

Board may consider whether the special education or related services required in the child’s IEP: Are available in the district or There is space in the special education or

related services.

Page 55: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Designation of Space

During the January meeting, the board must designate the number of special education spaces available in the district.

Use established criteria to determine the number of available spaces in programs and services that can have a class size or caseload. May use enrollment projections.

Page 56: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Review the IEP

Review the IEP to determine the special education and related services required in the IEP.

Even if the district’s special education programs and caseloads are at capacity, still may not deny open enrollment without a specific review of the child’s IEP.

The board must provide the sped/services in the IEP in their totality. If the board cannot do so, may deny the application.

Page 57: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Special Ed / Services Not Available

Nonresident district has all the options of the resident district in providing special education to an open enrolled pupil: CESA, CCDEB, 66.0301, private school, etc.

However, the nonresident district is not required to approve a pupil’s application if it does not have the special education or related services in the district.

Page 58: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Regular Education Space Not Available

Page 59: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

The most common reason for a space denial to be overturned is that the district did not follow its own criteria exactly and/or consistently.

Page 60: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Laws on Space

Wis. Stats. § 118.51 (5) (a) 1 School board may consider space.

Wis. Stats. § 118.51 (5) Board must designate spaces at January meeting.

Wis. Stats. § 118.51 (3) (a) 2. Preferences, guarantees, random selection.

McMorrow v. DPI, 2000 WI App 173 Statute must be strictly construed. School boards may not make exceptions to their space

criteria.

Page 61: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Policy Questions on Space

Will board consider the availability of space in acting on open enrollment applications?

May consider space in schools, programs, classes and grades.

Page 62: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Policy Questions on Space

What will be included in that determination? Building capacity? Class size limits? Pupil teacher ratios? Enrollment projections? Who will be included in the count of

occupied spaces? Tuition pupils (paid by another school district)? Currently attending pupils? Siblings of currently-attending pupils?

Page 63: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Policy Questions

Do you want to guarantee approval to:

Currently attending pupils? Siblings of currently attending pupils? Both? Neither?

Page 64: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Preferences or Guarantees?

Must grant preference to: Currently attending pupils and siblings of

currently attending pupils. Pupils & siblings of pupils attending K-8

district underlying UHS district to which the pupil applied.

Preference requires space.

May grant guarantee to: Currently attending pupils and/or siblings. Guarantee may be granted even if space is

not available.

Page 65: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Two Ways to Guarantee Students

Include currently-attending students or siblings in count of occupied spaces. Spaces designated are new spaces. Cannot both include student in count and

then give a new space.

Approve currently-attending students or siblings even if space is not available. District may fill more than designated

spaces if necessary to accept guaranteed students.

Page 66: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Policy Concern

Many policies include all three: Preferences Including some students in count of occupied

spaces Guaranteeing some students in spite of no

space.

These all work differently, so district must decide which to use.

Be sure to explain on appeal.

Page 67: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Implementing Space Policies

Page 68: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Basic Space Calculation

Apply criteria to determine the number of spaces available, by grade.

Subtract projected enrollment.

Result is the number of available spaces.

Page 69: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Simple Class Size Example

Grade

Class Size

Sections Capacity Projected Enrollmen

t

Spaces

1 18 2 36 34 2

2 18 2 36 38 0

Page 70: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Space Criteria

Building capacity. Class sizes.

District class size policies. District average, school average, specific

classes. Space criteria established specifically for

open enrollment. SAGE. For high school, districts often use class

sizes in core courses.

Page 71: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Enrollment Projections

The district must have enrollment projections for the following school year in order to apply space criteria.

Who is included in the count of occupied spaces? Currently-attending pupils? Siblings of currently-attending pupils? Pupils for whom tuition is paid by another

school district?

Page 72: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Pupils Cannot be Counted Twice

If a pupil is included in the count of occupied spaces, the pupil cannot also be given a “new” open enrollment space.

For example: If class size is 20 pupils and projected

enrollment is 18 pupils, there are 2 new spaces.

If an applicant is already included in the 18, cannot then be given one of the 2 new spaces.

Page 73: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Preference v. Guarantee

Must grant preference for available spaces to: Currently-attending pupils, and Siblings of currently-attending pupils.

May guarantee approval to: Currently-attending pupils, or Siblings of currently-attending pupils.

Preference requires space. Guarantee is approval regardless of space.

Page 74: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Random Selection

If there are more applications than spaces, pupils must be selected randomly, after granting preferences and guarantees.

If one pupil is selected, that pupil’s sibling(s) are given the next space in the sibling’s grade—provided space is still available in that grade.

Page 75: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Showing Approvals and Denials

Applications

Spaces Preferences/Guarantees

Number Approved

Number Denied

Categories and order of categories may vary depending on whether applicants were included in count of occupied spaces (in which case spaces are new spaces) or were granted guarantees or were granted only preference.

The district is not required to present its information in this format, but DPI will attempt to fit data into this format in reviewing the appeal.

Supporting documentation must still be included.

Page 76: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

DPI Decision & Order

Page 77: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Decision & Order

DPI’s decision will be in the form of an order and will include finding of facts and conclusions of law.

Page 78: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Right to Appeal DPI’s Decision

If the school board’s decision is affirmed, the parent may appeal to circuit court within 30 days. Decisions based on “best interests” are

final.

If the school board’s decision is overturned, the school board may appeal to circuit court within 30 days.

Page 79: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Read the order.

The order will explain why the decision was overturned.

If you do not understand, call us and we will explain it.

If you wish, we can meet with you to discuss your policy, criteria and procedures to assist you in making future decisions.

If Your Decision is Overturned

Page 80: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

Open Enrollment Resources

Web site: http://sms.dpi.wi.gov/sms_psctoc

Open Enrollment List serve:

Receive information and announcementsPrinted information rarely usedTo sign up, send email to:

[email protected]

Page 81: Defending an Open Enrollment Appeal Making & Defending Good (Legal) Decisions

DPI Open Enrollment Staff

Mary Jo Cleaver, Open Enrollment Consultant608-267-9101 or toll-free [email protected] or [email protected]

Jennifer Danfield, Open Enrollment Education Specialist608-264-6707 or toll-free [email protected] or [email protected]

Robert Soldner, Director, School Management [email protected]