U.S. Supreme Court Reports
HENDRICK HUDSON DIST. BD. OF ED. v. ROWLEY,
458 U.S.176 (1982)
BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE HENDRICK HUDSON CENTRAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT,WESTCHESTER COUNTY, ET AL. v.
ROWLEY, BY HER PARENTS, ROWLEY ET UX.CERTIORARI TO THE
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
No. 80-1002.Argued March 23, 1982
Decided June 28, 1982
The Education of the Handicapped Act (Act) provides
federal money to assist state and local agencies in educating
handicapped children. To qualify for federal assistance, a State must
demonstrate, through a detailed plan submitted for federal approval,
that it has in effect a policy that assures all handicapped children the
right to a "free appropriate public education," which policy must be
tailored to the unique needs of the handicapped child by means of an
"individualized educational program" (IEP). The IEP must be prepared
(and reviewed at least annually) by school officials with participation
by the child's parents or guardian. The Act also requires that a
participating State provide specified administrative procedures by which
the child's parents or guardian may challenge any change in the
evaluation and education of the child. Any party aggrieved by the state
administrative decisions is authorized to bring a civil action in either
a state court or a federal district court. Respondents a child with
only minimal residual hearing who had been furnished by school
authorities with a special hearing aid for use in the classroom and who
was to receive additional instruction from tutors, and the child's
parents filed suit in Federal District Court to review New York
administrative proceedings that had upheld the school administrators'
denial of the parents' request that the child also be provided a
qualified sign-language interpreter in all of her academic classes.
Entering judgment for respondents, the District Court found that
although the child performed better than the average child in her class
and was advancing easily from grade to grade, she was not performing as
well academically as she would without her handicap. Because of this
disparity between the child's achievement and her potential, the court
held that she was not receiving a "free appropriate public education,"
which the court defined as "an opportunity to achieve [her] full
potential commensurate with the opportunity provided to other children."
The Court of Appeals affirmed. Page 177
Held:
1. The Act's requirement of a "free appropriate
public education" is satisfied when the State provides personalized
instruction with sufficient support services to permit the handicapped
child to benefit educationally from that instruction. Such instruction
and services must be provided at public expense, must meet the State's
educational standards, must approximate grade levels used in the State's
regular education, and must comport with the child's IEP, as formulated
in accordance with the Act's requirements. If the child is being
educated in regular classrooms, as here, the IEP should be reasonably
calculated to enable the child to achieve passing marks and advance from
grade to grade. Pp. 187-204.
(a) This interpretation is supported by the
definitions contained in the Act, as well as by other provisions
imposing procedural requirements and setting forth statutory findings
and priorities for States to follow in extending educational services to
handicapped children. The Act's language contains no express substantive
standard prescribing the level of education to be accorded handicapped
children. Pp. 187-190.
(b) The Act's legislative history shows that Congress
sought to make public education available to handicapped children, but
did not intend to impose upon the States any greater substantive
educational standard than is necessary to make such access to public
education meaningful. The Act's intent was more to open the door of
public education to handicapped children by means of specialized
educational services than to guarantee any particular substantive level
of education once inside. Pp. 191-197.
(c) While Congress sought to provide assistance to
the States in carrying out their constitutional responsibilities to
provide equal protection of the laws, it did not intend to achieve
strict equality of opportunity or services for handicapped and
nonhandicapped children, but rather sought primarily to identify and
evaluate handicapped children, and to provide them with access to a free
public education. The Act does not require a State to maximize the
potential of each handicapped child commensurate with the opportunity
provided nonhandicapped children. Pp. 198-200.
2. In suits brought under the Act's judicial-review
provisions, a court must first determine whether the State has complied
with the statutory procedures, and must then determine whether the
individualized program developed through such procedures is reasonably
calculated to enable the child to receive educational benefits. If these
requirements are met, the State has complied with the obligations
imposed by Congress and the courts can require no more. Pp. 204-208.
Page 178
(a) Although the judicial-review provisions do not
limit courts to ensuring that States have complied with the Act's
procedural requirements, the Act's emphasis on procedural safeguards
demonstrates the legislative conviction that adequate compliance with
prescribed procedures will in most cases assure much, if not all, of
what Congress wished in the way of substantive content in an IEP. Pp.
204-207.
(b) The courts must be careful to avoid imposing
their view of preferable educational methods upon the States. Once a
court determines that the Act's requirements have been met, questions of
methodology are for resolution by the States. Pp. 207-208.
3. Entrusting a child's education to state and local
agencies does not leave the child without protection. As demonstrated by
this case, parents and guardians will not lack ardor in seeking to
ensure that handicapped children receive all of the benefits to which
they are entitled by the Act. Pp. 208-209.
4. The Act does not require the provision of a
sign-language interpreter here. Neither of the courts below found that
there had been a failure to comply with the Act's procedures, and the
findings of neither court will support a conclusion that the child's
educational program failed to comply with the substantive requirements
of the Act. Pp. 209-210.
632 F.2d 945, reversed and remanded.
REHNQUIST, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in
which BURGER, C. J., and POWELL, STEVENS, and O'CONNOR, JJ., joined.
BLACKMUN, J., filed an opinion concurring in the judgment, post,
p. 210. WHITE, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which BRENNAN and
MARSHALL, JJ., joined, post, p. 212.
Raymond G. Kuntz argued the cause for
petitioners. With him on the briefs were Robert D. Stone, Jean M.
Coon, Paul E. Sherman, Jr., and Donald O. Meserve.
Michael A. Chatoff argued the cause and filed
a brief for respondents.
Elliott Schulder argued the cause for the
United States as amicus curiae urging affirmance. On the brief
were Solicitor General Lee, Assistant Attorney General Reynolds,
Walter W. Barnett, and Louise A. Lerner.[fn*]
[fn*] Page
178 Briefs of amici curiae urging affirmance were filed by
Charles S. Sims for the American Civil Liberties Union; by Jane
Bloom Yohalem, Norman S. Rosenberg, Daniel Yohalem, and Marian
Wright Edelman for the Page 179 Association for Retarded Citizens of
the United States et al.; by Ralph J. Moore, Jr., and Franklin
D. Kramer for the Maryland Advocacy Unit for the Developmentally
Disabled, Inc., et al.; by Marc Charmatz, Janet Stotland, and
Joseph Blum for the National Association of the Deaf et al; by
Minna J. Kotkin and Barry Felder for the New York State
Commission on the Quality of Care for the Mentally Disabled, Protection
and Advocacy System; and by Michael A. Rebell for the United
Cerebral Palsy Associations, Inc., et al.
Norman H. Gross, Gwendolyn H. Gregory, Thomas A.
Shannon, and August W. Steinhilber filed a brief for the
National School Boards Association et al. as amici curiae. Page
179
JUSTICE REHNQUIST delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents a question of statutory
interpretation. Petitioners contend that the Court of Appeals and the
District Court misconstrued the requirements imposed by Congress upon
States which receive federal funds under the Education of the
Handicapped Act. We agree and reverse the judgment of the Court of
Appeals.
I
The Education of the Handicapped Act (Act), 84 Stat.
175, as amended, 20 U.S.C. § 1401 et seq. (1976 ed. and Supp.
IV), provides federal money to assist state and local agencies in
educating handicapped children, and conditions such funding upon a
State's compliance with extensive goals and procedures. The Act
represents an ambitious federal effort to promote the education of
handicapped children, and was passed in response to Congress' perception
that a majority of handicapped children in the United States "were
either totally excluded from schools or [were] sitting idly in regular
classrooms awaiting the time when they were old enough to `drop out.'"
H. R. Rep. No. 94-332, p. 2 (1975) (H. R. Rep.). The Act's evolution and
major provisions shed light on the question of statutory interpretation
which is at the heart of this case.
Congress first addressed the problem of educating the
handicapped in 1966 when it amended the Elementary and Page 180
Secondary Education Act of 1965 to establish a grant program "for the
purpose of assisting the States in the initiation, expansion, and
improvement of programs and projects . . . for the education of
handicapped children." Pub. L. 89-750, § 161, 80 Stat. 1204. That
program was repealed in 1970 by the Education of the Handicapped Act,
Pub. L. 91-230, 84 Stat. 175, Part B of which established a grant
program similar in purpose to the repealed legislation. Neither the 1966
nor the 1970 legislation contained specific guidelines for state use of
the grant money; both were aimed primarily at stimulating the States to
develop educational resources and to train personnel for educating the
handicapped.[fn1]
Dissatisfied with the progress being made under these
earlier enactments, and spurred by two District Court decisions holding
that handicapped children should be given access to a public education,[fn2]
Congress in 1974 greatly increased federal funding for education of the
handicapped and for the first time required recipient States to adopt "a
goal of providing full educational opportunities to all handicapped
children." Pub. L. 93-380, 88 Stat. 579, 583 (1974 statute). The 1974
statute was recognized as an interim measure only, adopted "in order to
give the Congress an additional year in which to study what if any
additional Federal assistance [was] required to enable the States to
meet the needs of handicapped children." H. R. Rep., at 4. The ensuing
year of study produced the Education for All Handicapped Children Act of
1975.
In order to qualify for federal financial assistance
under the Act, a State must demonstrate that it "has in effect a policy
that assures all handicapped children the right to a free appropriate
public education." 20 U.S.C. § 1412(1). That policy must be reflected in
a state plan submitted to and approved by the Secretary of Education,[fn3]
§ 1413, which describes in detail the goals, programs, and timetables
under which the State intends to educate handicapped children within its
borders. §§ 1412, 1413. States receiving money under the Act must
provide education to the handicapped by priority, first "to handicapped
children who are not receiving an education" and second "to handicapped
children . . . with the most severe handicaps who are receiving an
inadequate education," § 1412(3), and "to the maximum extent
appropriate" must educate handicapped children "with children who are
not handicapped." § 1412(5).[fn4]
The Act broadly defines "handicapped children" to include "mentally
retarded, hard of hearing, deaf, speech impaired, visually handicapped,
seriously emotionally disturbed, orthopedically impaired, [and] other
health impaired children, [and] children with specific learning
disabilities." § 1401(1).[fn5]
The "free appropriate public education" required by
the Act is tailored to the unique needs of the handicapped child by
means of an "individualized educational program" (IEP).
§ 1401(18). The IEP, which is prepared at a meeting between a qualified
representative of the local educational agency, the child's teacher, the
child's parents or guardian, and, where appropriate, the child, consists
of a written document containing
"(A) a statement of the present levels of
educational performance of such child, (B) a statement of annual
goals, including short-term instructional objectives, (C) a
statement of the specific educational services to be provided to
such child, and the extent to which such child will be able to
participate in regular educational programs, (D) the projected date
for initiation and anticipated duration of such services, and (E)
appropriate objective criteria and evaluation procedures and
schedules for determining, on at least an annual basis, whether
instructional objectives are being achieved." § 1401(19).
Local or regional educational agencies must review,
and where appropriate revise, each child's IEP at least annually. §
1414(a)(5). See also § 1413(a)(11).
In addition to the state plan and the IEP already
described, the Act imposes extensive procedural requirements upon States
receiving federal funds under its provisions. Parents or guardians of
handicapped children must be notified of any proposed change in "the
identification, evaluation, or educational placement of the child or the
provision of a free appropriate public education to such child," and
must be permitted to bring a complaint about "any matter relating to"
such evaluation and education. §§ 1415(b)(1)(D) and (E).[fn6]
Complaints brought by parents or guardians must be resolved at "an
impartial due process hearing," and appeal to the state educational
agency must be provided if the initial hearing is held at the local or
regional level. §§ 1415(b)(2) and (c).[fn7]
Thereafter, "[a]ny party aggrieved by the findings and decision" of the
state administrative hearing has "the right to bring a civil action with
respect to the complaint . . . in any State court of competent
jurisdiction or in a district court of the United States without regard
to the amount in controversy." § 1415(e)(2).
Thus, although the Act leaves to the States the
primary responsibility for developing and executing educational programs
for handicapped children, it imposes significant requirements to be
followed in the discharge of that responsibility. Compliance is assured
by provisions permitting the withholding of federal funds upon
determination that a participating state or local agency has failed to
satisfy the requirements of the Act, §§ 1414(b)(2)(A), 1416, and by the
provision for judicial review. At present, all States except New
Mexico receive federal funds under the portions of the Act at issue
today. Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae 2, n. 2.
II
This case arose in connection with the education of
Amy Rowley, a deaf student at the Furnace Woods School in the Hendrick
Hudson Central School District, Peekskill, N. Y. Amy has minimal
residual hearing and is an excellent lip-reader. During the year before
she began attending Furnace Woods, a meeting between her parents and
school administrators resulted in a decision to place her in a regular
kindergarten class in order to determine what supplemental services
would be necessary to her education. Several members of the school
administration prepared for Amy's arrival by attending a course in
sign-language interpretation, and a teletype machine was installed in
the principal's office to facilitate communication with her parents who
are also deaf. At the end of the trial period it was determined that Amy
should remain in the kindergarten class, but that she should be provided
with an FM hearing aid which would amplify words spoken into a wireless
receiver by the teacher or fellow students during certain classroom
activities. Amy successfully completed her kindergarten year.
As required by the Act, an IEP was prepared for Amy
during the fall of her first-grade year. The IEP provided that Amy
should be educated in a regular classroom at Furnace Woods, should
continue to use the FM hearing aid, and should receive instruction from
a tutor for the deaf for one hour each day and from a speech therapist
for three hours each week. The Rowleys agreed with parts of the IEP but
insisted that Amy also be provided a qualified sign-language interpreter
in all her academic classes in lieu of the assistance proposed in other
parts of the IEP. Such an interpreter had been placed in Amy's
kindergarten class for a 2-week experimental period, but the interpreter
had reported that Amy did not need his services at that time. The school
administrators
likewise concluded that Amy did not need such an interpreter in her
first-grade classroom. They reached this conclusion after consulting the
school district's Committee on the Handicapped, which had received
expert evidence from Amy's parents on the importance of a sign-language
interpreter, received testimony from Amy's teacher and other persons
familiar with her academic and social progress, and visited a class for
the deaf.
When their request for an interpreter was denied, the
Rowleys demanded and received a hearing before an independent examiner.
After receiving evidence from both sides, the examiner agreed with the
administrators' determination that an interpreter was not necessary
because "Amy was achieving educationally, academically, and socially"
without such assistance. App. to Pet. for Cert. F-22. The examiner's
decision was affirmed on appeal by the New York Commissioner of
Education on the basis of substantial evidence in the record. Id.,
at E-4. Pursuant to the Act's provision for judicial review, the Rowleys
then brought an action in the United States District Court for the
Southern District of New York, claiming that the administrators' denial
of the sign-language interpreter constituted a denial of the "free
appropriate public education" guaranteed by the Act.
The District Court found that Amy "is a remarkably
well-adjusted child" who interacts and communicates well with her
classmates and has "developed an extraordinary rapport" with her
teachers. 483 F. Supp. 528, 531 (1980). It also found that "she performs
better than the average child in her class and is advancing easily from
grade to grade," id., at 534, but "that she understands
considerably less of what goes on in class than she could if she were
not deaf" and thus "is not learning as much, or performing as well
academically, as she would without her handicap," id., at 532.
This disparity between Amy's achievement and her potential led the court
to decide that she was not receiving a "free appropriate public
education," which the court defined as "an opportunity to achieve [her]
full potential commensurate with the opportunity provided to other
children." Id., at 534. According to the District Court, such a
standard "requires that the potential of the handicapped child be
measured and compared to his or her performance, and that the resulting
differential or `shortfall' be compared to the shortfall experienced by
nonhandicapped children." Ibid. The District Court's definition
arose from its assumption that the responsibility for "giv[ing] content
to the requirement of an `appropriate education'" had "been left
entirely to the [federal] courts and the hearing officers." Id.,
at 533.[fn8]
A divided panel of the United States Court of Appeals
for the Second Circuit affirmed. The Court of Appeals "agree[d] with the
[D]istrict [C]ourt's conclusions of law," and held that its "findings of
fact [were] not clearly erroneous." 632 F.2d 945, 947 (1980).
We granted certiorari to review the lower courts'
interpretation of the Act. 454 U.S. 961 (1981). Such review requires us
to consider two questions: What is meant by the Act's requirement of a
"free appropriate public education"? And what is the role of state and
federal courts in exercising the review granted by 20 U.S.C. § 1415? We
consider these questions separately.[fn9]
III
A
This is the first case in which this Court has been
called upon to interpret any provision of the Act. As noted previously,
the District Court and the Court of Appeals concluded that "[t]he Act
itself does not define `appropriate education,'" 483 F. Supp., at 533,
but leaves "to the courts and the hearing officers" the responsibility
of "giv[ing] content to the requirement of an `appropriate education.'"
Ibid. See also 632 F.2d, at 947. Petitioners contend that the
definition of the phrase "free appropriate public education" used by the
courts below overlooks the definition of that phrase actually found in
the Act. Respondents agree that the Act defines "free appropriate public
education," but contend that the statutory definition is not
"functional" and thus "offers judges no guidance in their consideration
of controversies involving `the identification, evaluation, or
educational placement of the child or the provision of a free
appropriate public education.'" Brief for Respondents 28. The United
States, appearing as amicus curiae on behalf of respondents,
states that "[a]lthough the Act includes definitions of a `free
appropriate public education' and other related terms, the statutory
definitions do not adequately explain what is meant by `appropriate.'"
Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae 13.
We are loath to conclude that Congress failed to
offer any assistance in defining the meaning of the principal
substantive phrase used in the Act. It is beyond dispute that, contrary
to the conclusions of the courts below, the Act does expressly define
"free appropriate public education": Page 188
"The term `free appropriate public education'
means special education and related services which (A)
have been provided at public expense, under public supervision and
direction, and without charge, (B) meet the standards of the State
educational agency, (C) include an appropriate preschool,
elementary, or secondary school education in the State involved, and
(D) are provided in conformity with the individualized education
program required under section 1414(a)(5) of this title." § 1401(18)
(emphasis added).
"Special education," as referred to in this
definition, means "specially designed instruction, at no cost to parents
or guardians, to meet the unique needs of a handicapped child, including
classroom instruction, instruction in physical education, home
instruction, and instruction in hospitals and institutions." § 1401(16).
"Related services" are defined as "transportation, and such
developmental, corrective, and other supportive services . . . as may be
required to assist a handicapped child to benefit from special
education." § 1401(17).[fn10]
Like many statutory definitions, this one tends
toward the cryptic rather than the comprehensive, but that is scarcely a
reason for abandoning the quest for legislative intent. Whether or not
the definition is a "functional" one, as respondents contend it is not,
it is the principal tool which Congress has given us for parsing the
critical phrase of the Act. We think more must be made of it than either
respondents or the United States seems willing to admit.
According to the definitions contained in the Act, a
"free appropriate public education" consists of educational instruction
specially designed to meet the unique needs of the handicapped child,
supported by such services as are necessary to permit the child "to
benefit" from the instruction. Almost as a checklist for adequacy under
the Act, the definition also requires that such instruction and services
be provided at public expense and under public supervision, meet the
State's educational standards, approximate the grade levels used in the
State's regular education, and comport with the child's IEP. Thus, if
personalized instruction is being provided with sufficient supportive
services to permit the child to benefit from the instruction, and the
other items on the definitional checklist are satisfied, the child is
receiving a "free appropriate public education" as defined by the Act.
Other portions of the statute also shed light upon
congressional intent. Congress found that of the roughly eight million
handicapped children in the United States at the time of enactment, one
million were "excluded entirely from the public school system" and more
than half were receiving an inappropriate education. 89 Stat. 774, note
following § 1401. In addition, as mentioned in Part I, the Act requires
States to extend educational services first to those children who are
receiving no education and second to those children who are receiving an
"inadequate education." § 1412(3). When these express statutory findings
and priorities are read together with the Act's extensive procedural
requirements and its definition of "free appropriate public education,"
the face of the statute evinces a congressional intent to bring
previously excluded handicapped children into the public education
systems of the States and to require the States to adopt procedures
which would result in individualized consideration of and instruction
for each child.
Noticeably absent from the language of the statute is
any substantive standard prescribing the level of education to be
accorded handicapped children. Certainly the language of the statute
contains no requirement like the one imposed by the lower courts that
States maximize the potential of handicapped children "commensurate with
the opportunity provided to other children." 483 F. Supp., at 534. That
standard was expounded by the District Court without reference to the
statutory definitions or even to the legislative history of the Act.
Although we find the statutory definition of "free appropriate public
education" to be helpful in our interpretation of the Act, there remains
the question of whether the legislative history indicates a
congressional intent that such education meet some additional
substantive standard. For an answer, we turn to that history.[fn11]
B
(i)
As suggested in Part I, federal support for education
of the handicapped is a fairly recent development. Before passage of the
Act some States had passed laws to improve the educational services
afforded handicapped children,[fn12]
but many of these children were excluded completely from any form of
public education or were left to fend for themselves in classrooms
designed for education of their nonhandicapped peers. As previously
noted, the House Report begins by emphasizing this exclusion and
misplacement, noting that millions of handicapped children "were either
totally excluded from schools or [were] sitting idly in regular
classrooms awaiting the time when they were old enough to `drop out.'"
H. R. Rep., at 2. See also S. Rep., at 8. One of the Act's two principal
sponsors in the Senate urged its passage in similar terms:
"While much progress has been made in the last
few years, we can take no solace in that progress until all
handicapped children are, in fact, receiving an education. The most
recent statistics provided by the Bureau of Education for the
Handicapped estimate that . . . 1.75 million handicapped children do
not receive any educational services, and 2.5 million handicapped
children are not receiving an appropriate education." 121 Cong. Rec.
19486 (1975) (remarks of Sen. Williams).
This concern, stressed repeatedly throughout the
legislative history,[fn13]
confirms the impression conveyed by the language of the statute: By
passing the Act, Congress sought primarily to make public education
available to handicapped children. But in seeking to provide such access
to public education, Congress did not impose upon the States any greater
substantive educational standard than would be necessary to make such
access meaningful. Indeed, Congress expressly "recognize[d] that in many
instances the process of providing special education and related
services to handicapped children is not guaranteed to produce any
particular outcome." S. Rep., at 11. Thus, the intent of the Act was
more to open the door of public education to handicapped children on
appropriate terms than to guarantee any particular level of education
once inside.
Both the House and the Senate Reports attribute the
impetus for the Act and its predecessors to two federal-court judgments
rendered in 1971 and 1972. As the Senate Report states, passage of the
Act "followed a series of landmark court cases establishing in law the
right to education for all handicapped children." S. Rep., at 6.[fn14]
The first case, Pennsylvania Assn. for Retarded Children v.
Commonwealth, 334 F. Supp. 1257 (ED Pa. 1971) and 343 F. Supp. 279
(1972) (PARC), was a suit on behalf of retarded children
challenging the constitutionality of a Pennsylvania statute which acted
to exclude them from public education and training. The case ended in a
consent decree which enjoined the State from "deny[ing] to any mentally
retarded child access to a free public program of education and
training." 334 F. Supp., at 1258 (emphasis added).
PARC was followed by Mills v. Board
of Education of District of Columbia, 348 F. Supp. 866 (DC 1972), a
case in which the plaintiff handicapped children had been excluded Page
193 from the District of Columbia public schools. The court's judgment,
quoted in S. Rep., at 6, provided that
"no [handicapped] child eligible for a publicly supported education in
the District of Columbia public schools shall be excluded from a
regular school assignment by a Rule, policy, or practice of the Board of
Education of the District of Columbia or its agents unless such child is
provided (a) adequate alternative educational services suited to
the child's needs, which may include special education or tuition
grants, and (b) a constitutionally adequate prior hearing and periodic
review of the child's status, progress, and the adequacy of any
educational alternative." 348 F. Supp., at 878 (emphasis added).
Mills and PARC both held that
handicapped children must be given access to an adequate,
publicly supported education. Neither case purports to require any
particular substantive level of education.[fn15]
Rather, like the language of the Act, the cases set forth extensive
procedures to be followed in formulating personalized educational
programs for handicapped children. See 348 F. Supp., at 878-883; 334 F.
Supp., at 1258-1267.[fn16]
The fact that both PARC and Mills are discussed at length
in the legislative Reports[fn17]suggests
that the principles which they established are the principles which, to
a significant extent, guided the drafters of the Act. Indeed,
immediately after discussing these cases the Senate Report describes the
1974 statute as having "incorporated the major principles of the right
to education cases." S. Rep., at 8. Those principles in turn became the
basis of the Act, which itself was designed to effectuate the purposes
of the 1974 statute. H. R. Rep., at 5.[fn18]
That the Act imposes no clear obligation upon
recipient States beyond the requirement that handicapped children
receive some form of specialized education is perhaps best demonstrated
by the fact that Congress, in explaining the need for the Act, equated
an "appropriate education" to the receipt of some specialized
educational services. The Senate Report states: "[T]he most recent
statistics provided by the Bureau of Education for the Handicapped
estimate that of the more than 8 million children . . . with
handicapping conditions requiring special education and related
services, only 3.9 million such children are receiving an appropriate
education." S. Rep., at 8.[fn19]
This statement, which reveals Congress' view that 3.9 million
handicapped children were "receiving an appropriate education" in 1975,
is followed immediately in the Senate Report by a table showing that 3.9
million handicapped children were "served" in 1975 and a slightly larger
number were "unserved." A similar statement and table appear in the
House Report. H. R. Rep., at 11-12.
It is evident from the legislative history that the
characterization of handicapped children as "served" referred to
children who were receiving some form of specialized educational
services from the States, and that the characterization of children as "unserved"
referred to those who were receiving no specialized educational
services. For example, a letter sent to the United States Commissioner
of Education by the House Committee on Education and Labor, signed by
two key sponsors of the Act in the House, asked the Commissioner to
identify the number of handicapped "children served" in each State. The
letter asked for statistics on the number of children "being served" in
various types of "special education program[s]" and the number of
children who were not "receiving educational services." Hearings on S. 6
before the Subcommittee on the Handicapped of the Senate Committee on
Labor and Public Welfare, 94th Cong., 1st Sess., 205-207 (1975).
Similarly, Senator Randolph, one of the Act's principal sponsors in the
Senate, noted that roughly one-half of the handicapped children in the
United States "are receiving special educational services." Id.,
at 1.[fn20] By
characterizing the 3.9 million handicapped children who were "served" as
children who were "receiving an appropriate education," the Senate and
House Reports unmistakably disclose Congress' perception of the type of
education required by the Act: an "appropriate education" is provided
when personalized educational services are provided.[fn21]
(ii)
Respondents contend that "the goal of the Act is to
provide each handicapped child with an equal educational opportunity."
Brief for Respondents 35. We think, however, that the requirement that a
State provide specialized educational services to handicapped children
generates no additional requirement that the services so provided be
sufficient to maximize each child's potential "commensurate with the
opportunity provided other children." Respondents and the United States
correctly note that Congress sought "to provide assistance to the States
in carrying out their responsibilities under . . . the Constitution of
the United States to provide equal protection of the laws." S. Rep., at
13.[fn22] But we do not
think that such statements imply a congressional intent to achieve
strict equality of opportunity or services.
The educational opportunities provided by our public
school systems undoubtedly differ from student to student, depending
upon a myriad of factors that might affect a particular student's
ability to assimilate information presented in the classroom. The
requirement that States provide "equal" educational opportunities would
thus seem to present an entirely unworkable standard requiring
impossible measurements and comparisons. Similarly, furnishing
handicapped children with only such services as are available to
nonhandicapped children would in all probability fall short of the
statutory requirement of "free appropriate public education"; to
require, on the other hand, the furnishing of every special service
necessary to maximize each handicapped child's potential is, we think,
further than Congress intended to go. Thus to speak in terms of "equal"
services in one instance gives less than what is required by the Act and
in another instance more. The theme of the Act is "free appropriate
public education," a phrase which is too complex to be captured by the
word "equal" whether one is speaking of opportunities or services.
The legislative conception of the requirements of
equal protection was undoubtedly informed by the two District Court
decisions referred to above. But cases such as Mills and PARC
held simply that handicapped children may not be excluded entirely from
public education. In Mills, the District Court said:
"If sufficient funds are not available to finance
all of the services and programs that are needed and desirable in
the system then the available funds must be expended equitably in
such a manner that no child is entirely excluded from a publicly
supported education consistent with his needs and ability to benefit
therefrom." 348 F. Supp., at 876.
The PARC court used similar language, saying
"[i]t is the commonwealth's obligation to place each mentally retarded
child in a free, public program of education and training appropriate to
the child's capacity . . . ." 334 F. Supp., at 1260. The right of access
to free public education enunciated by these cases is significantly
different from any notion of absolute equality of opportunity regardless
of capacity. To the extent that Congress might have looked further than
these cases which are mentioned in the legislative history, at the time
of enactment of the Act this Court had held at least twice that the
Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment does not require
States to expend equal financial resources on the education of each
child. San Antonio Independent School Dist. v. Rodriguez,
411 U.S. 1 (1973); McInnis v. Shapiro, 293 F. Supp. 327
(ND Ill. 1968), aff'd sub nom. McInnis v. Ogilvie, 394
U.S. 322 (1969).
In explaining the need for federal legislation, the
House Report noted that "no congressional legislation has required a
precise guarantee for handicapped children, i. e. a basic floor of
opportunity that would bring into compliance all school districts with
the constitutional right of equal protection with respect to handicapped
children." H. R. Rep., at 14. Assuming that the Act was designed to fill
the need identified in the House Report that is, to provide a "basic
floor of opportunity" consistent with equal protection neither the Act
nor its history persuasively demonstrates that Congress thought that
equal protection required anything more than equal access. Therefore,
Congress' desire to provide specialized educational services, even in
furtherance of "equality," cannot be read as imposing any particular
substantive educational standard upon the States.
The District Court and the Court of Appeals thus
erred when they held that the Act requires New York to maximize the
potential of each handicapped child commensurate with the opportunity
provided nonhandicapped children. Desirable though that goal might be,
it is not the standard that Congress imposed upon States which receive
funding under the Act. Rather, Congress sought primarily to identify and
evaluate handicapped children, and to provide them with access to a free
public education.
(iii)
Implicit in the congressional purpose of providing
access to a "free appropriate public education" is the requirement that
the education to which access is provided be sufficient to confer some
educational benefit upon the handicapped child. It would do little good
for Congress to spend millions of dollars in providing access to a
public education only to have the handicapped child receive no benefit
from that education. The statutory definition of "free appropriate
public education," in addition to requiring that States provide each
child with "specially designed instruction," expressly requires the
provision of "such . . . supportive services . . . as may be required to
assist a handicapped child to benefit from special education." §
1401(17) (emphasis added). We therefore conclude that the "basic floor
of opportunity" provided by the Act consists of access to specialized
instruction and related services which are individually designed to
provide educational benefit to the handicapped child.[fn23]
The determination of when handicapped children are
receiving sufficient educational benefits to satisfy the requirements of
the Act presents a more difficult problem. The Act requires
participating States to educate a wide spectrum of handicapped children,
from the marginally hearing-impaired to the profoundly retarded and
palsied. It is clear that the benefits obtainable by children at one end
of the spectrum will differ dramatically from those obtainable by
children at the other end, with infinite variations in between. One
child may have little difficulty competing successfully in an academic
setting with nonhandicapped children while another child may encounter
great difficulty in acquiring even the most basic of self-maintenance
skills. We do not attempt today to establish any one test for
determining the adequacy of educational benefits conferred upon all
children covered by the Act. Because in this case we are presented with
a handicapped child who is receiving substantial specialized instruction
and related services, and who is performing above average in the regular
classrooms of a public school system, we confine our analysis to that
situation.
The Act requires participating States to educate
handicapped children with nonhandicapped children whenever possible.[fn24]
When that "mainstreaming" preference of the Act has been met and a child
is being educated in the regular classrooms of a public school system,
the system itself monitors the educational progress of the child.
Regular examinations are administered, grades are awarded, and yearly
advancement to higher grade levels is permitted for those children who
attain an adequate knowledge of the course material. The grading and
advancement system thus constitutes an important factor in determining
educational benefit. Children who graduate from our public school
systems are considered by our society to have been "educated" at least
to the grade level they have completed, and access to an "education" for
handicapped children is precisely what Congress sought to provide in the
Act.[fn25]
C
When the language of the Act and its legislative history are considered
together, the requirements imposed by Congress become tolerably clear.
Insofar as a State is required to provide a handicapped child with a
"free appropriate public education," we hold that it satisfies this
requirement by providing personalized instruction with sufficient
support services to permit the child to benefit educationally from that
instruction. Such instruction and services must be provided at public
expense, must meet the State's educational standards, must approximate
the grade levels used in the State's regular education, and must comport
with the child's IEP. In addition, the IEP, and therefore the
personalized instruction, should be formulated in accordance with the
requirements of the Act and, if the child is being educated in the
regular classrooms of the public education system, should be reasonably
calculated to enable the child to achieve passing marks and advance from
grade to grade.[fn26]
IV
A
As mentioned in Part I, the Act permits "[a]ny party aggrieved by the
findings and decision" of the state administrative hearings "to bring a
civil action" in "any State court of competent jurisdiction or in a
district court of the United States without regard to the amount in
controversy." § 1415(e)(2). The complaint, and therefore the civil
action, may concern "any matter relating to the identification,
evaluation, or educational placement of the child, or the provision of a
free appropriate public education to such child." § 1415(b)(1)(E). In
reviewing the complaint, the Act provides that a court "shall receive
the record of the [state] administrative proceedings, shall hear
additional evidence at the request of a party, and, basing its decision
on the preponderance of the evidence, shall grant such relief as the
court determines is appropriate." § 1415(e)(2).
The parties disagree sharply over the meaning of
these provisions, petitioners contending that courts are given only
limited authority to review for state compliance with the Act's
procedural requirements and no power to review the substance of the
state program, and respondents contending that the Act requires courts
to exercise de novo review over state educational decisions and
policies. We find petitioners' contention unpersuasive, for Congress
expressly rejected provisions that would have so severely restricted the
role of reviewing courts. In substituting the current language of the
statute for language that would have made state administrative findings
conclusive if supported by substantial evidence, the Conference
Committee explained that courts were to make "independent decision[s]
based on a preponderance of the evidence." S. Conf. Rep. No. 94-455, p.
50 (1975). See also 121 Cong. Rec. 37416 (1975) (remarks of Sen.
Williams).
But although we find that this grant of authority is
broader than claimed by petitioners, we think the fact that it is found
in § 1415, which is entitled "Procedural safeguards," is not without
significance. When the elaborate and highly specific procedural
safeguards embodied in § 1415 are contrasted with the general and
somewhat imprecise substantive admonitions contained in the Act, we
think that the importance Congress attached to these procedural
safeguards cannot be gainsaid. It seems to us no exaggeration to say
that Congress placed every bit as much emphasis upon compliance with
procedures giving parents and guardians a large measure of participation
at every stage of the administrative process, see, e. g., §§
1415(a)-(d), as it did upon the measurement of the resulting IEP against
a substantive standard. We think that the congressional emphasis upon
full participation of concerned parties throughout the development of
the IEP, as well as the requirements that state and local plans be
submitted to the Secretary for approval, demonstrates the legislative
conviction that adequate compliance with the procedures prescribed would
in most cases assure much if not all of what Congress wished in the way
of substantive content in an IEP.
Thus the provision that a reviewing court base its
decision on the "preponderance of the evidence" is by no means an
invitation to the courts to substitute their own notions of sound
educational policy for those of the school authorities which they
review. The very importance which Congress has attached to compliance
with certain procedures in the preparation of an IEP would be frustrated
if a court were permitted simply to set state decisions at nought. The
fact that § 1415(e) requires that the reviewing court "receive the
records of the [state] administrative proceedings" carries with it the
implied requirement that due weight shall be given to these proceedings.
And we find nothing in the Act to suggest that merely because Congress
was rather sketchy in establishing substantive requirements, as opposed
to procedural requirements for the preparation of an IEP, it intended
that reviewing courts should have a free hand to impose substantive
standards of review which cannot be derived from the Act itself. In
short, the statutory authorization to grant "such relief as the court
determines is appropriate" cannot be read without reference to the
obligations, largely procedural in nature, which are imposed upon
recipient States by Congress.
Therefore, a court's inquiry in suits brought under §
1415(e)(2) is twofold. First, has the State complied with the procedures
set forth in the Act?[fn27]
And second, is the individualized educational program developed through
the Act's procedures reasonably calculated to enable the child to
receive educational benefits?[fn28]
If these requirements are met, the State has complied with the
obligations imposed by Congress and the courts can require no more.
B
In assuring that the requirements of the Act have
been met, courts must be careful to avoid imposing their view of
preferable educational methods upon the States.[fn29]
The primary responsibility for formulating the education to be accorded
a handicapped child, and for choosing the educational method most
suitable to the child's needs, was left by the Act to state and local
educational agencies in cooperation with the parents or guardian of the
child. The Act expressly charges States with the responsibility of
"acquiring and disseminating to teachers and administrators of programs
for handicapped children significant information derived from
educational research, demonstration, and similar projects, and [of]
adopting, where appropriate, promising educational practices and
materials." § 1413(a)(3). In the face of such a clear statutory
directive, it seems highly unlikely that Congress intended courts to
overturn a State's choice of appropriate educational theories in a
proceeding conducted pursuant to § 1415(e)(2).[fn30]
We previously have cautioned that courts lack the
"specialized knowledge and experience" necessary to resolve "persistent
and difficult questions of educational policy." San Antonio
Independent School Dist. v. Rodriguez, 411 U.S., at 42. We
think that Congress shared that view when it passed the Act. As already
demonstrated, Congress' intention was not that the Act displace the
primacy of States in the field of education, but that States receive
funds to assist them in extending their educational systems to the
handicapped. Therefore, once a court determines that the requirements of
the Act have been met, questions of methodology are for resolution by
the States.
V
Entrusting a child's education to state and local agencies does not
leave the child without protection. Congress sought to protect
individual children by providing for parental involvement in the
development of state plans and policies, supra, at 182-183, and
n. 6, and in the formulation of the child's individual educational
program. As the Senate Report states:
"The Committee recognizes that in many instances
the process of providing special education and related services to
handicapped children is not guaranteed to produce any particular
outcome. By changing the language [of the provision relating to
individualized educational programs] to emphasize the process of
parent and child involvement and to provide a written record of
reasonable expectations, the Committee intends to clarify that such
individualized planning conferences are a way to provide parent
involvement and protection to assure that appropriate services are
provided to a handicapped child." S. Rep., at 11-12.
See also S. Conf. Rep. No. 94-445, p. 30 (1975); 34 CFR § 300.345
(1981). As this very case demonstrates, parents and guardians will not
lack ardor in seeking to ensure that handicapped children receive all of
the benefits to which they are entitled by the Act.[fn31]
VI
Applying these principles to the facts of this case, we conclude that
the Court of Appeals erred in affirming the decision of the District
Court. Neither the District Court nor the Court of Appeals found that
petitioners had failed to comply with the procedures of the Act, and the
findings of neither court would support a conclusion that Amy's
educational program failed to comply with the substantive requirements
of the Act. On the contrary, the District Court found that the "evidence
firmly establishes that Amy is receiving an `adequate' education, since
she performs better than the average child in her class and is advancing
easily from grade to grade." 483 F. Supp., at 534. In light of this
finding, and of the fact that Amy was receiving personalized instruction
and related services calculated by the Furnace Woods school
administrators to meet her educational needs, the lower courts should
not have concluded that the Act requires the provision of a
sign-language interpreter. Accordingly, the decision of the Court of
Appeals is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings
consistent with this opinion.[fn32]
So ordered.
[Footnote 1] Page 180
See S. Rep. No. 94-168, p. 5 (1975) (S. Rep.); H. R. Rep., at 2-3.
[Footnote 2] Page 180
Two cases, Mills v. Board of Education of District of
Columbia, 348 F. Supp. 866 (DC 1972), and Pennsylvania Assn. for
Retarded Children v. Commonwealth, 334 F. Supp. 1257 (ED Pa.
1971) and 343 F. Supp. 279 (1972), were later identified as the most
prominent of the cases contributing to Congress' enactment of the Act
and the statutes which preceded it. H. R. Rep., at 3-4. Both decisions
are discussed in Part III of this opinion.
[Footnote 3]Page 181
All functions of the Commissioner of Education, formerly an officer in
the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, were transferred to
the Secretary of Education in 1979 when Congress passed the Department
of Education Organization Act, 20 U.S.C. § 3401 et seq. (1976
ed., Supp. IV). See 20 U.S.C. § 3441(a)(1) (1976 ed., Supp. IV).
[Footnote 4] Page 181
Despite this preference for "mainstreaming" handicapped children
educating them with nonhandicapped children Congress recognized that
regular classrooms simply would not be a suitable setting for the
education of many handicapped children. The Act expressly acknowledges
that "the nature or severity of the handicap [may be] such that
education in regular classes with the use of supplementary aids and
services cannot be achieved satisfactorily." § 1412(5). The Act thus
provides for the education of some handicapped children in separate
classes or institutional settings. See ibid.; § 1413(a)(4).
[Footnote 5] Page 181
In addition to covering a wide variety of handicapping conditions, the
Act requires special educational services for children "regardless of
the severity of their handicap." §§ 1412(2)(C), 1414(a)(1)(A).
[Footnote 6] Page 182
The requirements that parents be permitted to file complaints regarding
their child's education, and be present when the child's IEP is
formulated, represent only two examples of Congress' effort to maximize
parental involvement in the education of each handicapped child. In
addition, the Act requires that parents be permitted "to examine all
relevant records with respect to the identification, evaluation, and
educational placement of the child, and . . . to obtain an independent
educational evaluation of the child." § 1415(b)(1)(A). See also §§
1412(4), 1414(a)(4). State educational policies and the state plan
submitted to the Secretary of Education must be formulated in
"consultation with individuals involved in or concerned with the
education of handicapped children, including handicapped individuals and
parents or guardians of handicapped children." § 1412(7). See also §
1412(2)(E). Local agencies, which receive funds under the Act by
applying to the state agency, must submit applications which assure that
they have developed procedures for "the participation and consultation
of the parents or guardian[s] of [handicapped] children" in local
educational programs, § 1414(a)(1)(C)(iii), and the application itself,
along with "all pertinent documents related to such application," must
be made "available to parents, guardians, and other members of the
general public." § 1414(a)(4).
[Footnote 7] Page 183
"Any party" to a state or local administrative hearing must "be accorded
(1) the right to be accompanied and advised by counsel and by
individuals with special knowledge or training with respect to the
problems of handicapped children, (2) the right to present evidence and
confront, cross examine, and compel the attendance of witnesses, (3) the
right to a written or electronic verbatim record of such hearing, and
(4) the right to written findings of fact and decisions." § 1415(d).
[Footnote 8] Page 186
For reasons that are not revealed in the record, the District Court
concluded that "[t]he Act itself does not define `appropriate
education.'" 483 F. Supp., at 533. In fact, the Act expressly defines
the phrase "free appropriate public education," see § 1401(18), to which
the District Court was referring. See 483 F. Supp., at 533. After
overlooking the statutory definition, the District Court sought guidance
not from regulations interpreting the Act, but from regulations
promulgated under § 504 of the Rehabilitation Act. See 483 F. Supp., at
533, citing 45 CFR § 84.33(b).
[Footnote 9] Page 186
The IEP which respondents challenged in the District Court was created
for the 1978-1979 school year. Petitioners contend that the District
Court erred in reviewing that IEP after the school year had ended and
before the school administrators were able to develop another IEP for
subsequent years. We disagree. Judicial review invariably takes more
than nine months to complete, not to mention the time consumed during
the preceding state administrative hearings. The District Court thus
correctly ruled that it retained jurisdiction to grant relief because
the alleged deficiencies in the IEP were capable of repetition as to the
parties before it yet evading review. 483 F. Supp. 536, 538 (1980). See
Murphy v. Hunt, 455 U.S. 478, 482 (1982); Weinstein
v. Bradford, 423 U.S. 147, 149 (1975).
[Footnote 10] Page 188
Examples of "related services" identified in the Act are "speech
pathology and audiology, psychological services, physical and
occupational therapy, recreation, and medical and counseling services,
except that such medical services shall be for diagnostic and evaluation
purposes only." § 1401(17).
[Footnote 11] Page 190
The dissent, finding that "the standard of the courts below seems . . .
to reflect the congressional purpose" of the Act, post, at 218,
concludes that our answer to this question "is not a satisfactory one."
Post, at 216. Presumably, the dissent also agrees with the
District Court's conclusion that "it has been left entirely to the
courts and the hearing officers to give content to the requirement of an
`appropriate education.'" 483 F. Supp., at 533. It thus seems that the
dissent would give the courts carte blanche to impose upon the
States whatever burden their various judgments indicate should be
imposed. Indeed, the dissent clearly characterizes the requirement of an
"appropriate education" as open-ended, noting that "if there are limits
not evident from the face of the statute on what may be considered an
`appropriate education,' they must be found in the purpose of the
statute or its legislative history." Post, at 213. Not only are
we unable to find any suggestion from the face of the statute that the
requirement of an "appropriate education" was to be limitless, but we
also view the dissent's approach as contrary to the fundamental
proposition that Congress, when exercising its spending power, can
impose no burden upon the States unless it does so unambiguously. See
infra, at 204, n. 26. No one can doubt that this would have been an
easier case if Congress had seen fit to provide a more comprehensive
statutory definition of the phrase "free appropriate public education."
But Congress did not do so, and "our problem is to construe what
Congress has written. After all, Congress expresses its purpose by
words. It is for us to ascertain neither to add nor to subtract,
neither to delete nor to distort." 62 Cases of Jam v. United
States, 340 U.S. 593, 596 (1951). We would be less than faithful to
our obligation to construe what Congress has written if in this case we
were to disregard the statutory language and legislative history of the
Act by concluding that Congress had imposed upon the States a burden of
unspecified proportions and weight, to be revealed only through
case-by-case adjudication in the courts.
[Footnote 12] Page 191
See H. R. Rep., at 10; Note, The Education of All Handicapped Children
Act of 1975, 10 U. Mich. J. L. Ref. 110, 119 (1976).
[Footnote 13] Page 191
See, e. g., 121 Cong. Rec. 19494 (1975) (remarks of Sen. Javits)
("all too often, our handicapped citizens have been denied the
opportunity to receive an adequate education"); id., at 19502
(remarks of Sen. Cranston) (millions of handicapped "children . . . are
largely excluded from the educational opportunities that we give to our
other children"); id., at 23708 (remarks of Rep. Mink)
("handicapped children . . . are denied access to public schools because
of a lack of trained personnel").
[Footnote 14] Page 192
Similarly, the Senate Report states that it was an "[i]ncreased
awareness of the educational needs of handicapped children and landmark
court decisions establishing the right to education for handicapped
children [that] pointed to the necessity of an expanded federal fiscal
role." S. Rep., at 5. See also H. R. Rep., at 2-3.
[Footnote 15] Page 193
The only substantive standard which can be implied from these cases
comports with the standard implicit in the Act. PARC states that
each child must receive "access to a free public program of education
and training appropriate to his learning capacities," 334 F.
Supp., at 1258 (emphasis added), and that further state action is
required when it appears that "the needs of the mentally retarded child
are not being adequately served," id., at 1266. (Emphasis
added.) Mills also speaks in terms of "adequate" educational
services, 348 F. Supp., at 878, and sets a realistic standard of
providing some educational services to each child when every need
cannot be met.
"If sufficient funds are not available to finance all of the services
and programs that are needed and desirable in the system then the
available funds must be expended equitably in such a manner that no
child is entirely excluded from a publicly supported education
consistent with his needs and ability to benefit therefrom. The
inadequacies of the District of Columbia Public School System whether
occasioned by insufficient funding or administrative inefficiency,
certainly cannot be permitted to bear more heavily on the `exceptional'
or handicapped child than on the normal child." Id., at 876.
[Footnote 16] Page 194
Like the Act, PARC required the State to "identify, locate, [and]
evaluate" handicapped children, 334 F. Supp., at 1267, to create for
each child an individual educational program, id., at 1265, and
to hold a hearing "on any change in educational assignment," id.,
at 1266. Mills also required the preparation of an individual
educational program for each child. In addition, Mills permitted
the child's parents to inspect records relevant to the child's
education, to obtain an independent educational evaluation of the child,
to object to the IEP and receive a hearing before an independent hearing
officer, to be represented by counsel at the hearing, and to have the
right to confront and cross-examine adverse witnesses, all of which are
also permitted by the Act. 348 F. Supp., at 879-881. Like the Act,
Mills also required that the education of handicapped children be
conducted pursuant to an overall plan prepared by the District of
Columbia, and established a policy of educating handicapped children
with nonhandicapped children whenever possible. Ibid.
[Footnote 17] Page 194
See S. Rep., at 6-7; H. R. Rep., at 3-4.
[Footnote 18] Page 194
The 1974 statute "incorporated the major principles of the right to
education cases," by "add[ing] important new provisions to the Education
of the Handicapped Act which require the States to: establish a goal of
providing full educational opportunities to all handicapped children;
provide procedures for insuring that handicapped children and their
parents or guardians are guaranteed procedural safeguards in decisions
regarding identification, evaluation, and educational placement of
handicapped children; establish procedures to insure that, to the
maximum extent appropriate, handicapped children . . . are educated with
children who are not handicapped; . . . and, establish procedures to
insure that testing and evaluation materials and procedures utilized for
the purposes of classification and placement of handicapped children
will be selected and administered so as not to be racially or culturally
discriminatory." S. Rep., at 8.
The House Report explains that the Act simply
incorporated these purposes of the 1974 statute: the Act was intended
"primarily to amend . . . the Education of the Handicapped Act in order
to provide permanent authorization and a comprehensive mechanism which
will insure that those provisions enacted during the 93rd Congress [the
1974 statute] will result in maximum benefits for handicapped children
and their families." H. R. Rep., at 5. Thus, the 1974 statute's purpose
of providing handicapped children access to a public education
became the purpose of the Act.
[Footnote 19] Page 195
These statistics appear repeatedly throughout the legislative history of
the Act, demonstrating a virtual consensus among legislators that 3.9
million handicapped children were receiving an appropriate education in
1975. See, e. g., 121 Cong. Rec. 19486 (1975) (remarks of Sen.
Williams); id., at 19504 (remarks of Sen. Schweicker); id.,
at 23702 (remarks of Rep. Madden); ibid. (remarks of Rep.
Brademas); id., at 23709 (remarks of Rep. Minish); id., at
37024 (remarks of Rep. Brademas); id., at 37027 (remarks of Rep.
Gude); id., at 37417 (remarks of Sen. Javits); id., at
37420 (remarks of Sen. Hathaway).
[Footnote 20] Page 196
Senator Randolph stated: "[O]nly 55 percent of the school-aged
handicapped children and 22 percent of the pre-school-aged handicapped
children are receiving special educational services." Hearings on S. 6
before the Subcommittee on the Handicapped of the Senate Committee on
Labor and Public Welfare, 94th Cong., 1st Sess., 1 (1975). Although the
figures differ slightly in various parts of the legislative history, the
general thrust of congressional calculations was that roughly one-half
of the handicapped children in the United States were not receiving
specialized educational services, and thus were not "served." See, e.
g., 121 Cong. Rec. 19494 (1975) (remarks of Sen. Javits) ("only 50
percent of the Nation's handicapped children received proper education
services"); id., at 19504 (remarks of Sen. Humphrey) ("[a]lmost 3
million handicapped children, while in school, receive none of the
special services that they require in order to make education a
meaningful experience"); id., at 23706 (remarks of Rep. Quie)
("only 55 percent [of handicapped children] were receiving a public
education"); id., at 23709 (remarks of Rep. Biaggi) ("[o]ver 3
million [handicapped] children in this country are receiving either
below par education or none at all").
Statements similar to those appearing in the text, which equate "served"
as it appears in the Senate Report to "receiving special educational
services," appear throughout the legislative history. See, e. g.,
id., at 19492 (remarks of Sen. Williams); id., at 19494
(remarks of Sen. Javits); id., at 19496 (remarks of Sen. Stone);
id., at 19504-19505 (remarks of Sen. Humphrey); id., at
23703 (remarks of Rep. Brademas); Hearings on H. R. 7217 before the
Subcommittee on Select Education of the House Committee on Education and
Labor, 94th Cong., 1st Sess., 91, 150, 153 (1975); Hearings on H. R.
4199 before the Select Subcommittee on Education of the House Committee
on Education and Labor, 93d Cong., 1st Sess., 130, 139 (1973). See also
34 CFR § 300.343 (1981).
[Footnote 21] Page 197
In seeking to read more into the Act than its language or legislative
history will permit, the United States focuses upon the word
"appropriate," arguing that "the statutory definitions do not adequately
explain what [it means]." Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae
13. Whatever Congress meant by an "appropriate" education, it is clear
that it did not mean a potential-maximizing education.
The term as used in reference to educating the handicapped appears to
have originated in the PARC decision, where the District Court
required that handicapped children be provided with "education and
training appropriate to [their] learning capacities." 334 F. Supp., at
1258. The word appears again in the Mills decision, the District
Court at one point referring to the need for "an appropriate educational
program," 348 F. Supp., at 879, and at another point speaking of a
"suitable publicly-supported education," id., at 878. Both cases
also refer to the need for an "adequate" education. See 334 F. Supp., at
1266; 348 F. Supp., at 878.
The use of "appropriate" in the language of the Act,
although by no means definitive, suggests that Congress used the word as
much to describe the settings in which handicapped children should be
educated as to prescribe the substantive content or supportive services
of their education. For example, § 1412(5) requires that handicapped
children be educated in classrooms with nonhandicapped children "to the
maximum extent appropriate."
Similarly, § 1401(19) provides that, "whenever appropriate," handicapped
children should attend and participate in the meeting at which their IEP
is drafted. In addition, the definition of "free appropriate public
education" itself states that instruction given handicapped children
should be at an "appropriate preschool, elementary, or secondary school"
level. § 1401(18)(C). The Act's use of the word "appropriate" thus seems
to reflect Congress' recognition that some settings simply are not
suitable environments for the participation of some handicapped
children. At the very least, these statutory uses of the word refute the
contention that Congress used "appropriate" as a term of art which
concisely expresses the standard found by the lower courts.
[Footnote 22] Page 198
See also 121 Cong. Rec. 19492 (1975) (remarks of Sen. Williams); id.,
at 19504 (remarks of Sen. Humphrey).
[Footnote 23] Page 201
This view is supported by the congressional intention, frequently
expressed in the legislative history, that handicapped children be
enabled to achieve a reasonable degree of self-sufficiency. After
referring to statistics showing that many handicapped children were
excluded from public education, the Senate Report states:
"The long range implications of these statistics are
that public agencies and taxpayers will spend billions of dollars over
the lifetimes of these individuals to maintain such persons as
dependents and in a minimally acceptable lifestyle. With proper
education services, many would be able to become productive citizens,
contributing to society instead of being forced to remain burdens.
Others, through such services, would increase their independence, thus
reducing their dependence on society." S. Rep., at 9. See also H. R.
Rep., at 11. Similarly, one of the principal Senate sponsors of the Act
stated that "providing appropriate educational services now means that
many of these individuals will be able to become a contributing part of
our society, and they will not have to depend on subsistence payments
from public funds." 121 Cong. Rec. 19492 (1975) (remarks of Sen.
Williams). See also id., at 25541 (remarks of Rep. Harkin);
id., at 37024-37025 (remarks of Rep. Brademas); id., at 37027
(remarks of Rep. Gude); id., at 37410 (remarks of Sen. Randolph);
id., at 37416 (remarks of Sen. Williams).
The desire to provide handicapped children with an
attainable degree of personal independence obviously anticipated that
state educational programs would confer educational benefits upon such
children. But at the same time, the goal of achieving some degree of
self-sufficiency in most cases is a good deal more modest than the
potential-maximizing goal adopted by the lower courts.
Despite its frequent mention, we cannot conclude, as
did the dissent in the Court of Appeals, that self-sufficiency was
itself the substantive standard which Congress imposed upon the States.
Because many mildly handicapped children will achieve self-sufficiency
without state assistance while personal independence for the severely
handicapped may be an unreachable goal, "self-sufficiency" as a
substantive standard is at once an inadequate protection and an overly
demanding requirement. We thus view these references in the legislative
history as evidence of Congress' intention that the services provided
handicapped children be educationally beneficial, whatever the nature or
severity of their handicap.
[Footnote 24] Page 202
Title 20 U.S.C. § 1412(5) requires that participating States establish
"procedures to assure that, to the maximum extent appropriate,
handicapped children, including children in public or private
institutions or other care facilities, are educated with children who
are not handicapped, and that special classes, separate schooling, or
other removal of handicapped children from the regular educational
environment occurs only when the
Page 203
nature or severity of the handicap is such that education in regular
classes with the use of supplementary aids and services cannot be
achieved satisfactorily."
[Footnote 25] Page 203
We do not hold today that every handicapped child who is advancing from
grade to grade in a regular public school system is automatically
receiving a "free appropriate public education." In this case, however,
we find Amy's academic progress, when considered with the special
services and professional consideration accorded by the Furnace Woods
school administrators, to be dispositive.
[Footnote 26] Page 204
In defending the decisions of the District Court and the Court of
Appeals, respondents and the United States rely upon isolated statements
in the legislative history concerning the achievement of maximum
potential, see H. R. Rep., at 13, as support for their contention that
Congress intended to impose greater substantive requirements than we
have found. These statements, however, are too thin a reed on which to
base an interpretation of the Act which disregards both its language and
the balance of its legislative history. "Passing references and isolated
phrases are not controlling when analyzing a legislative history."
Department of State v. Washington Post Co., 456 U.S. 595, 600
(1982).
Moreover, even were we to agree that these statements
evince a congressional intent to maximize each child's potential, we
could not hold that Congress had successfully imposed that burden upon
the States. "[L]egislation enacted pursuant to the spending power is
much in the nature of a contract: in return for federal funds, the
States agree to comply with federally imposed conditions. The legitimacy
of Congress' power to legislate under the spending power thus rests on
whether the State voluntarily and knowingly accepts the terms of the
`contract.' . . . Accordingly, if Congress intends to impose a condition
on the grant of federal moneys, it must do so unambiguously."
Pennhurst State School v. Halderman, 451 U.S. 1, 17 (1981)
(footnote omitted). As already demonstrated, the Act and its history
impose no requirements on the States like those imposed by the District
Court and the Court of Appeals. A fortiori Congress has not done
so unambiguously, as required in the valid exercise of its spending
power.
[Footnote 27] Page 206
This inquiry will require a court not only to satisfy itself that the
State has adopted the state plan, policies, and assurances required by
the Act,
Page 207
but also to determine that the State has created an IEP for the child in
question which conforms with the requirements of § 1401(19).
[Footnote 28] Page 207
When the handicapped child is being educated in the regular classrooms
of a public school system, the achievement of passing marks and
advancement from grade to grade will be one important factor in
determining educational benefit. See Part III, supra.
[Footnote 29] Page 207
In this case, for example, both the state hearing officer and the
District Court were presented with evidence as to the best method for
educating the deaf, a question long debated among scholars. See Large,
Special Problems of the Deaf Under the Education for All Handicapped
Children Act of 1975, 58 Wash. U. L. Q. 213, 229 (1980). The District
Court accepted the testimony of respondents' experts that there was "a
trend supported by studies showing the greater degree of success of
students brought up in deaf households using [the method of
communication used by the Rowleys]." 483 F. Supp., at 535.
[Footnote 30] Page 208
It is clear that Congress was aware of the States' traditional role in
the formulation and execution of educational policy. "Historically, the
States have had the primary responsibility for the education of children
at the elementary and secondary level." 121 Cong. Rec. 19498 (1975)
(remarks of Sen. Dole). See also Epperson v. Arkansas, 393
U.S. 97, 104 (1968) ("By and large, public education in our Nation is
committed to the control of state and local authorities").
[Footnote 31] Page 209
In addition to providing for extensive parental involvement in the
formulation of state and local policies, as well as the preparation of
individual educational programs, the Act ensures that States will
receive the advice of experts in the field of educating handicapped
children. As a condition for receiving federal funds under the Act,
States must create "an advisory panel, appointed by the Governor or any
other official authorized under State law to make such appointments,
composed of individuals involved in or concerned with the education of
handicapped children, including handicapped individuals, teachers,
parents or guardians of handicapped children, State and local education
officials, and administrators of programs for handicapped children,
which (A) advises the State educational agency of unmet needs within the
State in the education of handicapped children, [and] (B) comments
publicly on any rules or regulations proposed for issuance by the State
regarding the education of handicapped children." § 1413(a)(12).
[Footnote 32] Page 210
Because the District Court declined to reach respondents' contention
that petitioners had failed to comply with the Act's procedural
requirements in developing Amy's IEP, 483 F. Supp., at 533, n. 8, the
case must be remanded for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
JUSTICE BLACKMUN, concurring in the judgment.
Although I reach the same result as the Court does
today, I read the legislative history and goals of the Education of the
Handicapped Act differently. Congress unambiguously stated that it
intended to "take a more active role under its responsibility for equal
protection of the laws to guarantee that handicapped children are
provided equal educational opportunity." S. Rep. No. 94-168, p. 9
(1975) (emphasis added).
See also 20 U.S.C. § 1412(2)(A)(i) (requiring States to establish plans
with the "goal of providing full educational opportunity to all
handicapped children").
As I have observed before, "[i]t seems plain to me
that Congress, in enacting [this statute], intended to do more than
merely set out politically self-serving but essentially meaningless
language about what the [handicapped] deserve at the hands of state . .
. authorities." Pennhurst State School v. Halderman, 451
U.S. 1, 32 (1981) (opinion concurring in part and concurring in
judgment). The clarity of the legislative intent convinces me that the
relevant question here is not, as the Court says, whether Amy Rowley's
individualized education program was "reasonably calculated to enable
[her] to receive educational benefits," ante, at 207, measured in
part by whether or not she "achieve[s] passing marks and advance[s] from
grade to grade," ante, at 204. Rather, the question is whether
Amy's program, viewed as a whole, offered her an opportunity to
understand and participate in the classroom that was substantially equal
to that given her nonhandicapped classmates. This is a standard
predicated on equal educational opportunity and equal access to the
educational process, rather than upon Amy's achievement of any
particular educational outcome.
In answering this question, I believe that the
District Court and the Court of Appeals should have given greater
deference than they did to the findings of the School District's
impartial hearing officer and the State's Commissioner of Education,
both of whom sustained petitioners' refusal to add a sign-language
interpreter to Amy's individualized education program. Cf. 20 U.S.C. §
1415(e)(2) (requiring reviewing court to "receive the records of the
administrative proceedings" before granting relief). I would suggest
further that those courts focused too narrowly on the presence or
absence of a particular service a sign-language interpreter rather
than on the total package of services furnished to Amy by the School
Board.
As the Court demonstrates, ante, at 184-185,
petitioner Board has provided Amy Rowley considerably more than "a
teacher with a loud voice." See post, at 215 (dissenting
opinion). By concentrating on whether Amy was "learning as much, or
performing as well academically, as she would without her handicap," 483
F. Supp. 528, 532 (SDNY 1980), the District Court and the Court of
Appeals paid too little attention to whether, on the entire record,
respondent's individualized education program offered her an educational
opportunity substantially equal to that provided her nonhandicapped
classmates. Because I believe that standard has been satisfied here, I
agree that the judgment of the Court of Appeals should be reversed.
JUSTICE WHITE, with whom JUSTICE BRENNAN and JUSTICE
MARSHALL join, dissenting.
In order to reach its result in this case, the
majority opinion contradicts itself, the language of the statute, and
the legislative history. Both the majority's standard for a "free
appropriate education" and its standard for judicial review disregard
congressional intent.
I
The majority first turns its attention to the meaning
of a "free appropriate public education." The Act provides:
"The term `free appropriate public education'
means special education and related services which (A) have been
provided at public expense, under public supervision and direction,
and without charge, (B) meet the standards of the State educational
agency, (C) include an appropriate preschool, elementary, or
secondary school education in the State involved, and (D) are
provided in conformity with the individualized education program
required under section 1414(a)(5) of this title." 20 U.S.C. §
1401(18).
The majority reads this statutory language as establishing a
congressional intent limited to bringing "previously excluded
handicapped children into the public education systems of the States and
[requiring] the States to adopt procedures which would result in
individualized consideration of and instruction for each child."
Ante, at 189. In its attempt to constrict the definition of
"appropriate" and the thrust of the Act, the majority opinion states:
"Noticeably absent from the language of the statute is any substantive
standard prescribing the level of education to be accorded handicapped
children. Certainly the language of the statute contains no requirement
like the one imposed by the lower courts that States maximize the
potential of handicapped children `commensurate with the opportunity
provided to other children.'" Ante, at 189-190, quoting 483 F.
Supp. 528, 534 (SDNY 1980).
I agree that the language of the Act does not contain
a substantive standard beyond requiring that the education offered must
be "appropriate." However, if there are limits not evident from the face
of the statute on what may be considered an "appropriate education,"
they must be found in the purpose of the statute or its legislative
history. The Act itself announces it will provide a "full
educational opportunity to all handicapped children." 20 U.S.C. §
1412(2)(A) (emphasis added). This goal is repeated throughout the
legislative history, in statements too frequent to be "`passing
references and isolated phrases.'"[fn1]
Ante, at 204, n. 26, quoting Department of State v.
Washington Post Co., 456 U.S. 595, 600 (1982). These statements
elucidate the meaning of "appropriate." According to the Senate Report,
for example, the Act does "guarantee that handicapped children are
provided equal educational opportunity." S. Rep. No. 94-168, p. 9
(1975) (emphasis added). This promise appears throughout the legislative
history. See 121 Cong. Rec. 19482-19483 (1975) (remarks of Sen.
Randolph); id., at 19504 (Sen. Humphrey); id., at 19505
(Sen. Beall); id., at 23704 (Rep. Brademas); id., at 25538
(Rep. Cornell); id., at 25540 (Rep. Grassley); id., at
37025 (Rep. Perkins); id., at
37030 (Rep. Mink); id., at 37412 (Sen. Taft); id., at
37413 (Sen. Williams); id., at 37418-37419 (Sen. Cranston);
id., at 37419-37420 (Sen. Beall). Indeed, at times the purpose of
the Act was described as tailoring each handicapped child's educational
plan to enable the child "to achieve his or her maximum potential." H.
R. Rep. No. 94-332, pp. 13, 19 (1975); see 121 Cong. Rec. 23709 (1975).
Senator Stafford, one of the sponsors of the Act, declared: "We can all
agree that education [given a handicapped child] should be equivalent,
at least, to the one those children who are not handicapped receive."
Id., at 19483. The legislative history thus directly supports the
conclusion that the Act intends to give handicapped children an
educational opportunity commensurate with that given other children.
The majority opinion announces a different
substantive standard, that "Congress did not impose upon the States any
greater substantive educational standard than would be necessary to make
such access meaningful." Ante, at 192. While "meaningful" is no
more enlightening than "appropriate," the Court purports to clarify
itself. Because Amy was provided with some specialized
instruction from which she obtained some benefit and because she
passed from grade to grade, she was receiving a meaningful and therefore
appropriate education.[fn2]
This falls far short of what the Act intended. The
Act details as specifically as possible the kind of specialized
education each handicapped child must receive. It would apparently
satisfy the Court's standard of "access to specialized instruction and
related services which are individually designed to provide educational
benefit to the handicapped child," ante, at 201, for a deaf child
such as Amy to be given a teacher with a loud voice, for she would
benefit from that service. The Act requires more. It defines "special
education" to mean "specifically designed instruction, at no cost to
parents or guardians, to meet the unique needs of a handicapped
child . . . ." § 1401(16) (emphasis added).[fn3]
Providing a teacher with a loud voice would not meet Amy's needs and
would not satisfy the Act. The basic floor of opportunity is instead, as
the courts below recognized, intended to eliminate the effects of the
handicap, at least to the extent that the child will be given an equal
opportunity to learn if that is reasonably possible. Amy Rowley, without
a sign-language interpreter, comprehends less than half of what is said
in the classroom less than half of what normal children comprehend.
This is hardly an equal opportunity to learn, even if Amy makes passing
grades.
Despite its reliance on the use of "appropriate" in
the definition of the Act, the majority opinion speculates that
"Congress used the word as much to describe the settings in which
handicapped children should be educated as to prescribe the substantive
content or supportive services of their education." Ante, at 197,
n. 21. Of course, the word "appropriate" can be applied in many ways; at
times in the Act, Congress used it to recommend mainstreaming
handicapped children; at other points, it used the word to refer to the
content of the individualized education. The issue before us is what
standard the word "appropriate" incorporates when it is used to modify
"education." The answer given by the Court is not a satisfactory one.
II
The Court's discussion of the standard for judicial review is as flawed
as its discussion of a "free appropriate public education." According to
the Court, a court can ask only whether the State has "complied with the
procedures set forth in the Act" and whether the individualized
education program is "reasonably calculated to enable the child to
receive educational benefits." Ante, at 206, 207. Both the
language of the Act and the legislative history, however, demonstrate
that Congress intended the courts to conduct a far more searching
inquiry.
The majority assigns major significance to the review
provision's being found in a section entitled "Procedural safeguards."
But where else would a provision for judicial review belong? The
majority does acknowledge that the current language, specifying that a
court "shall receive the records of the administrative proceedings,
shall hear additional evidence at the request of a party, and, basing
its decision on the preponderance of the evidence, shall grant such
relief as the court determines is appropriate," § 1415(e)(2), was
substituted at Conference for language that would have restricted the
role of the reviewing court much more sharply. It is clear enough to me
that Congress decided to reduce substantially judicial deference to
state administrative decisions.
The legislative history shows that judicial review is
not limited to procedural matters and that the state educational
agencies are given first, but not final, responsibility for the
Page 217
content of a handicapped child's education. The Conference Committee
directs courts to make an "independent decision." S. Conf. Rep. No.
94-455, p. 50 (1975). The deliberate change in the review provision is
an unusually clear indication that Congress intended courts to undertake
substantive review instead of relying on the conclusions of the state
agency.
On the floor of the Senate, Senator Williams, the
chief sponsor of the bill, Committee Chairman, and floor manager
responsible for the legislation in the Senate, emphasized the breadth of
the review provisions at both the administrative and judicial levels:
"Any parent or guardian may present a complaint
concerning any matter regarding the identification,
evaluation, or educational placement of the child or the provision
of a free appropriate public education to such child. In this
regard, Mr. President, I would like to stress that the language
referring to `free appropriate education' has been adopted to make
clear that a complaint may involve matters such as questions
respecting a child's individualized education program, questions of
whether special education and related services are being provided
without charge to the parents or guardians, questions relating to
whether the services provided a child meet the standards of the
State education agency, or any other question within the
scope of the definition of `free appropriate public education.' In
addition, it should be clear that a parent or guardian may present a
complaint alleging that a State or local education agency has
refused to provide services to which a child may be entitled or
alleging that the State or local educational agency has erroneously
classified a child as a handicapped child when, in fact, that child
is not a handicapped child." 121 Cong. Rec. 37415 (1975) (emphasis
added).
There is no doubt that the state agency itself must make substantive
decisions. The legislative history reveals that the
Page 218
courts are to consider, de novo, the same issues. Senator
Williams explicitly stated that the civil action permitted under the Act
encompasses all matters related to the original complaint. Id.,
at 37416.
Thus, the Court's limitations on judicial review have
no support in either the language of the Act or the legislative history.
Congress did not envision that inquiry would end if a showing is made
that the child is receiving passing marks and is advancing from grade to
grade. Instead, it intended to permit a full and searching inquiry into
any aspect of a handicapped child's education. The Court's standard, for
example, would not permit a challenge to part of the IEP; the
legislative history demonstrates beyond doubt that Congress intended
such challenges to be possible, even if the plan as developed is
reasonably calculated to give the child some benefits.
Parents can challenge the IEP for failing to supply
the special education and related services needed by the individual
handicapped child. That is what the Rowleys did. As the Government
observes, "courts called upon to review the content of an IEP, in
accordance with 20 U.S.C. [§] 1415(e) inevitably are required to make a
judgment, on the basis of the evidence presented, concerning whether the
educational methods proposed by the local school district are
`appropriate' for the handicapped child involved." Brief for United
States as Amicus Curiae 13. The courts below, as they were
required by the Act, did precisely that.
Under the judicial review provisions of the Act,
neither the District Court nor the Court of Appeals was bound by the
State's construction of what an "appropriate" education means in general
or by what the state authorities considered to be an appropriate
education for Amy Rowley. Because the standard of the courts below seems
to me to reflect the congressional purpose and because their factual
findings are not clearly erroneous, I respectfully dissent.
[Footnote 1*] Page 213
The Court's opinion relies heavily on the statement, which occurs
throughout the legislative history, that, at the time of enactment, one
million of the roughly eight million handicapped children in the United
States were excluded entirely from the public school system and more
than half were receiving an inappropriate education. See, e. g.,
ante, at 189, 195, 196-197, n. 20. But this statement was often
linked to statements urging equal educational opportunity. See, e.
g., 121 Cong. Rec. 19502 (1975) (remarks of Sen. Cranston); id.,
at 23702 (remarks of Rep. Brademas). That is, Congress wanted not only
to bring handicapped children into the schoolhouse, but also to benefit
them once they had entered.
[Footnote 2] Page 214
As further support for its conclusion, the majority opinion turns to
Pennsylvania Assn. for Retarded Children v. Commonwealth, 334
F. Supp. 1257 (ED Pa. 1971), 343 F. Supp. 279 (1972) (PARC), and
Mills v. Board of Education of District of Columbia, 348
F. Supp. 866 (DC 1972). That these decisions served as an impetus for
the Act does not, however, establish them as the limits of the Act. In
any case, the very language that the majority quotes from Mills,
ante, at 193, 199, sets a standard not of some education, but
of educational opportunity equal to that of nonhandicapped children.
Indeed, Mills, relying on decisions since
called into question by this Court's opinion in San Antonio
Independent School Dist. v. Rodriguez, 411 U.S. 1 (1973),
states:
"In Hobson v. Hansen, [269 F. Supp. 401 (DC 1967),]
Judge Wright found that denying poor public school children educational
opportunity equal to that available to more affluent public school
children was violative of the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
A fortiori, the defendants' conduct here, denying plaintiffs and
their class not just an equal publicly supported education but all
publicly supported education while providing such education to other
children, is violative of the Due Process Clause." 348 F. Supp., at 875.
Whatever the effect of Rodriguez on the validity of this
reasoning, the statement exposes the majority's mischaracterization of
the opinion and thus of the assumptions of the legislature that passed
the Act.
[Footnote 3] Page 215
"Related services" are "transportation, and such developmental,
corrective, and other supportive services . . . as may be required to
assist a handicapped child to benefit from special education." §
1401(17).
Page 219
|