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Special Ed 101
A federal appeals court says parents cannot sue school districts to force them to c
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<blockquote data-quote="Ropefree" data-source="post: 217897" data-attributes="member: 6271"><p>Well, I get the part where IN THAT CASE the failure to notify a parent that their child could transfer out means that they CAN sue them for failure to notify they COULD</p><p>transfer out. </p><p>This does point to the fact that parents need to really be looking at how the get what is needed for their child from the public school system. We had a situation where we were homeless and the district that my child had been in was declining</p><p>admission. The principle told me it was because that year they had classrooms in his grade level that were already over filled. When I looked into the adjoing county they were welcoming with open arms and we had the pick of schools. I had to drive 45 minutes to get there am and afternoon...oh is that three hours of driving per day? </p><p>The good news was the quality of the teachers was tops!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ropefree, post: 217897, member: 6271"] Well, I get the part where IN THAT CASE the failure to notify a parent that their child could transfer out means that they CAN sue them for failure to notify they COULD transfer out. This does point to the fact that parents need to really be looking at how the get what is needed for their child from the public school system. We had a situation where we were homeless and the district that my child had been in was declining admission. The principle told me it was because that year they had classrooms in his grade level that were already over filled. When I looked into the adjoing county they were welcoming with open arms and we had the pick of schools. I had to drive 45 minutes to get there am and afternoon...oh is that three hours of driving per day? The good news was the quality of the teachers was tops! [/QUOTE]
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A federal appeals court says parents cannot sue school districts to force them to c
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