Current through Reg. 50, No. 187; September 24, 2024
Each public agency, including a school district, must
establish, maintain and implement procedural safeguards that meet the
requirements of this rule. A public agency means local educational agencies
(LEAs), educational services agencies (ESAs), nonprofit public charter schools
that are not otherwise included as LEAs or ESAs and are not a school of an LEA
or ESA, and any other political subdivisions of the State that are responsible
for providing education to children with disabilities.
(1) Prior written notice. The public agency,
including a school district, shall provide parents with written notice a
reasonable time before proposing or refusing to initiate or change the
identification, evaluation, educational placement of the student or the
provision of a free appropriate public education (FAPE) to the student. Prior
notice may be provided at any meeting where such proposal or refusal is made.
Graduation from high school with a regular diploma constitutes a change in
placement, requiring prior written notice.
(a)
The prior notice to the parents shall be written in language understandable to
the general public and shall be provided in the native language or other mode
of communication used by the parents, unless it is clearly not feasible to do
so.
(b) If the parents' mode of
communication is not a written language, the public agency, including a school
district, shall ensure:
1. That the notice is
translated orally or by other means to the parents in their native language or
other mode of communication;
2.
That the parents understand the content of the notice; and,
3. That there is written documentation that
these requirements have been met.
(c) The notice to the parents shall include:
1. A description of the action proposed or
refused by the public agency, including a school district;
2. An explanation of why the public agency,
including a school district, proposes or refuses to take the action;
3. A description of each evaluation
procedure, assessment, record, or report the public agency, including a school
district, used as a basis for the proposed or refused action;
4. A statement that the parents of a student
with a disability have protection under the procedural safeguards of this rule
and, if this notice is not an initial referral for evaluation, the means by
which a copy of a description of the procedural safeguards can be
obtained;
5. Sources for parents to
contact to obtain assistance in understanding the provisions of Rules
6A-6.03011 -.0361,
F.A.C.;
6. A description of other
options that the individual education plan (IEP) team considered and the
reasons why those options were rejected; and,
7. A description of other factors that are
relevant to the public agency's, including a school district's, proposal or
refusal.
(2)
Provision of Procedural Safeguards to Parents.
(a) Parents must be provided a copy of their
procedural safeguards, which provides a full explanation of the provisions of
this rule relating to:
1. Prior written
notice;
2. Parental
consent;
3. Access to education
records;
4. The availability of
mediation;
5. The opportunity to
present and resolve complaints through the state complaint and due process
hearing procedures, including the time period in which to file a complaint, the
opportunity for the public agency, including a school district, to resolve the
complaint, and the difference between the request for due process procedures
and the state complaint procedures, including the jurisdiction of each
procedure, what issues may be raised, filing and decisional timelines, and
relevant procedures pursuant to subsection
6A-6.03311(5),
F.A.C.;
6. Independent educational
evaluations;
7. Procedures for
students who are subject to placement in an interim alternative educational
setting;
8. Requirements for
placement of students with disabilities in private school by their parents at
public expense;
9. Due process
hearings, including the student's placement during the pendency of any due
process hearing request and requirements for disclosure of evaluation results
and recommendations;
10. Civil
actions, including the time period in which to file those actions;
and,
11. Attorney's fees.
(b) A copy of the procedural
safeguards must be given to the parents of a student with a disability only one
time a school year, except that a copy also must be given to the parents:
1. Upon initial referral or parent request
for evaluation;
2. In accordance
with the discipline procedures when a change in placement occurs;
3. Upon receipt of the first State complaint
and upon receipt of the first request for a due process hearing in a school
year;
4. Upon request by a parent;
and,
5. In accordance with the
provisions of Section
1008.212, F.S., upon the public
agency, including a school district, superintendent's recommendation to the
Commissioner of Education that an extraordinary exemption for a given state
assessment be granted or denied.
(c) A public agency, including a school
district, may place a current copy of the procedural safeguards on its internet
website, if a website exists.
(d) A
parent of a student with a disability may elect to receive notices required by
this rule by an electronic mail communication, if the public agency, including
a school district, makes that option available.
(e) The procedural safeguards must be
provided in an understandable language as provided under subsection (1) of this
rule.
(4) Mediation.
The Department of Education ("Department") has established a mediation process
to provide parents of students with disabilities and personnel of public
agencies, including school districts, the opportunity to resolve disputes
involving any matters arising under Part B of the Individuals with Disabilities
Education Act (IDEA), including matters arising prior to the filing of a due
process complaint, through a mediation process.
(a) Requirements. The mediation process must:
1. Be voluntary on the part of both
parties;
2. Not be used to deny or
delay a parent's right to a due process hearing under subsection (9) of this
rule, or any other rights under this rule; and,
3. Be conducted by a qualified and impartial
mediator who is trained in effective mediation techniques and who is Florida
Supreme Court certified with no reported sanctions.
(b) Written request. A request for mediation
must be in writing and must be filed with the Department by electronic mail,
mail, hand-delivery, or facsimile. The Department has developed a form that may
be used by parties requesting mediation. The form is available on request from
the Department at IDEAMediation@fldoe.org and is also available on the
Department's website at
https://www.fldoe.org/core/fileparse.php/7675/urlt/MediationRequestForm.pdf.
(c) List of mediators. The Department will
maintain a list of individuals who are qualified mediators and knowledgeable in
laws and regulations relating to the provision of special education and related
services.
(d) Mediator assignment.
1. For each mediation provided pursuant to
this rule, the Department will assign a mediator on a random, rotational, or
impartial basis, from the Department's list. The Department will provide the
parties with written notice of the specific mediator assigned to conduct the
mediation. The parties must not contact a mediator on the Department's list of
mediators until the Department has provided the parties with the written notice
of the mediator assignment.
2. If
the Department is unable to assign a mediator from the list described in
paragraph (4)(c) of this rule, due to scheduling conflicts or availability, the
Department will provide an alternate list of mediators to the parent and the
public agency, which includes a school district, and will permit the parties
involved in the dispute to agree on the mediator.
(e) Costs. The Department will bear the cost
of the mediation process described in subsection (4) of this rule.
(f) Scheduling. Each session in the mediation
process must be scheduled in a timely manner and must be held in a location,
including an option for virtual mediation, that is convenient to both the
parent and the public agency, including a school district.
(g) Written agreement. If the parties resolve
a dispute through the mediation process, the parties must execute a legally
binding agreement that:
1. States that all
discussions that occurred during the mediation process will remain confidential
and may not be used as evidence in any subsequent due process hearings or civil
proceedings;
2. Is signed by both
the parent and a representative of the public agency, including a school
district, who had the authority to bind the public agency, including a school
district; and,
3. Is enforceable in
any State court of competent jurisdiction or in a district court of the United
States.
(h)
Confidentiality. Whether or not the dispute is resolved through mediation,
discussions that occur during the mediation process must be confidential and
may not be used as evidence in any subsequent due process hearings or civil
proceedings of any Federal court or State court.
(i) Impartiality of the Mediator. An
individual who serves as a mediator:
1. May
not be an employee of any public agency, including a school district, or any
state agency that is involved in the education or care of the
student;
2. Must not have a
personal or professional interest that conflicts with the person's objectivity;
and,
3. Is not an employee of a
public agency, including a school district, or state agency solely because he
or she is paid by the Department to serve as a mediator.
(5) State complaint procedures.
The Department of Education shall provide parents and other interested persons,
including an organization or individual from another state, the opportunity to
resolve any complaint that a public agency, including a local school district,
has violated a requirement of Part B of the IDEA or its implementing
regulations, or a state requirement, regarding the education of students with
disabilities through its state complaint procedures. The Department of
Education shall disseminate its state complaint procedures, which may be
accessed at
http://www.fldoe.org/academics/exceptional-student-edu/dispute-resolution/
to parents and other interested individuals, including the parent training and
information centers, protection and advocacy agencies, independent living
centers, and other appropriate entities.
(a)
Within sixty (60) calendar days after a complaint is filed under the provisions
of this rule, the Department shall:
1. Carry
out an independent onsite investigation, if the Department determines that an
investigation is necessary;
2. Give
the complainant the opportunity to submit additional information, either orally
or in writing, about the allegations in the complaint;
3. Provide the public agency, including a
school district, with the opportunity to respond to the complaint, including,
at a minimum:
a. A proposal to resolve the
complaint, at the discretion of the public agency, including a school district;
and,
b. An opportunity for a parent
who has filed a complaint and the public agency, including a school district,
to engage in mediation consistent with this rule.
4. Review all relevant information and make
an independent determination as to whether the public agency, including a
school district, is violating a federal or state requirement regarding the
education of students with disabilities;
5. Issue a written decision to the
complainant that addresses each issue presented in the complaint and contains
findings of fact, conclusions, and the reason(s) for the Department's decision;
and,
6. Extend the time limit
established in paragraph (6)(a) of this rule, only if exceptional circumstances
exist with respect to a particular complaint or the parent and the public
agency, including a school district, involved agree to extend the time to
engage in mediation pursuant to subsection (5) of this rule.
(b) Procedures for the effective
implementation of the Department's decision, if needed, include the following:
1. Technical assistance activities;
2. Negotiations;
3. Corrective actions to achieve compliance;
and,
4. Where the Department has
found a failure to provide appropriate services, the Department must address
the failure to provide appropriate services, including corrective action
appropriate to address the needs of the student (such as compensatory services
or monetary reimbursement) and appropriate future provision of services for all
students with disabilities.
5. If
there remain disputed issues after the Department issues its written decision,
either the public agency or the person filing the complaint may, if they have
not already done so, use mediation or file a request for a due process hearing
on the disputed issues, provided the aggrieved party has the right to file due
process as specified in subsection (9) of this rule.
(c) Relationship to due process hearings.
1. If a written complaint is received that is
also the subject of a due process hearing requested pursuant to this rule, or
the complaint contains multiple issues, of which one or more are part of that
hearing, the Department shall set aside any part of the complaint that is being
addressed in the due process hearing until the conclusion of the hearing.
However, any issue in the complaint that is not a part of the due process
action must be resolved in compliance with the procedures described in this
rule.
2. If an issue is raised in a
complaint filed under this section that has previously been decided in a due
process hearing involving the same parties, the administrative law judge's
(ALJ) decision is binding on that issue and the Department shall inform the
complainant to that effect.
3. The
Department shall resolve any complaint which alleges that a public agency,
including a school district, has failed to implement a due process hearing
decision.
(d) Filing a
complaint. An organization or individual may file a signed written complaint
and must forward a copy of the complaint to the public agency, including a
school district, serving the student at the same time the party files the
complaint with the Department. The complaint must include:
1. A statement that a public agency,
including a school district, has violated a requirement of Part B of the IDEA
or its implementing regulations regarding the education of students with
disabilities;
2. The facts on which
the statement is based;
3. The
signature and contact information for the complainant; and,
4. If alleging violations with regard to a
specific student:
a. The name and address of
the residence of the student;
b.
The name of the school the student is attending;
c. In the case of a homeless student or
youth, available contact information for the student, and the name of the
school the student is attending;
d.
A description of the nature of the problem of the student, including facts
relating to the problem;
e. A
proposed resolution of the problem to the extent known and available to the
party at the time the complaint is filed; and,
f. Alleged violations that occurred not more
than one (1) year prior to the date that the complaint is received.
(e) The Department will
develop a model form to assist parents and other parties in filing a state
complaint. However, neither the Department nor a public agency, including a
school district, may require the use of the model form. Parents, public
agencies, including school districts, and other appropriate parties may use the
appropriate model form or another form or other document, as long as the form
or other document that is used meets, as appropriate, the content requirements
in paragraph (5)(d), above.
(f)
Proposals to resolve the complaint. If a public agency, including a school
district, submits a proposal to resolve the complaint, the complainant shall be
provided the opportunity to review the proposal and provide voluntary written
agreement to withdraw the complaint. Absent the voluntary written agreement of
the complainant to withdraw the complaint, the Department shall:
1. Review all relevant information and make
an independent determination as to whether the public agency, including a
school district, is violating a requirement of the IDEA or state statute or
rule related to the education of students with disabilities; and
2. Issue a written decision to the
complainant that addresses each allegation in the complaint and contains:
a. Findings of fact and conclusions;
and
b. The reasons for the
Department's decision.
(6) Independent educational evaluations.
(a) A parent of a student with a disability
has the right to an independent educational evaluation at public expense if the
parent disagrees with an evaluation obtained by the public agency, including a
school district.
(b) The parent of
a student with a disability has the right to be provided, upon request for an
independent educational evaluation, information about where an independent
educational evaluation may be obtained and of the public agency's, including a
school district's, criteria applicable to independent educational
evaluations.
(c) For purposes of
this section, independent educational evaluation is defined to mean an
evaluation conducted by a qualified evaluation specialist who is not an
employee of the public agency, including a school district, responsible for the
education of the student in question.
(d) Public expense is defined to mean that
the public agency, including a school district, either pays for the full cost
of the evaluation or ensures that the evaluation is otherwise provided at no
cost to the parent.
(e) Whenever an
independent educational evaluation is conducted, the criteria under which the
evaluation is obtained, including the location of the evaluation and the
qualifications of the evaluation specialist, shall be the same as the criteria
used by the public agency, including a school district, when it initiates an
evaluation, to the extent that those criteria are consistent with the parent's
right to an independent educational evaluation.
(f) The public agency, including a school
district, may not impose conditions or timelines for obtaining an independent
educational evaluation at public expense other than those criteria described in
this rule.
(g) If a parent requests
an independent educational evaluation at public expense, the public agency,
including a school district, must, without unnecessary delay either:
1. Ensure that an independent educational
evaluation is provided at public expense; or
2. Initiate a due process hearing under this
rule to show that its evaluation is appropriate or that the evaluation obtained
by the parent did not meet the public agency's, including a school district's,
criteria. If the public agency, including a school district, initiates a
hearing and the final decision from the hearing is that the district's
evaluation is appropriate, then the parent still has a right to an independent
educational evaluation, but not at public expense.
(h) If a parent requests an independent
educational evaluation, the public agency, including a school district, may ask
the parent to give a reason why he or she objects to the public agency's,
including a school district's, evaluation. However, the explanation by the
parent may not be required and the public agency's, including a school
district, may not unreasonably delay either providing the independent
educational evaluation at public expense or initiating a due process hearing to
defend the public agency, including a school district's, evaluation.
(i) A parent is entitled to only one (1)
independent educational evaluation at public expense each time the public
agency, including a school district, conducts an evaluation with which the
parent disagrees.
(j)
Parent-initiated evaluations. If the parent obtains an independent educational
evaluation at public expense or shares with the public agency, including a
school district, an evaluation obtained at private expense:
1. The public agency, including a school
district, shall consider the results of such evaluation in any decision
regarding the provision of FAPE to the student, if it meets appropriate
district criteria described in this rule; and,
2. The results of such evaluation may be
presented by any party as evidence at any due process hearing regarding that
student.
(k) If an ALJ
requests an independent educational evaluation as part of a due process
hearing, the cost of the evaluation must be at public expense.
(7) Placement of students with
disabilities in private schools by their parents when the provision of FAPE is
at issue.
(a) A public agency, including a
school district, is not required to pay for the costs of education, including
special education and related services, of a student with a disability at a
private school or facility if that public agency, including a school district,
has made FAPE available to the student and the parents elected to place the
student in a private school or facility. However, the public agency, including
a school district, must include that student in the population whose needs are
addressed consistent with Rule
6A-6.030281, F.A.C.
(b) Disagreements between a parent and a
public agency, including a school district, regarding the availability of a
program appropriate for the student, and the question of financial
responsibility, are subject to the due process procedures described in this
rule.
(c) If the parents of a
student with a disability, who previously received special education and
related services under the authority of a public agency, including a school
district, enroll the student in a private preschool, elementary, or secondary
school without the consent of or referral by the public agency, including a
school district, a court or an ALJ may require the public agency, including a
school district, to reimburse the parents for the cost of that enrollment if
the court or ALJ finds that the public agency, including a school district, had
not made FAPE available to the student in a timely manner prior to that
enrollment and that the private placement is appropriate. A parental placement
may be found to be appropriate by an ALJ or a court even if it does not meet
the state standards that apply to education provided by the Department of
Education and the public agency, including a school district.
(d) The cost of reimbursement described in
paragraph (c) of this subsection, may be reduced or denied if:
1. At the most recent IEP Team meeting that
the parents attended prior to removal of the student from the public school,
the parents did not inform the IEP Team that they were rejecting the placement
proposed by the public agency, including a school district, to provide FAPE to
their student, including stating their concerns and their intent to enroll
their student in a private school at public expense or at least ten (10)
business days (including any holidays that occur on a business day) prior to
the removal of the student from the public school, the parents did not give
written notice to the public agency, including a school district, of the
information described herein;
2.
Prior to the parents' removal of the child from the public school, the public
agency, including a school district, informed the parents, through the notice
requirements described in this rule, of its intent to evaluate the student
(including a statement of the purpose of the evaluation that was appropriate
and reasonable), but the parents did not make the student available for the
evaluation; or
3. Upon a judicial
finding of unreasonableness with respect to actions taken by the
parents.
4. Exception.
Notwithstanding the notice requirement in subparagraph 1. of this paragraph,
the cost of reimbursement must not be reduced or denied for failure to provide
the notice if:
a. The school prevented the
parent from providing the notice;
b. The parents had not received notice,
pursuant to the procedural safeguards requirements, of the notice requirement
in subparagraph 1. of this section; or
c. Compliance with subparagraph (d)1., would
likely result in physical harm to the student; and,
5. Notwithstanding the notice requirement in
subparagraph (7)(d)1. of this rule, the cost of reimbursement may not, in the
discretion of the court or a hearing officer, be reduced or denied for failure
to provide this notice if:
a. The parent is
not literate or cannot write in English; or
b. Compliance with subparagraph (7)(d)1. of
this section, would likely result in serious emotional harm to the
student.
(8) Transfer of Parental Rights at the Age of
Majority.
(a) When a student with a disability
reaches the age of eighteen (18), (except for a student with a disability who
has been determined incompetent under State law or who has had a guardian
advocate appointed to make educational decisions as provided by Section
393.12, F.S.), the right to
notice under this rule is retained as a shared right of the parent and the
student.
(b) All other rights
afforded to parents under Rules
6A-6.03011 through
6A-6.0361, F.A.C., transfer to
the student.
(c) The public agency,
including a school district, must notify the student and the parent of the
transfer of rights, when the student attains the age of eighteen
(18).
(d) At least one (1) year
before the student reaches age eighteen (18), the public agency must provide
information and instruction to the student and his or her parent on
self-determination and the legal rights and responsibilities regarding the
educational decisions that transfer to the student upon attaining the age of
eighteen (18). The information and instruction must include a written notice
that the rights afforded to parents under Part B of the Individuals with
Disabilities Education Act transfer to the student at age eighteen (18) except
in specified circumstances referenced in paragraph (8)(a) of this rule, a
description of the rights that transfer to the student, and the ways in which
the parent may continue to participate in educational decisions, including:
1. Informed consent to grant permission to
access confidential records protected under the Family Educational Rights and
Privacy Act (FERPA) as provided in Section
1002.22, F.S.
2. Powers of attorney as provided in Chapter
709, F.S.
3. Guardian advocacy as
provided in Section 393.12, F.S.
4. Guardianship as provided in Chapter 744,
F.S.
5. Supported decisionmaking
agreements as provided in s.
709.2209, F.S.
(e) For a student with a
disability who has attained age eighteen (18) and is incarcerated in a juvenile
justice facility or local correctional facility, all rights accorded to parents
under this rule transfer to the student, including the right to notice as
described in this rule. For students incarcerated in state correctional
facilities, all rights accorded to parents under this rule transfer to the
student, including notice, regardless of the age of the student.
(f) If a student with a disability has
reached the age of majority and does not have the ability to provide informed
consent with respect to his or her educational program, procedures established
by statute may be used by the parent to:
1.
Have the student declared incompetent and the appropriate guardianship
established in accordance with the provisions of Chapter 744, F.S.;
2. Be appointed to represent the educational
interests of their student throughout the student's eligibility for FAPE under
Rules 6A-6.03011 through
6A-6.0361, F.A.C.; or
3. Have another appropriate individual
appointed to represent the educational interests of the student throughout the
student's eligibility for FAPE under Rules
6A-6.03011 through
6A-6.0361, F.A.C., if the parent
is not available in accordance with Section
393.12, F.S.
(9) Due process Hearings
and Resolution Sessions.
(a) A due process
hearing request may be initiated by a parent or a public agency, including a
school district, as to matters related to the identification, evaluation,
eligibility determination, or educational placement of a student or the
provision of FAPE to the student. In addition, in accordance with Section
1008.212, F.S., in the event
that a school district superintendent requests an extraordinary exemption from
participation in a statewide standardized assessment and the Commissioner of
Education denies such request, the parent may request an expedited due process
hearing. In this event, the Department must inform the parent of any free or
low-cost legal services and other relevant services available. The Department
of Education shall arrange a hearing on this matter with the Division of
Administrative Hearings. The hearing must begin within twenty (20) school days
following the receipt of the parent's request by the Department. The ALJ must
make a determination within ten (10) school days after the expedited hearing is
completed.
(b) A due process
hearing request must allege a violation that occurred not more than two (2)
years before the date the parent or public agency, including a school district,
knew or should have known about the alleged action that forms the basis of the
due process hearing request. This limitations period does not apply to a parent
if the parent was prevented from filing a due process hearing request because
of:
1. Specific misrepresentations by the
public agency, including a school district, that it had resolved the problem
forming the basis of the due process hearing request; or
2. The public agency's, including a school
district's, withholding of information from the parent that was required under
Rules 6A-6.03011 -.0361, F.A.C., to be
provided to the parent.
(c) Information for parents. The public
agency, including a school district, must inform the parent of any free or
low-cost legal and other relevant services available in the area if the parent
requests the information or the parent or the public agency, including a school
district, files a due process hearing request.
(d) The due process hearing request. The
public agency, including a school district, must have procedures that require
either party, or the attorney representing a party, to provide to the other
party a due process hearing request (which must remain confidential). The party
filing a due process hearing request must forward a copy of the request by mail
to the Florida Department at 325 West Gaines Street, Room 614, Tallahassee,
Florida 32399 or via fax transmission to (850)245-0953. A due process hearing
request must contain the following:
1. The
name of the student;
2. The address
of the residence of the student;
3.
The name of the school the student is attending;
4. In the case of a homeless student or
youth, available contact information for the student and the name of the school
the student is attending;
5. A
description of the nature of the problem of the student relating to the
proposed or refused initiation or change in the identification, evaluation,
eligibility determination, placement or provision of FAPE to the student,
including facts relating to the problem; and,
6. A proposed resolution of the problem to
the extent known and available to the party at the time, including any remedy
authorized by the IDEA.
(e) A party may not have a hearing on a due
process hearing request or engage in a resolution session, as described below,
until the party, or the attorney representing the party, files a due process
hearing request that meets the requirements of paragraph (d) of this
subsection.
(f) The Department will
develop a model form to assist parents and public agencies, including school
districts, in filing a due process hearing request. However, neither the
Department nor a public agency, including a school district, may require the
use of the model form. Parents and public agencies, including school districts,
may use the appropriate model form or another form or other document, as long
as the form or other document that is used meets, as appropriate, the content
requirements in paragraph (d) of this subsection.
(g) A due process hearing request will be
deemed sufficient unless the party receiving the due process hearing request
notifies the ALJ and the other party in writing, within fifteen (15) days of
receipt of the due process hearing request, that the receiving party believes
the due process hearing request does not meet the requirements in paragraph (d)
of this subsection. Within five (5) days of receipt of the notification of
insufficiency, the ALJ must make a determination on the face of the due process
hearing request of whether it meets the requirements of paragraph (d) of this
subsection, and must immediately notify the parties in writing of that
determination.
(h) A party may
amend its due process hearing request only if the other party consents in
writing to the amendment and is given the opportunity to resolve the due
process hearing request through a resolution session held pursuant to paragraph
(l) of this subsection or the ALJ grants permission, except that the ALJ may
only grant permission to amend at any time not later than five (5) days before
the due process hearing begins. If a party files an amended due process hearing
request, the timelines for the resolution session in paragraph (l) of this
subsection and the thirty (30) day time period to resolve the request as set
forth in paragraph (o) of this subsection, begin again with the filing of the
amended due process hearing request.
(i) Public agency, including a school
district, response to a due process hearing request. If the public agency,
including a school district, has not sent a prior written notice under this
rule, to the parent regarding the subject matter contained in the parent's due
process hearing request, the public agency, including a school district, must,
within ten (10) days of receiving the due process hearing request, send to the
parent a response that includes:
1. An
explanation of why the public agency, including a school district, proposed or
refused to take the action raised in the due process hearing request;
2. A description of other options that the
IEP team considered and the reasons why those options were rejected;
3. A description of each evaluation
procedure, assessment, record, or report the public agency, including a school
district, used as the basis for the proposed or refused action; and,
4. A description of the other factors
relevant to the public agency's, including a school district's, proposed or
refused action.
(j) A
response by a public agency, including a school district, under paragraph (i)
of this subsection, shall not be construed to preclude the public agency,
including a school district, from asserting that the parent's due process
hearing request was insufficient, where appropriate.
(k) Other party response to a due process
hearing request. Except as provided in paragraph (i) of this subsection, the
party receiving a due process hearing request must, within ten (10) days of
receiving the due process hearing request, send to the other party a response
that specifically addresses the issues raised in the due process hearing
request.
(l) Resolution session.
Within fifteen (15) days of receiving notice of a parent's due process hearing
request and prior to convening a due process hearing, the public agency,
including a school district, must convene a meeting with the parents and the
relevant member or members of the IEP team who have specific knowledge of the
facts identified in the due process hearing request that:
1. Includes a representative of the public
agency, including a school district, who has decision-making authority on
behalf of that district or agency; and,
2. May not include an attorney of the public
agency, including a school district, unless the parent is accompanied by an
attorney.
(m) The purpose
of the resolution meeting is for the parents to discuss their due process
hearing request and the facts that form the basis of the due process hearing
request, so that the public agency, including a school district, has the
opportunity to resolve the dispute that is the basis for the due process
hearing request. The resolution meeting need not be held if:
1. The parent and the public agency,
including a school district, agree in writing to waive the meeting;
or
2. The parent and the public
agency, including a school district, agree to use the mediation process
described in this rule.
(n) The parent and the public agency,
including a school district, determine the relevant members of the IEP team to
attend the meeting.
(o) Resolution
period. If the public agency, including a school district, has not resolved the
due process hearing request to the satisfaction of the parents within thirty
(30) days of the receipt of the due process hearing request, the due process
hearing may occur and, except as provided in paragraph (r) of this subsection,
the forty-five (45)-day timeline for issuing a final decision begins at the
expiration of this thirty (30)-day period.
(p) Except where the parties have jointly
agreed to waive the resolution process or to use mediation, the failure of a
parent filing a due process hearing request to participate in the resolution
meeting will delay the thirty (30)-day resolution timeline and the forty-five
(45)-day due process hearing timeline until the meeting is held. If the public
agency, including a school district, is unable to obtain the participation of
the parent in the resolution meeting after reasonable efforts have been made
and documented, the public agency, including a school district, may, at the
conclusion of the thirty (30)-day period, request that the ALJ dismiss the
parent's due process hearing request.
(q) If the public agency, including a school
district, fails to hold the resolution meeting within fifteen (15) days of
receiving notice of a parent's due process hearing request or fails to
participate in the resolution meeting, the parent may seek the intervention of
an ALJ to begin the due process hearing timeline.
(r) Adjustments to the thirty (30)-day
resolution period. The forty-five (45)-day timeline for the due process hearing
starts the day after one of the following events:
1. Both parties agree in writing to waive the
resolution meeting;
2. After either
the mediation or resolution meeting starts but before the end of the thirty
(30)-day period, the parties agree in writing that no agreement is possible;
or
3. If both parties agree in
writing to continue the mediation at the end of the thirty (30)-day resolution
period, but later, the parent or public agency, including a school district,
withdraws from the mediation process.
(s) Written settlement agreement. If a
resolution to the dispute is reached at the meeting described in paragraph (l)
of this subsection, the parties must execute a legally binding agreement that
is:
1. Signed by both the parent and a
representative of the public agency, including a school district, who has the
authority to bind the public agency, including a school district;
and,
2. Enforceable in any State
court of competent jurisdiction or in a district court of the United
States.
(t) Agreement
review period. If the parties execute an agreement pursuant to paragraph(s) of
this subsection, a party may void the agreement within three (3) business days
of the agreement's execution.
(u)
Should a hearing be required, it shall be conducted by an ALJ appointed as
required by section 120.65, F.S., from the Division
of Administrative Hearings, Department of Management Services, on behalf of the
Department. At a minimum, an ALJ must not be an employee of the Department or
the public agency, including a school district, that is involved in the
education or care of the student or have a personal or professional interest
that conflicts with the person's objectivity in the hearing. In addition, an
ALJ must possess knowledge of, and the ability to understand, the provisions of
the IDEA, federal and state regulations pertaining to the IDEA, and legal
interpretations of the IDEA by federal and state courts; must possess the
knowledge and ability to conduct hearings in accordance with appropriate,
standard legal practice; and must possess the knowledge and ability to render
and write decisions in accordance with appropriate, standard legal practice. A
person who otherwise qualifies to conduct a hearing under this paragraph is not
an employee of the agency solely because he or she is paid by the agency to
serve as an ALJ. The Department will keep a list of the persons who serve as
ALJs, which must include a statement of the qualifications of each of those
persons.
(v) An ALJ shall use the
provisions of Rules 6A-6.03011 -.0361, F.A.C., for
conducting due process hearings and shall conduct such hearings in accordance
with the Uniform Rules for Administrative Proceedings, Chapter 28-106, F.A.C.
Minimum procedures for due process hearings shall include the following:
1. Hearing rights. Any party to a due process
hearing has the right:
a. To be represented by
counsel or to be represented by a qualified representative under the
qualifications and standards set forth in Rules
28-106.106 -.107, F.A.C., or to
be accompanied and advised by individuals with special knowledge or training
with respect to the problems of students with disabilities, or any combination
of the above;
b. To present
evidence, and to confront, cross-examine, and compel the attendance of
witnesses;
c. To prohibit the
introduction of any evidence at the hearing that has not been disclosed to that
party at least five (5) business days before the hearing;
d. To obtain written, or, at the option of
the parents, electronic verbatim record of the hearing at no cost to the
parents; and,
e. To obtain written,
or, at the option of the parents, electronic findings of fact and decisions at
no cost to the parents.
2. Additional disclosure of information.
a. At least five (5) business days prior to a
hearing conducted pursuant to this rule, each party shall disclose to all other
parties all evaluations completed by that date and recommendations based on the
offering party's evaluations that the party intends to use at the
hearing.
b. An ALJ may bar any
party that fails to comply with sub-subparagraph (9)(v)2.a. of this rule, from
introducing the relevant evaluation or recommendation at the hearing without
the consent of the other party.
3. Additional parental rights at hearings. In
addition to the rights already identified in this rule, parents involved in
hearings must be given the right to:
a. Have
their student who is the subject of the hearing present;
b. Open the hearing to the public;
and,
c. Have the record of the
hearing and the findings of fact and decisions described above provided at no
cost to the parents.
4.
Hearing decisions. An ALJ's determination of whether a student received FAPE
must be based on substantive grounds. In matters alleging a procedural
violation, an ALJ may find that a student did not receive FAPE only if the
procedural inadequacies impeded the student's right to FAPE; significantly
impeded the parent's opportunity to participate in the decision-making process
regarding the provision of FAPE to the student; or caused a deprivation of
educational benefit. This shall not be construed to preclude an ALJ from
ordering a public agency, including a school district, to comply with the
procedural safeguards set forth in Rules
6A-6.03011 -.0361, F.A.C. In
addition, nothing in Rules
6A-6.03011 -.0361, F.A.C., shall
be construed to preclude a parent from filing a separate request for due
process on an issue separate from a request for due process already
filed.
5. Findings and decision to
advisory panel and general public. The SEA, after deleting any personally
identifiable information, must transmit the findings and decisions of the ALJ
to the State Advisory Committee for the Education of Exceptional Students and
make those findings and decisions available to the public.
6. Timelines and convenience of hearings and
reviews. The SEA must ensure that not later than forty-five (45) days after the
expiration of the thirty (30) day period for resolution pursuant to paragraph
(9)(o) of this rule, or the adjusted time period described in this rule, a
final decision is reached in the hearing and a copy of the decision is mailed
to each of the parties. An ALJ may grant specific extensions of time beyond
these time periods at the request of either party. Each hearing must be
conducted at a time and place that is reasonably convenient to the parents and
the student involved.
(w)
Civil Action. A decision made in a due process hearing shall be final, unless,
within ninety (90) days from the date of the decision of the ALJ, a party
aggrieved by the decision brings a civil action in federal district or state
circuit court without regard to the amount in controversy, as provided in
Section 1003.57(5),
F.S. The state circuit or federal district court shall receive the records of
the administrative proceedings; hear additional evidence at the request of a
party; and basing its decision on the preponderance of the evidence, grant the
relief it determines appropriate. Nothing in this rule restricts or limits the
rights, procedures, and remedies available under the U.S. Constitution, the
Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, Title V of the Rehabilitation Act of
1973, or other Federal laws protecting the rights of students with
disabilities, except that before the filing of a civil action under these laws
seeking relief that is also available under the procedures safeguards available
under the IDEA, the procedures related to due process hearings must be
exhausted to the same extent as would be required had the action been brought
under the IDEA.
(x) Attorneys'
Fees.
1. In any due process hearing or
subsequent judicial proceeding brought under this rule, the court, in its
discretion, may award reasonable attorneys' fees as part of the costs to:
a. The prevailing party who is the parent of
a student with a disability;
b. To
a prevailing party who is the Department or public agency, including a school
district, against the attorney of a parent who files a complaint or subsequent
cause of action that is frivolous, unreasonable, or without foundation, or
against the attorney of a parent who continued to litigate after the litigation
clearly became frivolous, unreasonable, or without foundation; or
c. To the prevailing Department or public
agency, including a school district, against the attorney of a parent, or
against the parent, if the parent's request for a due process hearing or
subsequent cause of action was presented for any improper purpose, such as to
harass, to cause unnecessary delay, or to needlessly increase the cost of
litigation.
2.
Prohibition on use of funds. Funds under Part B of the IDEA may not be used to
pay attorneys' fees or costs of a party related to any action or proceeding
under this rule. However, this does not preclude a public agency, including a
school district, from using funds under Part B of the IDEA for conducting a due
process hearing or subsequent judicial proceedings under the IDEA.
3. Award of fees. A court awards reasonable
attorneys' fees under this paragraph consistent with the following:
a. Fees awarded must be based on rates
prevailing in the community in which the due process hearing or judicial
proceeding arose for the kind and quality of services furnished. No bonus or
multiplier may be used in calculating the fees awarded under this
paragraph.
b. Attorneys' fees may
not be awarded and related costs may not be reimbursed in any due process
hearing or judicial proceeding for services performed subsequent to the time of
a written offer of settlement to a parent if the offer is made within the time
prescribed by Rule 68 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure or, in the case
of a due process hearing, at any time more than ten (10) days before the
hearing begins; the offer is not accepted within ten (10) days; and the court
or ALJ finds that the relief finally obtained by the parents is not more
favorable to the parents than the offer of settlement. An award of attorneys'
fees and related costs may be made, however, to a parent who is the prevailing
party and was substantially justified in rejecting the settlement
offer.
c. Attorneys' fees may not
be awarded relating to any meeting of the IEP team, unless the meeting is
convened as a result of a due process hearing or judicial proceeding. For
purposes of this section, a resolution session/meeting conducted pursuant to
this rule is not considered a meeting convened as a result of a due process
hearing or judicial proceeding or a due process hearing or judicial
proceeding.
4. Except as
provided in paragraph (e) of this subsection, the court reduces, accordingly,
the amount of the attorneys' fees awarded, if the court finds that:
a. The parent, or the parent's attorney,
during the course of the action or proceeding, unreasonably protracted the
final resolution of the controversy;
b. The amount of the attorneys' fees
otherwise authorized to be awarded unreasonably exceeds the hourly rate
prevailing in the community for similar services by attorneys of reasonably
comparable skill, reputation, and experience;
c. The time spent and legal services
furnished were excessive considering the nature of the action or proceeding;
or
d. The attorney representing the
parent did not provide to the public agency, including a school district, the
appropriate information in the due process request in accordance with this
rule.
e. The provisions of
subsection (4) of this subsection do not apply in any action or proceeding if
the court finds that the Department of Education or the public agency,
including a school district, unreasonably protracted the final resolution of
the action or proceeding or there was a violation of section 1415 of the
IDEA.
(y)
Student's status during proceedings. Except as provided in Rule
6A-6.03312, F.A.C., which
addresses discipline of students with disabilities, during the time that an
administrative or subsequent judicial proceeding regarding a due process
hearing is pending, unless the parent of the student and the public agency,
including a school district, agree otherwise, the student involved in the
proceeding must remain in the then-current placement. If the proceeding
involves an application for an initial admission to public school, the student,
with the consent of the parent, must be placed in a public school program until
the completion of all proceedings. If the due process hearing involves an
application for initial services under Rules
6A-6.03011 -.0361, F.A.C., from
a student who is transitioning from an IDEA Part C Early Intervention program
to an IDEA Part B program and is no longer eligible for Part C services because
the student has turned three (3), the public agency, including a school
district, is not required to provide the Part C services that the student had
been receiving. If the student is found eligible for special education and
related services under Part B and the parent consents to the initial provision
of such services, then the public agency, including a school district, must
provide those special education and related services that are not in dispute
between the parent and the public agency, including a school district. If the
ALJ agrees with the parent that a change of placement is appropriate, that
placement must be treated as an agreement between the State and the parents for
purposes of determining the stay-put placement for the student.
Rulemaking Authority
1001.02(1),
(2)(n),
1003.01,
1003.57,
1003.571,
1003.5715,
1003.5716,
1008.212 FS. Law Implemented
1003.01,
1003.57,
1003.571,
1003.5715,
1003.5716,
1008.212
FS.
New 7-13-83, Amended 12-20-83, 4-26-84, Formerly 6A-6.3311,
Amended 7-17-90, 9-20-04, 12-22-08, 3-25-14, 7-14-21, 6-14-22, 8-22-23
11-21-23.