Skyer Law Testifies at Packed City Council Hearing

Yesterday, the NYC Council Education Committee held a packed oversight hearing on the provision of special education services. Parents and advocates waited all afternoon and early evening hours to give powerful testimony about a range of issues—long gaps in services, non-implementation of IEPs, lack of translation services, stories of children being badly injured or mistreated in schools, and more.

Jesse Cole Cutler and Sonia Mendez-Castro, two of our firm’s partners, testified on the issue of delays in the settlement process and in payments on pendency cases. They also alerted the Committee to a growing crisis affecting all due process complaints—there aren’t nearly enough Impartial Hearing Officers willing to hear cases. (Read their testimonies.)

To learn more about what happened at the hearing, read Chalkbeat’s reporting: “New York City Council grills top education department officials on special education.”

It is not too late for our clients and the providers they work with to submit testimony. This is one of those rare window of opportunity moments—a powerful, friendly government body is actively listening to what the special education community has to say. NYC parents, providers, and schools should all take a few minutes to compose an email explaining in their own words how delays in reimbursement, non-payment of orders, and any other special education issues have personally affected their families and communities.

 Email your testimony to both Council Member Rosenthal’s Legislative Director Ned Terrace at nterrace@council.nyc.gov and Education Committee Senior Legislative Counsel Malcom Butehorn mbutehorn@council.nyc.gov directly.

Testimony is being collected until the end of Thursday, February 28th.

 

Monday: An Opportunity to Testify on Tuition Reimbursement Delays at City Hall

The New York City Council Education Committee will be holding an oversight hearing focused on the provision of special education in New York City on Monday at 1pm in City Hall Chambers. Members of the public are welcome to testify on any of the bills that are being considered as part of that oversight hearing.  

Of the five bills being considered, the one most relevant to families who must sue New York City in order for their children to receive an appropriate education has been introduced by Council Member Helen Rosenthal of the Upper West Side.

Intro 1380 requires the DOE to annually report on the claims for special education tuition or services. If this bill is enacted, the DOE would have to provide a report each November 1st on a number of data points including when individual claims are received and responded to. If a claim is referred for settlement, the district will have to say when that happens, when a first settlement offer is made, when an agreement is transmitted to the Comptroller for approval, when the Comptroller’s office gives its approval, and when a settlement agreement is signed by the parent and the district. The district will also have to say when a first payment is made for tuition or services pursuant to a written settlement agreement. If a complaint goes to impartial hearing, the district will have to say when the hearing commences and when a decision is rendered. All this data will be collected with each individual case having its own row of a data in the DOE’s report, but without identifying information.

In addition, the DOE will be required to report this as aggregated data given in percentages to show, overall, how quickly the city is processing claims. For example, the DOE would have to give percentages of ten-day notices that are responded to within 15 business days, within 16-30 business days, or greater than 30 days.  

This bill will go a long way in casting sunlight on how poorly the City is living up to the promises of Mayor de Blasio’s 2014 Special Education Initiative, in which his administration committed to expedite decisions on whether to settle within 15 days of notice, reduce extended legal battles, and to expedite payments to families, among other promises. As we have said in the past, while more cases are now referred for settlement and higher dollar amount settlements are being offered than in prior administrations, these improvements have been completely overshadowed by increasing delays at every stage of this process. It used to take around nine months from filing a claim to receiving a first payment for tuition reimbursement. Now, we advise clients to be prepared for it to take up to two years.

If you can’t afford to front two years of tuition, it hardly matters what dollar amount the settlement is. The basic math of this is why these delays have a particularly cruel impact on middle class families. We believe that these proposed reporting requirements will help New York families, advocates for special education students, and policymakers who care about these issues by giving much needed insight on where in the pipeline the biggest delays are located as well as the statistics we all need to monitor how well the system is working over time.

If you have personal experience with reimbursement delays and can speak to how this issue has impacted your family, professional practice (SEITs, school administrators or other related service providers), you should consider testifying in person or submitting testimony by email.

You can testify in person. Bring 20 copies of your remarks to the hearing. The Department of Education will testify first. Lawmakers questioning government agencies often takes quite a bit of time (sometimes hours), so plan to be there for most of the afternoon. Also, since there are four other bills on special education topics being considered there may be a large number of advocates waiting to testify on those important issues too. After you speak for 3 minutes (it’s timed), lawmakers may ask you questions about your testimony.

You can also submit testimony in writing. It is best to do this by Monday. However, the record will be kept open for three additional days (until the end of the day on Thursday). Email your testimony to both Council Member Rosenthal’s Legislative Director Ned Terrace at nterrace@council.nyc.gov and Education Committee Senior Legislative Counsel Malcom Butehorn mbutehorn@council.nyc.gov directly.

 

Sonia Mendez-Castro, Abbie Smith Named Partners at Skyer Law

The Law Offices of Regina Skyer & Associates is proud to announce that senior attorneys Sonia Mendez-Castro and Abbie Smith have been named partners.

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Sonia Mendez-Castro joined Skyer Law in 2002 and is one of the most senior attorneys at the firm. She has a stellar record at impartial hearings and appeals and is beloved by her loyal clients. Before coming to our firm, she worked as Supervising Attorney at the esteemed nonprofit Advocates for Children. Sonia graduated from St. John’s University Law School in 1993.

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Abbie Smith came to Skyer Law in 2010. She first met Regina Skyer working at Summit Camp, a sleep-away camp for special needs children. Their collaboration inspired her to put aside her degree in civil engineering and instead pursue special education law. Abbie is a sharp litigator with a great bedside manner who has rapidly risen to the top of her field. She graduated from Brooklyn Law School in 2008.

We Won! NYC Council Unanimously Passes GPS School Bus Tracking Bill

image by Free Press/ Free Press Action Fund

Today, the NYC Council passed Intro. 1099, a bill that Council Member Ben Kallos introduced at our suggestion, to allow parents to use GPS technology to track their child’s school bus. We are so excited and proud to have been a part of this community advocacy effort! Parents will have access to an app to track their children’s school bus by September 2019, and we know that this will be a useful tool (and a great relief) for the families of students in private and public schools alike.

One aspect of the bill must still be fixed: schools also require access to the data to truly ensure student safety. We have been promised that a technical “clean-up” bill to allow our schools to access the GPS data will be passed in time for September enactment as well.

The leadership of Council Member Ben Kallos, Education Chair Mark Treyger, and Speaker Corey Johnson in shepherding the bill through the legislative process is something we should all celebrate. Especially at this moment in our country, it’s truly heartening to see government work to advance the interests of vulnerable citizens.

Our community of special education students, families, schools, and advocates (shout out to Advocates for Children and NY Lawyers for the Public Interest!) is a mighty one and deserves to celebrate this win. Whether you came out to City Hall to stand at the press conference, helped to fill the Council’s Chambers to capacity, waited hours to testify in person, or submitted testimony by email, you helped make a difference for over 150,000 schoolchildren who rely on the school bus each day. Congratulations to all!

(image by Free Press/ Free Press Action Fund)

Important Reminder for Parents of Children Born in 2014: The NYC Kindergarten Registration Deadline is Monday, January 14th

Last fall, the NYC Department of Education’s Special Education Office mailed a kindergarten ‘Welcome Packet’ to parents of children currently receiving preschool special education (CPSE) services who will be “turning five” during the 2019 calendar year.

The information in the packet makes clear that the DOE expects parents to engage with two processes: applying to kindergarten through the regular NYC application process and engaging in the Turning Five IEP process. In short, the DOE asks parents to apply to a local public school for a general education seat regardless of whether or not you feel that your child’s needs could ever be met in that program.

There are 3 ways to apply for a kindergarten seat at your community school before the January 14th deadline:

  1. Online at MySchools

  2. Over the phone by calling 718-935-2009

  3. In person at a Family Welcome Center

According to the DOE, you should receive your “blue Notice of Referral” to begin the special education (Turning Five) process anytime between January and July of this year.