J.T. v. Dumont Public Schools , 438 N.J. Super. 241 ( 2014 )


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  •                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-2424-12T1
    J.T., ON HER OWN BEHALF,
    ON BEHALF OF HER MINOR CHILD,
    APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    A.T., AND ON BEHALF OF ALL
    OTHERS SIMILARLY SITUATED,               November 24, 2014
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,             APPELLATE DIVISION
    v.
    DUMONT PUBLIC SCHOOLS, THE DUMONT
    PUBLIC SCHOOLS BOARD OF EDUCATION,
    EMANUELE TRIGGIANO, IN HIS OFFICIAL
    CAPACITY AS SUPERINTENDENT OF THE
    DUMONT PUBLIC SCHOOLS, AND PAUL
    BARBATO, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY
    AS DIRECTOR OF SPECIAL SERVICES
    FOR THE DUMONT PUBLIC SCHOOLS,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    ____________________________________________________
    Argued April 1, 2014 – Decided November 24, 2014
    Before Judges Messano, Hayden, and Lisa.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New
    Jersey, Chancery Division, Bergen County,
    Docket No. C-139-12.
    John D. Rue argued the cause for appellant
    (Law Offices of John Rue, attorneys; Maryam
    Jazini Dorcheh (White & Case), Jack E. Pace,
    (White & Case) of the New York bar, admitted
    pro hac vice, and Peter E. Wilhelm
    (White & Case) of the New York bar, admitted
    pro hac vice, on the brief).
    Eric L. Harrison argued the cause for
    respondents (Methfessel & Werbel, attorneys;
    Mr. Harrison and Boris Shapiro, on the
    brief).
    Ruth Deale Lowenkron argued the cause for
    amici curiae Council of Parent Attorneys and
    Advocates, Disability Rights New Jersey,
    Education Law Center, New Jersey Special
    Education Practitioners, Statewide Parent
    Advocacy Network, and the Special Education
    Clinic   of  Rutgers   University  -    Newark
    (Education   Law   Center,   attorneys;    Ms.
    Lowenkron, on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    HAYDEN, J.A.D.
    The     issue   before   us   is       whether    one    component    of    an
    appropriate special education placement violates the Law Against
    Discrimination's    (LAD),   N.J.S.A.        10:5-1    to    -42,   prohibition
    against discrimination due to a disability.                 Plaintiff J.T., on
    behalf of herself, her minor son A.T., and all Dumont students
    similarly   situated,   appeals   from       the   Chancery    Division     order
    granting summary judgment in favor of defendants.                    Plaintiffs
    allege that defendants failed to accommodate the putative class 1
    members' disabilities in violation of the LAD by refusing to
    1
    The complaint defines the putative class as all "kindergarten
    students in the District, or who may be kindergarten students in
    the District in the future, [who] are classified as requiring
    special education services, or who may be so classified in the
    future, and [who] reside within the town of Dumont." This class
    consisted of at least ninety-six students.        The complaint
    alleged that A.T.'s claims are "typical of those of the [c]lass
    as a whole."
    2                                 A-2424-12T1
    provide the special education services that the special needs
    students require in their neighborhood schools.                            Defendants are
    the Dumont school district, the Board of Education, the district
    superintendent, and the director of special services.                                 Because
    plaintiffs did not demonstrate they were deprived of a benefit
    due   to   a    disability      and     thus       failed    to   make    a    prima     facie
    showing of disability discrimination under the LAD, we affirm.
    I.
    The record reveals that J.T. and her minor son A.T. resided
    in    Dumont,    a    town     of   about      two    square      miles.        The    school
    district of Dumont has four elementary schools: Selzer, Grant,
    Honiss, and Lincoln.            In both the 2008-2009 and 2009-2010 school
    years,     about      180    students     attended          kindergarten        within      the
    district.       The school district's policy provided that generally
    children       were     to    attend     their        neighborhood        schools.            An
    exception      to     the    policy    was     when    the    child's      Individualized
    Education Plan (IEP) required special education services that
    were provided in a different school.
    Beginning       in     the     2008-2009       school      year,       the   district
    offered an inclusion kindergarten class in addition to a self-
    contained kindergarten class.                  The self-contained classroom had
    only children whose needs, according to their IEPs, warranted a
    full-time special education teacher.                        The inclusion classroom,
    3                                      A-2424-12T1
    on   the    other     hand,   had   both       general     education      and    special
    education students who were taught the regular curriculum by a
    full-time      general        education        teacher      with     the      part-time
    assistance of a special education teacher.                    The amount of time
    that    the   special     education       teacher    spent     in       the   inclusion
    classroom varied according to the combined requirements of the
    children's IEPs.         Both the inclusion and self-contained classes
    were located in the same school building each year.
    In each of the 2008-2009 and 2009-2010 school years, four
    special needs children were placed in the inclusion kindergarten
    classroom as required by their IEPs.2                    In the 2010-2011 school
    year, only one student with disabilities was in the inclusion
    class.      Each year during this same period, depending on their
    individual     educational       needs     as     determined       by    their      IEPs,
    several     special    education    children        were    placed      in    the   self-
    contained kindergarten classroom, in out-of-district placements,
    or     in   regular    kindergartens       in     their     neighborhood         schools
    because they needed only support services, not special education
    teachers, to carry out their IEPs.3
    2
    Inclusion classrooms may contain up to eight students with
    special needs. N.J.A.C. 6A:14-4.6(n).
    3
    At least one child was in a regular education classroom without
    special services because his parents declined the inclusion
    placement in favor of placement in the neighborhood school
    (continued)
    4                                    A-2424-12T1
    When    A.T.     was   three    years   old,    he    was     diagnosed     with
    childhood autism, a pervasive developmental disorder.                         In the
    2008-2009     school     year,     pursuant   to     his    IEP,    A.T.     attended
    preschool in the district's inclusion classroom in Selzer, his
    neighborhood school, for half the day and spent the remainder of
    the day in an out-of-district self-contained program.
    In May 2009, the district personnel and J.T. met to discuss
    A.T.'s IEP for his upcoming kindergarten year.                       J.T. and the
    district      agreed     that      A.T.   needed     some       special     education
    services.      The district personnel proposed moving him from a
    self-contained class to the district's inclusion class, to be
    held in Grant.          The inclusion class was taught by a regular
    education teacher who followed a regular education curriculum.
    The   class    also    had    fewer   students     than     a    regular    education
    kindergarten     class       and   provided   services          according    to   each
    special education student's IEP with the assistance of a part-
    time special education teacher.
    In contrast, J.T. wanted A.T. to attend a general education
    classroom at his home school, Selzer, with the supports provided
    in that classroom.           The district personnel did not think this
    option met A.T.'s special needs; rather, they reasoned that A.T.
    (continued)
    without a special education teacher's services.
    5                                  A-2424-12T1
    needed the integrated services, smaller class size, and in-class
    special       education    teacher     to       enable     A.T.    to    retain    and
    generalize information in order to meet the goal of readying him
    for a regular education classroom for the next year.                        Although
    J.T. did not agree, the final IEP designated A.T.'s educational
    placement as the inclusion kindergarten class at Grant.
    In June 2009, J.T. filed a due process petition with the
    New      Jersey        Department      of       Education         challenging      the
    appropriateness of the IEP's inclusion placement at Grant rather
    than a regular education placement at Selzer.                           In September
    2009, A.T. began attending the inclusion kindergarten class at
    Grant.        Shortly thereafter, on September 28, 2009, plaintiffs
    filed     a    class    action   complaint        in     federal    court   alleging
    violations of (1) the Individuals with Disabilities Education
    Act (IDEA), 
    20 U.S.C.A. §§ 1400-1485
    , based on the district's
    failure       to   educate       children       in     the    least      restrictive
    environment, (2) Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act (RA), 
    29 U.S.C.A. § 794
    , due to discrimination against class members, and
    (3) the LAD for failing to accommodate class members in their
    neighborhood       school.       In   November       2009,   plaintiffs     withdrew
    their due process petition.
    While the federal litigation was pending, A.T. completed
    his kindergarten year in the inclusion class.                       The parties do
    6                                A-2424-12T1
    not dispute that A.T. benefitted educationally, emotionally, and
    socially from the inclusion placement.                        For his first        grade
    year, the parents and district                    personnel agreed that it was
    appropriate to place him in the regular education classroom in
    Selzer with some special education services.
    After completion of discovery in federal court, both sides
    moved for summary judgment.                 The district court granted summary
    judgment      in    favor     of    defendants     on   the   IDEA   and   RA   claims,
    finding a lack of subject matter jurisdiction because there was
    no legally cognizable injury and plaintiffs failed to exhaust
    administrative remedies.                  The court noted that "plaintiffs are
    also    not        claiming        that    A.T.    suffered     a    deprivation       of
    educational benefits.                Thus, Plaintiffs have not demonstrated
    either 'a loss of educational opportunity for the student,' or a
    serious deprivation of the parents' 'participation rights,' or a
    'deprivation of educational benefits . . . .'"                       J.T. v. Dumont
    Pub. Schs., No. 09-4969 (MAH), 
    2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 42671
    , at
    *34-35 (D.N.J. Mar. 28, 2012) (internal citations omitted).
    In finding that plaintiffs failed to establish a concrete
    and particularized harm, the court reasoned:
    Plaintiffs may not establish their standing
    based solely on the argument that Dumont
    committed a procedural violation by failing
    to consider whether the exact same services
    should be provided in a child's neighborhood
    school.   Crucially, Plaintiffs have failed
    7                                 A-2424-12T1
    to   identify,  or   they  have  abandoned,
    assertions that Dumont's policy resulted in
    the loss of an educational opportunity,
    seriously deprived parents of participation
    rights, or deprived students of educational
    benefits.
    [Id. at *42.]
    The court also found that plaintiffs' voluntary failure to
    pursue    their     administrative      remedies    was   fatal       to      their
    complaint.     According to the court, "[t]he evidence does not
    support Plaintiffs' claim that Dumont used the inclusion class
    to systematically avoid the IDEA's requirement to individually
    consider students' needs when making placement decisions."                       
    Id. at *54
    .      On the issue of whether the placement was the least
    restrictive environment, the court pointed out that plaintiffs
    and any kindergartener affected by an inclusion placement, "can
    [and must] seek redress on this substantive claim through the
    administrative process."          
    Id. at *55
    .
    Addressing       plaintiffs'     claim   that   placement    in   the      non-
    neighborhood school was a violation of the RA, the court found
    that "[f]or the same reasons Plaintiffs have failed to show that
    they suffered an injury under the IDEA, Plaintiffs have failed
    to establish that J.T. has been discriminated against due to his
    disability."        
    Id. at *58
    .      The court specifically found that
    plaintiffs'    RA    claim   of   discrimination    due   to    not   attending
    one's neighborhood school was based upon the same facts as their
    8                                   A-2424-12T1
    IDEA claim.      
    Ibid.
          Having dismissed the federal claims for lack
    of subject matter jurisdiction, the district court declined to
    exercise     supplemental          jurisdiction        over      the    LAD   claims    and
    dismissed them without prejudice.
    II.
    Shortly      after    the    dismissal        of    the    federal      complaint,
    plaintiffs filed a civil complaint in the Chancery Division.
    The    complaint     alleged       violations     of      the    LAD,    including     that
    defendants discriminated against the putative class members due
    to their disabilities by (1) forcing them to receive required
    special      education      services       in    a     school      other      than    their
    neighborhood school, (2) failing to consider the placements or
    the provision of transportation on an individual basis, and (3)
    segregating class members due to their special education needs.
    Plaintiffs sought a declaration that defendants had failed to
    obey   the    LAD    and    asked    for   an    order     requiring,         among   other
    relief, that all class members be educated in their neighborhood
    school whenever possible, an in-class special education teacher
    be furnished in each of the class members' neighborhood school,
    and a court-appointed Special Master paid for by the district to
    review all IEPs and determine defendants' compliance with these
    requirements.
    9                                     A-2424-12T1
    After agreeing to rely on the discovery obtained in the
    federal case, the parties moved for partial summary judgment as
    to   liability       under    the    LAD.           In    analyzing       plaintiffs'         LAD
    disability      accommodation             claim,         the    judge     found        it    was
    undisputed     that     A.T.    had       a    disability        and     that    the    school
    district       was     an      entity          required          to     make      reasonable
    accommodations unless the school district demonstrated that such
    accommodations would impose an undue burden to its operation.
    N.J.A.C. 13:13-4.11.           Employing the standard from the Americans
    with Disabilities Act (ADA), 
    42 U.S.C.A. §§ 12101-12213
    , the
    judge found that to state a claim for failure to accommodate, a
    plaintiff must show that he or she (1) has a disability; (2) is
    otherwise qualified to participate in a program; and (3) was
    denied   the    benefits       of   the       program      or    discriminated         against
    because of the disability.
    The   judge     noted     that      under      the       IDEA,    centralization        of
    programs was lawful and determined that plaintiffs failed to
    show that the centralization of the program deprived them of a
    benefit.       Based     upon       the       circumstances           present,    the       judge
    reasoned     that     program       accessibility,              rather     than     facility
    accessibility, was key to the implementation of the ADA, and by
    implication the LAD.
    10                                      A-2424-12T1
    The judge found that plaintiffs established the first two
    elements but did not show that the district deprived A.T. of a
    cognizable benefit or program due to a disability.                           "To the
    contrary,     the     [p]laintiffs        received         all     the      necessary
    educational    benefits,       programs       and    extracurricular        resources
    required under the law."              Although the judge recognized that
    there was a pedagogical benefit to attending one's neighborhood
    school, "all other things being equal," he emphasized that A.T.
    thrived in his kindergarten class, educationally and socially,
    and that there was no evidence that A.T. or any of the putative
    class   members     suffered    actual    harm       by   not    attending    his   or
    neighborhood school or by being bused to school.                      Accordingly,
    the judge dismissed the complaint.              This appeal followed.
    While this appeal was pending, the Third Circuit upheld the
    district    court's    decision    dismissing         plaintiffs     IDEA     and   RA
    claims on April 26, 2013.          J.T. v. Dumont Pub. Schs., 533 Fed.
    App'x 44, 55 (3d Cir. 2013).           The circuit court emphasized that
    "IDEA permits schools to provide special education services in a
    centralized location."         
    Id. at 49
    .           The circuit court concurred
    that there was no substantive harm shown to A.T. or any of the
    putative class members          as there was "no denial of services,
    opportunities, participation, or benefits."                      
    Id. at 50
    .         The
    circuit    court    also   rejected    plaintiffs'         claim    under    the    RA,
    11                                  A-2424-12T1
    reasoning that "when [RA] claims are based on violations of the
    IDEA, the [RA] claims are derivative of the IDEA claims."                          
    Id. at 52
     (internal citations omitted).
    In    addition,        the     circuit     court    explicitly        rejected
    plaintiffs' claim that they suffered additional injury under the
    RA because they were bused out of their neighborhood and located
    in a different part of the school from the regular education
    classrooms, thus marking them as disabled in the eyes of their
    peers.      
    Ibid.
        The court found that Doe v. National Board of
    Medical Examiners, 
    199 F.3d. 146
    , 153 (3d Cir. 1999), which held
    that under certain circumstances, merely identifying a person as
    disabled     can    be   a    violation    of     the    RA,    did   not     support
    plaintiffs' RA claims.             J.T., supra, 533 Fed. App'x at 52.              The
    court found that busing students in compliance with their IEPs
    was   not    such   a    circumstance,         stating   "[i]n    contrast,      IDEA
    requires school districts to identify students in need in order
    to provide them special education services.                    Busing students to
    a centralized location for special services may be integral to
    IDEA compliance and, depending on the IEP, is sought by many
    parents     of   children     with     special    needs."        Ibid.      (internal
    citations omitted).          The court also stressed that "the procedure
    through which the school district placed A.T. in the inclusion
    12                                 A-2424-12T1
    class   is    not   rendered    a     systemic      issue        simply    because     J.T.
    raises it in a putative class action."4                 Id. at 54.
    III.
    On appeal, plaintiffs argue that the trial judge erred in
    holding that they failed to establish a prima facie case under
    the LAD for disability discrimination.                      Plaintiffs contend that
    attending     one's    neighborhood        school      is    a    cognizable      benefit
    protected      under   the     LAD,     and     that        the    judge    incorrectly
    distinguished       between    program      and     facility        accessibility        in
    analyzing the benefit.              Further, plaintiffs contend that the
    judge's      determination     that     plaintiffs          provided       no   proof     of
    actual harm was erroneous because plaintiffs' expert's report
    described such harm.
    Amici, consisting of several non-profit organizations that
    advocate for the rights of children with disabilities, support
    plaintiffs'     arguments.          They   submit      that       studies       show   that
    children with disabilities benefit more from being in regular
    education     classrooms      with    regular     education         students,      rather
    4
    In   considering   J.T.'s   failure  to   exhaust  the   IDEA
    administrative remedies, the court observed that while J.T.
    framed the complaint as an overall challenge to a general school
    policy, the determination of the effect of any district policy
    on each IEP entailed a factually-intensive inquiry, which the
    IDEA administrative process was designed to address, noting
    that"[t]his claim addresses only one component of the school
    district's educational program . . . ." Id. at 54.
    13                                     A-2424-12T1
    than being segregated in special education classes with only
    disabled    students.     They     also    contend    that   children    are
    stigmatized as different by having to take a small school bus to
    their programs.    Amici further argue that the school district's
    policy of centralizing the inclusion kindergarten class denied
    the putative class members of benefits they would have enjoyed
    if they had attended integrated classrooms in their neighborhood
    schools.
    Defendants maintain that no LAD violation occurred because
    under the IDEA and state law, a school district has discretion
    in determining the location and type of services that a child
    needs to receive an appropriate education in accordance with the
    child's    IEP.   They   also    argue    that   because   plaintiffs'   LAD
    claims are based upon the same core facts as their IDEA claims,
    the LAD claims are derivative of the IDEA claims and fail for
    the same reasons as the IDEA and the RA claims.                 Defendants
    further contend that plaintiffs failed to establish that A.T.
    was deprived of a benefit or, in the alternative, submit that
    the IEPs were a reasonable accommodation based upon each child's
    individual disability.      Finally, defendants urge us to affirm
    the trial court's decision because the record does not contain
    any proof of actual harm.
    14                             A-2424-12T1
    We begin with a review of the applicable legal principles
    that   guide    our     analysis.          We    first    address    the   federal     law
    concerning education of children with disabilities.                          "Although
    education      is     primarily        a        concern    of      state   and      local
    governments,"       education         of    children       with     disabilities       "is
    regulated by a complex scheme of federal and state statutes and
    administrative regulations."                Lascari v. Bd. of Educ., 
    116 N.J. 30
    ,    33   (1989).       The    IDEA       ensures       that    all   children     with
    disabilities5 have available to them a free appropriate public
    education      (FAPE)    in     the    least         restrictive    environment       that
    provides special education and related services to meet their
    unique needs and prepare them for further education, employment,
    and independent living, and ensures that the rights of such
    children and their parents are protected.                         See 
    20 U.S.C.A. §§ 1400
    (d)(1)(A),(B).         New Jersey has adopted a statute, N.J.S.A.
    18A:46-1 to -55, and regulations, N.J.A.C. 6A:14-1.1 to -9.2, to
    comply with the extensive goals and procedures established in
    the IDEA in order to receive significant federal funding.                              See
    
    20 U.S.C.A. § 1412
    .
    5
    A "child with a disability" includes children with intellectual
    disabilities, speech and language impairments, serious emotional
    disturbance, and specific learning disabilities, who, by reason
    thereof, need special education and related services.          
    20 U.S.C.A. § 1401
    (30)(A).
    15                               A-2424-12T1
    Central to the IDEA and the provision of a FAPE is the IEP,
    a comprehensive written plan developed by a team consisting of
    the       student's   parents,    teachers,         and   representatives         of    the
    local educational agency.6             
    20 U.S.C.A. § 1414
    (d).                The IEP's
    ultimate purpose is to tailor the educational services in order
    to    meet     the    special     needs       resulting       from    the     student's
    disability and to ensure that the student receives the benefits
    of    a    FAPE.      
    20 U.S.C.A. §§ 1412
    (a)(1),      (4).        The    IEP   is
    generally      developed     each     year    by    the    entire    IEP    team.       
    20 U.S.C.A. §§ 1414
    (d)(2), (4).                Regarding the development of this
    important       comprehensive       plan,     the    IDEA     accords      "significant
    deference to the choices made by school officials as to what
    constitutes an appropriate program for each student."                              Ridley
    Sch. Dist. v. M.R., 
    680 F.3d 260
    , 277 (3d Cir. 2012).
    The IDEA mandates that, to the maximum extent possible,
    children       with   disabilities         must     be    educated    in    the     least
    restrictive        environment.       
    20 U.S.C.A. § 1412
    (a)(5);        N.J.A.C.
    6
    Under the New Jersey Administrative Code, an IEP is defined as
    "a written plan which sets forth present levels of academic
    achievement and functional performance, measurable annual goals
    and short-term objectives or benchmarks . . . ."        N.J.A.C.
    6A:14-1.3.   It refers to an "integrated, sequential program of
    individually designed instructional activities and related
    services necessary to achieve the stated goals and objectives.
    This plan shall establish the rationale for the student's
    educational placement[] [and] serve as the basis for program
    implementation. . . ." 
    Ibid.
    16                                  A-2424-12T1
    6A:14-1.1(b)(5).       This environment is one that, to the greatest
    extent    possible,     educates     disabled    children      together   with
    children who are not disabled in the same school the disabled
    child would attend if the child was not disabled.               
    20 U.S.C.A. § 1412
    (a)(5); N.J.A.C. 6A:14-4.2.            Specifically, "[u]nless the IEP
    of a child with a disability requires some other arrangement,
    the child is educated in the school that he or she would attend
    if nondisabled."       Murray v. Montrose Cnty. Sch. Dist., 
    51 F.3d. 921
    , 929 (10th Cir.), cert. denied, 
    516 U.S. 909
    , 
    116 S. Ct. 278
    , 
    133 L. Ed. 2d 198
     (1995) (internal citations omitted); see
    also     N.J.A.C.   6A:14-14.2(a)(7).           The    Third    Circuit    has
    interpreted this to require that a disabled child be placed in
    the least restrictive environment that will provide the child
    with a "meaningful educational benefit."              T.R. v. Kingwood Twp.
    Bd. of Educ., 
    205 F.3d 572
    , 578 (3d Cir. 2000).                 Additionally,
    in the Third Circuit, there is a presumption in favor of placing
    the child in the neighborhood school if possible.               See Oberti v.
    Bd. of Educ., 
    995 F.2d 1204
    , 1224 n.31 (3d Cir. 1993).
    Nevertheless,    the   IDEA     does     not   impose    an   absolute
    obligation to place a child in his or her neighborhood school;
    rather, the school district is required to take into account
    geographical proximity of placement.             Barnett v. Fairfax Cnty.
    Sch. Bd., 
    927 F.2d 146
    , 153 (4th Cir.), cert. denied, 
    502 U.S. 17
                                 A-2424-12T1
    589,   
    112 S. Ct. 175
    ,   
    116 L. Ed. 2d 138
        (1991);    White    v.
    Ascension Parish Sch. Bd.,7 
    343 F.3d 373
    , 380 (5th Cir. 2003)
    (school districts have discretion on the location of special
    education services); see also AW v. Fairfax Cnty. Sch. Bd., 
    372 F.3d 674
    ,    682    (4th    Cir.    2004)        (finding    no    mandate    that    the
    student      must    be    assigned      to    the       closest     school).      School
    districts      are        permitted      to    centralize           services    and     the
    preference for neighborhood schooling is one of many factors
    which the school district is entitled to consider.                         See Barnett,
    supra, 927 F.2d at 153.               Further, the school district is not
    required to move a program or service to a child's neighborhood
    school.      See Kevin G. v. Cranston Sch. Comm., 
    130 F.3d. 481
    , 482
    (1st Cir. 1997) (holding that a school district was not required
    to move a nurse to a student's neighborhood school to comply
    with the IDEA), cert. denied, 
    524 U.S. 956
    , 
    118 S. Ct. 2377
    , 
    141 L. Ed. 2d 744
     (1998); see also Urban v. Jefferson Cnty. Sch.
    Dist., 
    89 F.3d 720
    , 728 (10th Cir. 1996); M.A. v. Voorhees Twp.
    Bd. of Educ., 
    202 F. Supp. 2d 345
    , 363-64 (D.N.J. 2002) (holding
    that a school district was not required to make dramatic changes
    7
    Indeed, all federal circuits that have considered the issue
    (First, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Eighth, Ninth, and Tenth)
    recognize that there is no right to a neighborhood school
    assignment under the IDEA. White, supra, 
    343 F.3d at 381
    .
    18                                 A-2424-12T1
    to its program in order for a child to attend his neighborhood
    school), aff'd, 65 Fed. App'x 404 (3d Cir. 2003).
    If the parents disagree about the contents of the IEP, the
    IDEA provides two methods of seeking redress.                    They can request
    a due process hearing,8 which in New Jersey entails a full-
    fledged     adjudicatory    hearing        at   the   Office   of   Administrative
    Law,   or   they   can    file   an   administrative       complaint       with     the
    designated state education agency, which must investigate and
    issue a decision within sixty days.               See 
    34 C.F.R. § 300.152
    .             A
    party aggrieved by the decision may bring an appeal from the
    administrative     proceedings        in    any   state   or     federal   district
    court regardless of the amount in controversy.                      
    20 U.S.C.A. § 1415
    (i)(2)(A).           Generally,        plaintiffs     must      exhaust      these
    administrative remedies before seeking relief under the IDEA as
    well as under several other federal laws:
    Nothing in this title [
    20 U.S.C.A. §§ 1400
    et seq.] shall be construed to restrict or
    limit the rights, procedures, and remedies
    available   under   the   Constitution,  the
    Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990,
    title V of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973
    [
    29 U.S.C.A. §§ 790
     et seq.], or other
    Federal   laws  protecting   the  rights  of
    children with disabilities, except that
    8
    At a due process hearing, the student may bring complaints
    under the IDEA "with respect to any matter relating to the
    identification, evaluation, or educational placement of the
    child, or the provision of a [FAPE] to such child[.]"     
    20 U.S.C.A. § 1415
    (b)(6)(A).
    19                                 A-2424-12T1
    before the filing of a civil action under
    such laws seeking relief that is also
    available under this part [
    20 U.S.C.A. §§ 1411
       et   seq.],   the   procedures   under
    subsections (f) and (g) shall be exhausted
    to the same extent as would be required had
    the action been brought under this part.
    [
    20 U.S.C.A. § 1415
    (l).]
    Thus, to the extent that any federal action seeks relief
    that is available under the IDEA, the administrative procedures
    in the IDEA must first be exhausted.                    N.J. Prot. & Advocacy,
    Inc. v. N.J. Dep't of Educ., 
    563 F. Supp. 2d 474
    , 484 (D.N.J.
    2008).      The    exhaustion       rule    permits     "agencies    to    exercise
    discretion   and    apply    their    expertise,        to   allow   the   complete
    development of the record before judicial review, to prevent
    parties    from     circumventing          the    procedures     established       by
    Congress, and to avoid unnecessary judicial decisions by giving
    the agency an opportunity to correct errors."                    Urban, supra, 
    89 F.3d at
    724 (citing Ass'n for Cmty. Living v. Romer, 
    992 F.2d 1040
    , 1044 (10th Cir. 1993)).               Further, "[t]his provision bars
    plaintiffs from circumventing IDEA's exhaustion requirement by
    taking    claims   that     could    have       been   brought   under     IDEA   and
    repackaging them as claims under some other statute" such as the
    RA and the ADA.      Jeremy H. v. Mount Lebanon Sch. Dist., 
    95 F.3d. 272
    , 281 (3rd Cir. 1996).
    20                               A-2424-12T1
    In    the   prior         federal    litigation,      plaintiffs      contended,
    albeit unsuccessfully, that defendants' policy of centralizing
    the   provision       of    special       education     services      and   failing   to
    provide special education services at each child's neighborhood
    school violated the RA.               The RA provides that anyone receiving
    federal      funds    may       not     discriminate      against      an    "otherwise
    qualified individual with a disability . . . ."                         
    29 U.S.C.A. § 794
    (a).      The education regulations promulgated under Section 504
    of the RA generally conform to the standards established in the
    IDEA.      See 
    34 C.F.R. §§ 104.31
     to -39.               Indeed, the IDEA and the
    RA are "built around fundamental notions of equal access to
    state   programs       and       facilities"      and    thus   "their      substantive
    requirements      .    .    .    have     been    interpreted    to    be   strikingly
    similar."      Smith v. Robinson, 
    468 U.S. 992
    , 1017, 
    104 S. Ct. 3457
    , 3471, 
    82 L. Ed. 2d 746
    , 768 (1984), superseded on other
    grounds by 20 U.S.C.A. 1415(i)(3)(B).
    Comparable to the RA, the ADA protects against disability
    discrimination by providing that "no qualified individual with a
    disability shall, by reason of such disability, be excluded from
    participation in or be denied                    the benefits of the services,
    programs, or activities of a public entity, or be subjected to
    discrimination by any such entity."                     
    42 U.S.C.A. § 12132
    .          The
    ADA regulations generally conform to the regulations promulgated
    21                                A-2424-12T1
    under Section 504 of the RA.       See 
    28 C.F.R. § 35.103
    (a).        "With
    limited exceptions, the same legal principles govern ADA and RA
    claims."    CG v. Pa. Dep't of Educ., 
    734 F.3d 229
    , 235 (3d Cir.
    2013).
    Relying   on   these   well-recognized      similarities,   federal
    courts have routinely concluded that "if a disabled child is not
    entitled to a neighborhood placement under the IDEA, he [or she]
    is not entitled to such a placement under [the RA]."               Urban,
    
    supra,
     
    89 F.3d at 728
    ; see also Miller v. Bd. of Educ., 
    565 F.3d 1232
    , 1246 (10th Cir. 2009) (noting that "complying with the
    IDEA is sufficient to disprove educational discrimination" under
    the RA); N.L. v. Knox Cnty. Schs., 
    315 F.3d 688
    , 695-96 (6th
    Cir. 2003) (noting that "precedent has firmly established that
    section 504 claims are dismissed when IDEA claims brought on the
    theory of a denial of free appropriate public education are also
    dismissed."); Taylor v. Altoona Area Sch. Dist., 
    737 F. Supp. 2d 474
    , 487 (W.D. Pa. 2010) (noting that if an IDEA claim fails,
    ADA and RA claims brought on the same core facts "must also
    fail") (internal citations omitted); Barnett, supra, 927 F.2d at
    154-55 (finding school board did not violate the IDEA or the RA
    by   not   delivering   program   for   hearing    impaired   student     in
    child's neighborhood school).      Conversely, if the IDEA claim and
    the RA or the ADA claims do not share a similar factual basis,
    22                             A-2424-12T1
    they will be addressed separately.                 See CG, supra, 734 F.3d at
    235; Taylor, 
    supra,
     
    737 F. Supp. 2d at 487-88
    ; Hornstine v. Twp.
    Of Moorestown, 
    263 F. Supp. 2d 887
    , 901 (D.N.J. 2003).
    While the IDEA concerns the affirmative duty to provide a
    public    education     to    disabled     students,        the   RA    and    the      ADA
    "embody    the   negative      prohibition      against       depriving        disabled
    students   of    public      education."       CG,    supra,      734   F.3d       at   234
    (citing W.B. v Matula, 
    67 F.3d 484
    , 492-93 (3d Cir. 1995)).
    Hence, the IDEA provides a remedy for "inappropriate educational
    placement decisions, regardless of discrimination," while the
    ADA and the RA prohibit and provide a remedy for discrimination.
    
    Ibid.
        (citing      Hornstine,   
    supra,
          
    263 F. Supp. 2d at 901
    ).
    Generally, failure to provide a FAPE violates the IDEA as well
    as the ADA and the RA9 "because it deprives disabled students of
    a benefit that non-disabled students receive simply by attending
    school    in    the   normal    course     —   a     free,    appropriate          public
    education."      Id. at 235.        Conversely, the provision of a FAPE
    generally rules out discrimination claims under the RA and the
    ADA for benefits available under the IDEA.                     See, e.g., Miller,
    9
    We recognize that as the definition of disability is different
    under the IDEA and the RA, violation of the IDEA is not evidence
    of a per se violation of the RA.    Andrew M. v. Delaware Cnty.
    Office of Mental Health & Mental Retardation, 
    490 F.3d 337
    , 349
    (3d Cir. 2007).
    23                                    A-2424-12T1
    supra, 
    565 F.3d. at 1246
    ; H.D. v. Cent. Bucks Sch. Dist., 
    902 F. Supp. 2d 614
    , 628 (E.D. Pa. 2012).
    IV.
    We    now   turn    to     the    LAD's       protection    from   disability
    discrimination,   the    basis       of   plaintiffs'     complaint.        In    New
    Jersey,    persons      with     disabilities           are     protected        from
    discrimination by the LAD.           N.J.S.A. 10:5-4.          In relevant part,
    the LAD provides:
    All persons shall have the opportunity to
    obtain . . .      all the accommodations,
    advantages, facilities, and privileges of
    any place of public accommodation . . .
    without discrimination because of . . .
    disability . . . .     This opportunity is
    recognized as and declared to be a civil
    right.
    [N.J.S.A. 10:5-4.]
    "A place of public accommodation" includes "any kindergarten,
    primary and secondary school[.]"                N.J.S.A. 10:5-5(l).
    Our courts broadly interpret the LAD to further its purpose
    "to eradicate the 'cancer of discrimination[.]'"                       Ellison v.
    Creative Learning Ctr., 
    383 N.J. Super. 581
    , 588 (App. Div.
    2006) (internal citations omitted).                The regulations implemented
    in furtherance of the LAD similarly provide that "the remedial
    provisions of the statute will be given a broad construction and
    its exceptions construed narrowly."                N.J.A.C. 13:13-1.2(a).         The
    LAD must be construed to prohibit any unlawful discrimination
    24                              A-2424-12T1
    against any person because such a person is disabled.              N.J.S.A.
    10:5-4.
    The LAD public accommodation regulations provide that
    (a) It shall be unlawful for . . . any place
    of public accommodation to refuse, withhold
    from or deny an individual, either directly
    or indirectly, on account of that person's
    disability or perceived disability, access
    to any of the accommodations, advantages,
    facilities or privileges of a place of
    public   accommodation  .   .    .  [and]   to
    discriminate    against  a   person   with   a
    disability    in    the  price,    eligibility
    criteria,    methods    of     administration,
    standards, terms, or conditions upon which
    access to such accommodations, advantages,
    facilities or privileges may depend.
    [N.J.A.C. 13:13-4.3(a).]
    N.J.A.C.     13:13-4.4(a)        requires    a    place   of      public
    accommodation    to     "afford       goods,     services,    facilities,
    privileges, advantages, and accommodations . . . in the most
    integrated   setting"   and   "to    the   extent    reasonable[.]"      And
    N.J.A.C. 13:13-4.11(a) requires a place of public accommodation
    to accommodate a disabled person to the extent reasonable unless
    providing the accommodation "would impose an undue burden" on
    the place of public accommodation.
    To    determine   the   extent    of   the   protection   afforded    to
    disabled persons under the LAD, we must look to the analytical
    framework of the RA and the ADA.           Lasky v Moorestown Twp., 
    425 N.J. Super. 530
    , 538 (App. Div.), certif. denied, 
    212 N.J. 198
    25                            A-2424-12T1
    (2012); See also Ensslin v. Twp. Of N. Bergen, 
    275 N.J. Super. 352
    , 364 (App. Div. 1994) (noting appropriateness of construing
    a state regulation based on federal law due to the correlation
    between   state   and   federal   law   on    disability   discrimination),
    certif. denied, 
    142 N.J. 446
     (1995).            Indeed, the Supreme Court
    has recently observed that the Legislature has not "amended the
    LAD to afford rights to the disabled that are different from
    those found in Section 504 [of the RA] and the ADA . . . ."
    Victor v. State, 
    203 N.J. 383
    , 406 (2010); see also Chisolm v.
    McManimon, 
    275 F.3d 315
    , 324-25 n.9 (3d Cir. 2001) (analyzing an
    ADA claim "with the understanding that the principles will apply
    equally to the [RA] and the [LAD] claims").
    Under the ADA and the RA standard for establishing a prima
    facie case of failure to accommodate a disability, a plaintiff
    must show that he or she (1) had a disability; (2) was otherwise
    qualified to participate in the activity or program at issue;
    and (3) was denied the benefits of the program or otherwise
    discriminated     against   because      of    his   or    her   disability.
    Chambers v. Sch. Dist of Philadelphia Bd. of Educ., 
    587 F.3d 176
    , 189 (3d Cir. 2009); D.G. v. Somerset Hills Sch. Dist., 
    559 F. Supp. 2d 484
    , 503 (D.N.J. 2008); cf., Victor, supra, 203 N.J.
    at 407.    If the plaintiff can meet this burden, the question
    then becomes whether the accommodation was reasonable.                Lasky,
    26                              A-2424-12T1
    supra, 
    425 N.J. Super. at 539, 542-44
    ; Ellison, supra, 
    383 N.J. Super. at 595-96
    .            The defendant may argue as an affirmative
    defense that the requested accommodation created an undue burden
    on the defendant.         Hall v. Saint Joseph's Hosp., 
    343 N.J. Super. 88
    ,    108-09     (App.    Div.     2001),    certif.          denied,   
    171 N.J. 336
    (2002).
    In    this    case,    the    trial        court    found       that    plaintiffs
    established         the   first     two     elements      of      a    LAD    failure-to-
    accommodate prima facie case, that A.T. was disabled and was
    otherwise       qualified     for     a     program       or     activity,       but    that
    plaintiffs did not establish the third element, that A.T. was
    deprived     "a     cognizable      benefit       or   program."             Applying   the
    applicable RA and ADA legal principles, we agree.
    When a disabled child is denied a FAPE, it violates the
    IDEA   and    the    RA   "because     it    is    denying       a    disabled    child    a
    guaranteed education merely because of the child's disability.
    It is the denial of an education that is guaranteed to all
    children that forms the basis of the claim."                          Andrew M., supra,
    
    490 F.3d at 350
    ; C.G., supra, 734 F.3d at 235.                           The undisputed
    facts in this case show that A.T. received a FAPE and there was
    no evidence presented that any other class member did not or
    will not receive a FAPE.             Under the IDEA and state law, this is
    precisely the special education benefit made available to A.T.
    27                                    A-2424-12T1
    Accordingly,     guided         by     the    previously     cited      cases
    concerning the RA, the ADA, and the IDEA, we hold that, when a
    LAD discrimination claim concerns the special education benefits
    and related services available to a child under the IDEA, the
    program or benefit used to determine the prima facie test for
    disability discrimination is the provision of a FAPE.                      Relying
    further on the similarity between the RA, the ADA, and the LAD,
    we also hold that if a disabled child is not entitled to a
    neighborhood school placement under the ADA or the RA, he or she
    is not entitled to such placement under the LAD.
    Plainly, the issue of the location of special education
    services is a component of the IEP process aimed at developing a
    FAPE.   The same facts underlying A.T.'s IDEA claim and RA claim
    are   the   core   facts   in   his    LAD      claim.   Federal    courts      have
    routinely rejected claims that placement in a non-neighborhood
    school for purposes of receiving special education and related
    services is a form of disability discrimination under the RA or
    the ADA.    See White, 
    supra,
     
    343 F.3d at 381
    .             In fact, the Third
    Circuit rejected plaintiffs' claim of RA discrimination based on
    non-neighborhood school placement in affirming the dismissal of
    the federal litigation here.               Plaintiffs have not cited and our
    research has not revealed any cases that held that the failure
    to provide a FAPE in the neighborhood school violated the RA or
    28                              A-2424-12T1
    the ADA.
    Plaintiffs    incorrectly        seek          to     isolate     one       specific
    component   of   A.T.'s     IEP,    the    inclusion          class     location,       and
    assert that it violates the right to attend one's neighborhood
    school, purportedly a separate and distinct benefit from the
    educational benefits provided under the IDEA.                       Separation of one
    component   of     the    FAPE     from        all    the     other     services        and
    considerations     that   went     into    the       IEP    in   this    case      is   not
    appropriate.     We cannot agree that, for purposes of the three
    elements of the prima facie test, there is a separate stand-
    alone benefit of attending the neighborhood school unrelated to
    the provision of a FAPE.           This argument has not been successful
    under the RA or the ADA and, based upon previously stated RA and
    ADA   principles,   it    must     fail    here.           Simply     put,    where     the
    disabled child's placement is determined as part of the IDEA
    process, the program or benefit the school district must provide
    is the provision of a FAPE.         Andrew M., supra, 
    490 F.3d at 350
    .
    Plaintiffs    argue    further      that       centralization          of    special
    education services, although admittedly correct under the IDEA
    and federal and state special education regulations, denies a
    child access to his neighborhood school in violation of state
    and federal regulations requiring that all public facilities be
    accessible to persons with disabilities.                     Based upon RA and ADA
    29                                      A-2424-12T1
    principles addressing special education benefits, this argument
    is also unpersuasive.             Moreover, the district has not denied
    A.T.    physical    access   to    his   neighborhood      school;    indeed,    he
    attended Selzer for the pre-school class and for first grade.
    He did not attend Selzer for kindergarten because his IEP, aimed
    at providing a FAPE, called for him to be in an inclusion class,
    which    was    held   at    Grant.       Thus,       plaintiffs'    reliance    on
    regulations concerning physical access is misplaced here.
    Additionally,    we    reject     plaintiffs'      contention    that    the
    provision of special transportation services to bus A.T. to his
    special education program constitutes a separate violation of
    the LAD.       Transportation is a related service which cannot be
    segregated from the child's individual IEP and FAPE.                    The IDEA
    requires transportation to be provided as a related service when
    it is necessary to enable a child with a disability to benefit
    from     education.          
    20 U.S.C.A. § 1401
    (26)(A).        Thus,
    transportation is not a separate educational component but is a
    means to assist the child in receiving the FAPE as designed by
    the IEP.       If an individual student is aggrieved by the provision
    or non-provision of transportation, he or she can file for due
    process under the IDEA and request a change.                   See Tyler W. v.
    Upper Perkiomen Sch. Dist., 963 F. Supp 2d 427, 436-37 (E.D. Pa.
    2013) (FAPE provided despite lengthy bus ride to educational
    30                              A-2424-12T1
    placement);      Bonadonna     v.    Cooperman,        
    619 F. Supp. 401
    ,    415
    (D.N.J. 1985) (district required to provide transportation to
    facility located distance from neighborhood school).
    Contrary    to    plaintiffs'         arguments,   the      cases    upon   which
    they relied do not provide support for their claims.                        Oberti, an
    IDEA   case,     highlighted      the    undisputed       legal     principle      that,
    under the IDEA, the preferred placement for special education
    services    is     the    least      restrictive        environment,         but    also
    acknowledged, as do all the cases concerning least restrictive
    environment, that the placement depends on the child's unique
    needs as determined by a properly constructed IEP.                             Oberti,
    supra, 
    995 F.2d at 1214-15
    .                   Importantly, Oberti underscores
    that the IDEA governs the decision on where the child receives
    special education services and if a child is aggrieved by the
    placement, the remedy is to file a due process petition alleging
    failure to comply with the IDEA.                  20 U.S.C.A. 1415(b)(6).          Here,
    plaintiffs seek to make an end run around the IDEA by dismissing
    the due process petition and repackaging the claim as a class
    action under the LAD.
    Likewise, Hornstine is inapposite here.                     In Hornstine, the
    district   court    engaged     in      an    extensive      discussion     about    the
    overlapping of the IDEA, the RA, and the ADA and determined that
    the issue before it, a high school's qualification requirements
    31                                A-2424-12T1
    for valedictorian, was not part of the child's IEP and was not
    covered      by   the    IDEA;    hence,      the     plaintiff     did    not   have   to
    exhaust administrative remedies.                   Hornstine, supra, 
    263 F. Supp. 2d at 901-02, 913
    .             In stark contrast, the inclusion class here
    is part of the IEP and part of the benefit made available to
    A.T.   under       the   IDEA.        Thus,    Hornstine       supports     defendants'
    assertions that when the dispute is based upon benefits provided
    pursuant to the IDEA, the LAD claim is coextensive with the IDEA
    and the RA claims.             Additionally, plaintiffs' reliance on D.G.
    is misdirected because there the school district did not provide
    any special education program or benefits, which supported the
    plaintiff's        RA    and    LAD    claims        for    failure   to    provide     an
    educational benefit.            D.G., supra, 
    559 F. Supp. 2d at 488-90
    .
    No evidence in the record demonstrates that A.T. did not
    receive the appropriate educational program from the inclusion
    placement at Grant or that any of plaintiffs' rights under the
    IDEA were violated.            Instead, it was acknowledged that placement
    in the inclusion class benefitted A.T., both educationally and
    socially.         Nor were any facts provided that any other children
    did    not   receive      a    FAPE    or     were    actually     harmed.        Rather,
    plaintiffs'        expert      made   a   sweeping         claim   that    all   children
    provided with special education services in a non-neighborhood
    school or provided with the related service of transportation,
    32                                 A-2424-12T1
    are harmed by the stigma of being singled out as disabled.                                  The
    expert never evaluated A.T. or any of the other putative class
    members nor did she identify the specific harm suffered by these
    children.      Since A.T. received the educational benefit to which
    he   was    entitled       under    the   IDEA,        the   Third     Circuit      found    no
    evidence of harm under the IDEA or the RA, and we perceive no
    actual harm here under the LAD.
    In sum, we conclude that for purposes of establishing a
    prima      facie    case    of    disability       discrimination        under      the     LAD
    where the facts concern the provision of special education and
    related     services,       the     program      or    benefit    measured       under      the
    third element is the provision of a FAPE.                        To be sure, when the
    discrimination claimed does not pertain to special education and
    related     services,       the     particular         benefit   or    program      will     be
    different.         Because here, the alleged discriminatory component,
    the location of the services, was part of the comprehensive IEP
    developed     to     provide       A.T.   with     a    FAPE,    and    did    so   provide,
    plaintiffs         have    not     demonstrated         a    prima     facie     claim      for
    disability discrimination under the LAD.
    Affirmed.
    33                                     A-2424-12T1
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A-2424-12

Citation Numbers: 438 N.J. Super. 241, 103 A.3d 269

Filed Date: 11/24/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021

Authorities (28)

wb-parent-of-the-minor-ej-on-her-own-behalf-and-on-behalf-of-her , 67 F.3d 484 ( 1995 )

Aw, 1 by His Parents, Debra D. Wilson and Christopher D. ... , 372 F.3d 674 ( 2004 )

Hornstine v. Township of Moorestown , 263 F. Supp. 2d 887 ( 2003 )

Ronald Chisolm v. Patrick McManimon Jr., Director of Mercer ... , 275 F.3d 315 ( 2001 )

New Jersey Protection & Advocacy, Inc. v. New Jersey ... , 563 F. Supp. 2d 474 ( 2008 )

D.G. v. Somerset Hills School District , 559 F. Supp. 2d 484 ( 2008 )

andrew-m-deirdre-m-on-their-own-behalf-and-on-behalf-of-their-minor-sons , 490 F.3d 337 ( 2007 )

Lasky v. MOORESTOWN TP. , 425 N.J. Super. 530 ( 2012 )

rafael-oberti-by-his-parents-and-next-friends-carlos-and-jeanne-oberti , 995 F.2d 1204 ( 1993 )

Ensslin v. Township of North Bergen , 142 N.J. 446 ( 1995 )

Hall v. St. Joseph's Hosp. , 343 N.J. Super. 88 ( 2001 )

Lascari v. Board of Education of the Ramapo Indian Hills ... , 116 N.J. 30 ( 1989 )

ELLISON EX REL. WHITTLE v. Creative Learning Ctr. , 383 N.J. Super. 581 ( 2006 )

MA Ex Rel. GA v. Voorhees Tp. Bd. of Educ. , 202 F. Supp. 2d 345 ( 2002 )

T.R. E.M.R., on Behalf of Their Minor Child, N.R. v. ... , 205 F.3d 572 ( 2000 )

Kevin G. Ex Rel. Jo-Ann G. v. Cranston School Committee , 130 F.3d 481 ( 1997 )

nl-a-minor-by-her-mother-ms-c-as-next-friend-and-ms-c , 315 F.3d 688 ( 2003 )

John DOE v. NATIONAL BOARD OF MEDICAL EXAMINERS, Appellant , 199 F.3d 146 ( 1999 )

White Ex Rel. White v. Ascension Parish School Board , 343 F.3d 373 ( 2003 )

Taylor v. Altoona Area School District , 737 F. Supp. 2d 474 ( 2010 )

View All Authorities »