ACLU of Washington files lawsuit on behalf of special-education students
The ACLU of Washington has filed a lawsuit against the Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction on behalf of public-school students the organization says were wrongfully disciplined because of their disabilities.
Across the state, students who receive special-education services are suspended or expelled about two times more frequently than their classmates. The lawsuit alleges that the state superintendents office failed to address that problem, and provide schools and teachers with needed support.
The ACLU of Washington filed the lawsuit in Thurston County Superior Court on behalf of students who receive special-education services in Pasco and Yakima, and who have been suspended and expelled from school. One student, a 13-year-old Yakima boy, has been excluded from his classroom for 52 days in the past two years because of outbursts related to several mood and anxiety disorders. The ACLU says instead of de-escalating the students outbursts, teachers disciplined and physically restrained him.
ACLU of Washington legal director Emily Chiang said the lawsuit calls for the superintendents office to do its job and ensure that students who require special education be fully included in the states education system.
Read more: http://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/education/aclu-of-washington-files-lawsuit-on-behalf-of-special-education-students/