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T.K. et al. v. New York City Department of Education

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT * ~PR 26 20\1 * EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK BROOKLYN OffiCE

T.K. AND S.K., INDIVIDUALLY AND ON MEMORANDUM & BEHALF OF L.K. ORDER

Plaintiff-Appellant, 10-CV-007S2

- against-

NEW YORK CITY DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION,

Defendant.

JACK B. WEINSTEIN, Senior United States District Judge:

APPEARANCES:

For Plaintiff:

GARY S. MAYERSON Mayerson and Associates th 330 West 38 Street, Suite 600 New York, NY 10018

BRIANNE NICOLE DOTTS Mayerson and Associates th 330 West 38 Street, Suite 600 New York, NY 10018

For the Defendant:

Michael A. Cardozo, Corporation Counsel of the City of New York By: JOHN MICHAEL BUHTA, Of Counsel ABIGAIL LYNNE GOLDENBERG, Of Counsel

Table of Contents

I. Introduction ........................................................................................................................ 3 II. Facts ..................................................................................................................................... 4 A. Party's Contentions .......................................................................................................... .4 B. L.K.'s Academic Program ................................................................................................ 6 C. Evidence of Bullying ........................................................................................................ 8 D. School's Knowledge of Bullying .................................................................................... 10 E. Bullying in America ........................................................................................................ 11 1. What Constitutes Bullying .............................................................................................. 13 a. Cyberbullying .............................................................................................................. 15 b. Increased State Efforts to Address Bullying ................................................................ 16 2. Distinguishing Bullying From Horseplay ....................................................................... 17 3. How Bullying Differs Between Boys and Girls ............................................................. 18 4. Why Kids Bully .............................................................................................................. 18 5. Bullying and Students With Disabilities ......................................................................... 21 F. Effects on Children ......................................................................................................... 23 1. Victim ............................................................................................................................. 24 2. Bully ................................................................................................................................ 26 3. Bystander ........................................................................................................................ 27 III. Law .................................................................................................................................... 28 A. Summary Judgment Standard ......................................................................................... 28 B. Obligations of Schools to Remedy Bullying .................................................................. 28 1. Due Process ..................................................................................................................... 28 2. Guaranteed Right to Be Protected From Abuse in School ............................................. 30 3. Title IX of the Civil Rights Act and Individuals with Disability Education Act (IDEA) ....................................................................................................... 31 C. IDEA and Guarantees of a Free and Appropriate Education .......................................... 32 I. General Requirements ..................................................................................................... 32 2. Exhaustion of Administrative Remedy ........................................................................... 35 D. Bullying and IDEA ......................................................................................................... 37 I. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.. ....................................................................... 37 2. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit ........................................................................... 38 3. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit ....................................................................... 39 4. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit .......................................................................... .40

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5. Possible Legal Standards ............................................................................................... .41 a. Title IX of the Civil Rights Act ................................................................................ .41 b. Due Process Under Section 1983 ............................................................................... .43 c. Equal Protection Under Section 1983 ....................................................................... .44 d. Applicable Standard ................................................................................................... 45 IV. Application of Law to Facts ............................................................................................. .48 V. Predetermination ................................................................................................................ 49 VI. Conclusion ......................................................................................................................... 50

I. Introduction

This case presents the largely unresolved issue of the extent to which bullying by other

students inhibits a disabled child from being educated appropriately, and what her school must

do about it. A strict legal test is developed and applied.

Plaintiff L.K. acting through her parents, challenges her public school placement by the

New York City Department of Education ("POE") under the Individuals with Disabilities

Education Act. After exhausting her administrative remedies, she brings this action arguing that

the placement was procedurally and substantively inappropriate, and her parents seek

reimbursement for private school tuition. The DOE moves for summary judgment.

The primary complaint is that L.K. was deprived of an appropriate education because her

assigned public school did nothing to prevent her from being so bullied by other students as to

seriously reduce the opportunity for an appropriate education. Such a contention, under the

Individuals with Disability Education Act ("IDEA") provisions that require a proper school

placement and appropriate education, apparently have not yet been ruled upon by the Court of

Appeals for the Second Circuit. For the reasons stated below, the issue requires a court

evidentiary hearing, and, a possible remand tbthe ~t'a'i~·authorities for a rehearing.

Access to a free and appropriate education for all students remains one of the central

issues for our time. For children with disabilities, the struggle for equal access to education at 3

their local public schools is now decades old. Thirty-five years ago, passage of the Individuals

with Disabilities Education Act required communities to provide equal access for students with

special needs.

In 1970, before the IDEA's passage, United States schools provided special education to

only one in five children with a disability. U. S. Dep't of Educ., Thirty-five Years of Progress in

Educating Children With Disabilities Through IDEA 3 (2010), available at

http://www2.ed. gov/aboutioffices/listiosers/idea:J Sihistory/idea-3 5-history. pdf By 2008, 95

percent of children with disabilities received special education in their neighborhood public

schools. Id. at 2. But an effective and appropriate education may be negated by child bullying.

When a school fails to take reasonable steps to prevent such objectionable harassment of a

student, it has denied her an educational benefit protected by statute.

No one gains from ignoring school bullying - not even the bullies themselves. The

students who are bullied may suffer lasting scars in the fonu of an inferior education, emotional

damage, and decreased self-confidence; the bullies are left to continue on a path that may lead to

future violence. See Gayle 1. Macklem, Bullying and Teasing: Social Power in Children's

Groups 42-47 (2003) (noting that bullying may lead to sexual harassment and an increased '\ '\ ;',,;'. ;,':1: ,I likelihood of being convicted ofa felony). Bullying and inappropriate peer harassment in its

many fonus provides an unacceptable toxic leaming environment. For the reasons stated below

defendant's motion for summary judgment is denied. Defendant's motion to dismiss plaintiffs

predetenuination claim is granted.

II. Facts

A. Party's Contentions

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'., )'

Plaintiff presents two arguments. First, that bullying made L.K.' s educational

environment hostile - a factor not properly taken into account during the administrative process.

Plaintiff's Memorandum of Law in Support of Motion for De Novo Review ("PI's Mem. Supp.

Mot. De Novo Rev.") at II, November 17,2010, Docket Entry No. 18.

L.K. argues that in considering bullying during the administrative review, the test for

determining if a school district is liable for sexual harassment of a student developed in Davis v.

Monroe County Bd. ofEduc., 526 U.S. 629 (1999) should be applied. Id. Plaintiff alleges that

she was subjected to repeated bullying at school as a result of her disability, that the school was

aware of this conduct, and that the school stonewalled her parents' attempts to address the issue,

establishing its deliberate indifference. Id. at 12-13.

Second, L.K. contends that the school improperly predetermined her Individualized

Education Plan ("IEP") and did not provide a meaningful opportunity for her parents to

participate. Id. at 15-17. She supports this argument by pointing to the school's withholding of

documents and failure to discuss bullying as it related to her IEP. Id.

As an initial matter, defendant urges this court to defer to the opinions rendered by the

Independent Hearing Officer and the State Review Officer that L.K. was not denied a free,

appropriate public education ("FAPE"). Defendant's Memorandum of Law in Opposition to

Plaintiffs Motion for De Novo Review ("Def. Mem. Opp. Mot. De Novo Rev.") at 2, Dec. 17,

2010, Docket Entry No. 29. It asserts that bullying as a denial ofa FAPE is "unsupported by

any law, and is not relevant .... " Id. at 6. It conlends that L.K.'s parents not only had the

chance to participate in developing the IEP, but they played an active role in the deliberations of

the Committee on Special Education ("CSE") that developed the program. Id. at 11-14.

Finally, Defendant argues that the IEP was "reasonably calculated to enable the child to

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receive educational benefits" and thus provided L.K. with a FAPE. Defendant's Memorandum

of Law in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment ("Def. Mem. in SUpp. of Mot. Summ. J.")

at 10, November 17,2010, Docket Entry No. 23. In particular, the DOE contends that the IEP

was likely to produce progress because it was the result of appropriate input from L.K.'s parents,

teachers and school staff and accounted for the student's performance, goals for the future, and

ways to measure achievement. Id. at 11-14..

The facts set out below are based on filed documents in the case. For the purposes of this

summary judgment motion, they are assumed to be true.

B. L.K.'s Academic Program

L.K. is a 12-year-old girl who was originally diagnosed as autistic, but has since been re-

classified as learning disabled. Pl.'s Ex. J at 36-37, 72. During the 2007-2008 school year, the

DOE placed her in a "Collaborative Tearn Teaching" ("CTT") classroom, which involved

teaching students who are learning disabled alongside those who are not. Defendant's Rule 56.1

Statement of Material Facts ("Defs Rule 56.1 Statement") at ~ 2, November 17,2010, Docket

Entry No. 22; Plaintiffs Rule 56.1 Statement of Material Facts ("Pl.'s Rule 56.1 Statement" at ~

2, November 17, 2010, Docket Entry No. 19. To assist L.K. with her studies, she was provided a

teacher's aide on a one-to-one basis. She received additional school services including speech

therapy, occupation therapy, and physical therapy. Pl.'s Rule 56.1 Statement at ~ 2; Pl.'s. Ex. NN

at I;Pat I.

On June 4, 2008 a meeting was held to develop L.K.'s IEP for the 2008-2009 school

year. L.K.'s parents requested all documents used to evaluate their daughter in advance of the

meeting. Pl.'s Ex. T at I. They were given a single piece of paper. Pl.'s Ex. 0; Impartial

Hearing Officer Hearing Transcript ("IHO Tr.") 1722, Sept. 3, 2008-March 13,2009. As a

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result of the meeting the Committee of Special Education recommended that L.K. continue in the

same CIT setting at the same school. The classroom would contain two teachers, one student

teacher and two aides assigned to specific students other than L.K. It had a 12: I student to

teacher ratio. PI.'s Ex. D at I. The plan called for continued speech therapy, occupational

therapy, and physical therapy. Def.'s Rule 56.1 Statement at ~12; PI.'s Ex. D at I. The 2008-

2009 plan was the first under which L.K. did not have a 1: 1 aide at all times in the classroom.

IHO Tr. 1707-08.

During this CSE meeting, L.K.'s parents sought to discuss bullying of their daughter, but

were rebuffed by the school's principal. PI.'s Ex. J at 45-46. The principal stated that it was not

the appropriate time to discuss bullying, but the matter could be discussed later. [d.; IHO Tr.

1702-03, 1734. No future meeting was scheduled or took place. IHO Tr. 1703. L.K.'s parents

contend that this failure to address their concerns is just one example of many where bullying

was brought the school's attention and nothing was done. PI's Mem. Supp. Mot. De Novo Rev.

at 13.

Prior to the CSE meeting, L.K.'s parents placed a deposit to secure a place for her at the

Summit School, a private institution. PI's Ex. UU. After the IEP meeting, the parents rejected

the proposed placement at P.S. 6, where L.K. had been the year before, and instead enrolled her

in the Summit School. A not-for-profit organization approved by the New York State Education

Department; it provides educational and therapeutic services for learning disabled students. See

The Summit School, http://www. summitscho~lq:~~~~~.~;om/about (last visited April 14, 2011);

Def. Rule 56.1 Statement at ~ 38; PIs. Rule 56.1 Statement at ~ 50.

The instant action is brought to recover tuition and related expenses only for the 2008-

2009 school year. Since that school year, the family has moved outside of the New York City

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Department of Education District. See Plaintiffs Opposition to Defendant's Motion to Quash, at

n. 2, Feb. 22,2011, Docket Entry No. 37.

L.K.'s parents appealed from the DOE administrative decision to an Impartial Hearing

Officer (IHO) and then to a State Review Officer (SRO). Both appellate officers sided with the

DOE. See Part III.C.2, infra. i I

C. Evidence of BuJlying

During the 2007-2008 school year, L.K complained to her parents almost daily about

being bullied at school. IHO Tr. 1706. Her father insists that this constant bullying made her

"emotionally unavailable to learn." [d. at 1697. L.K.' s parents contend that their attempts to

address the bullying issue with the school principal both in person and in writing were

summarily dismissed. [d. at 1696-97.

Throughout the 2007-2008 school year, L.K. had one-on-one teacher's aide help in her

classroom during the day. This support was supplied by two women who worked on alternate

days. Both report that L.K. was ostracized in the 'class~oom and the subject of ridicule from

other students. See IHO Tr. 1477-85, 1555-66.

Shannon Maloney was L.K.'s teacher's aide on Tuesdays and Thursdays beginning in

November 2007. When she arrived at the school, she described it as a "hostile environment"

in which she was simply "just trying to get ... [L.K.] by each day." [d. at 1555. Maloney

reported that there was a great deal of teasing ofL.K., with other children physically backing

away to avoid her. !d. at 1556-58.

Dominique Faber was L.K.'s aide on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays during the

2007-2008 school year. She testified that there was "constant negative interaction" between L.K.

and other students on a daily basis. [d. at 1472. Other children would intentionally stay away

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from L.K. and at times physically push her away for fun. Id. at 1472-74, 1477. "She would be

tripped, where she was walking by and they would stick out their feet just to see what would

happen. And then if she fell, well, then the teachers would get upset with her for making a

scene." Id. at 1477-78.

Testimony from a substitute aide supports these contentions. Sharifa Wiggins worked as

a substitute aide for L.K. four times during the 2007-2008 school year. lHO Tr. 1292, 1324. Her

reaction was that "[L.K.] was isolated by girls and boys in her classroom. There was an incident

in the classroom when there was a group of students at one table that [L.K.] was sitting at, where

they had to write an assignment, and there was a pencil that [L.K.] touched. And for some

reason, she put it down and no one wanted to touch the pencil." Id. at 1319. This behavior

continued when L.K. tried to participate in class. "And a question was asked of the class ... to

give an opinion about a situation. And [L.K.] raised her hand and kind of people laughed at her."

Id. at 1320-21.

Others at the school for brief periods of time noticed the same isolation. Mary Kutch,

who was the director ofL.K.'s school program referred to an incident where a student refused to

take a paper from L.K. to grade it, requiring an aide to intervene. lHO Tr. 1454.

Specific incidents of bullying include: a drawing in the record made by a student in

L.K.'s class depicting L.K. in a disparaging light; a student chasing L.K. with what he claimed

was blood but was in fact ketchup; other studentsiidfUki~g to touch things once L.K had; and a

prank phone call made to L.K.'s home, which the school was informed about. See PI.'s Ex. MM;

Tr. 941, 1305, 1320. No incident reports were generated by the school relating to these

occurences. This lack of records is significant because it raises questions about whether the

school was actually on notice, or if it was, whether it was deliberately indifferent.

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The DOE has no incident reports of bullying where L.K. was the victim. It has, however,

provided several reports where the school alleges she was the aggressor, including one where she

is accused of hitting her teacher. See PI.' sEx. eee at 9. These documents were furnished after

repeated requests by the plaintiff, leading the State' Review Office to find a procedural violation

of the IDEA, but not one that rose to the level of a denial of FAPE.

L.K.'s parents maintain that bullying caused their daughter to resist attending school, hurt

her academic performance, and damaged her emotional well-being. PI's Mem. Supp. Mot. De

Novo Rev. at 12. The DOE points to progress reports showing L.K.'s academic progress and

portraying her as an enthusiastic classroom participant. Def.'s Rule 56.1 Statement at ~ 3.

D. School's Knowledge of Bullying

L.K.'s parents sent several letters to her school about her being bullied, which the school

principal says she responded to via telephone call. IHO Tr. 853-55,932-34; 1695-1702; 1718.

The principal recalls receiving letters from L.K.'s parents specifically reporting two acts of

bullying. [d. at 875, 893.

During the 2007-2008 school year, L.K.'s parents brought her to the school principal's

office to discuss bullying in the school. IHO Tr. at 847-48. After showing them into her office,

the principal asked L.K.'s parents to have the conversation outside ofL.K.'s presence. [d. When

L.K.'s parents continued to try to discuss the matter, the principal asked them to leave. As the

parent's continued to try to discuss their daughter's problem the principal opened the door to her

office and said she would call security if they did not leave. [d.

No subsequent meeting about bullying with school personnel took place. The principal

does not recall what she did to investigate any claims of bullying. IHO Tr. 851-52. ("Question:

What, if anything, did you do to investigate [daims'ofbullying] internally? Answer: I can't

10 ( i. ',~ •.l - '1 l'"

recall."). When L.K.'s parents, tried raising the issue of bullying during a meeting to set the

educational plan at issue they were rebuffed. Id. at 876-77. The school principal did not permit

this discussion because she said she thought it was not appropriate for a CSE meeting. Id. at

877.

Maloney, the school aide, testified that when she brought incidents of bullying to the

attention of classroom teachers, it was ignored. IHO Tr. 1556-58. When trying to discuss a

particular incident with the principal, Maloney says that she was turned away and told there was

no time for a meeting. Id. at 1559.

E. Bullying in America

Were bullying characterized as a disease affecting America's youth, a team from the

Center for Disease Control charged with investigating epidemics would have been called in to

study it. Joseph 1. Wright, Address at American Medical Association Educational Forum on

Adolescent Health: Youth Bullying 23 (2002), available at http://www.ama-

assn.orglamal/pub/upload/mm/39/youthbullying.pdf. ("If [bullying] were a medical issue, for

example an infectious disease in my pediatrics practice, we would have the Epidemic

Intelligence Service people from the Centers for Control and Prevention investigate it. The

prevalence and epidemiology is striking."). The problem is pervasive; it is perceived by

educators as serious, particularly in the middle school years. Michaela Gulemetova, Darrel

Drury, and Catherine P. Bradshaw, Findings Form the National Education Association's

Nationwide Study of Bullying: Teachers' and Education Support Professionals' Perspectives, in

White House Conference on Bullying Prevention, at 11-12 (March 10, 2011), available at

http://www.stopbullying.gov/references/white_house_conference/index.htm\. ("Over 40 percent

of [teachers and support staff surveyed] indicated that bullying was a moderate or major problem in

their school, with 62 percent indicating that they witnessed two or more incidents of bUllying in the II

last month, while 41 percent witnessed bullying once a week or more,"). It is the most common

type of violence in our schools. Macklem, supra, at 7.

The issue first seized the attention oft the Am!!Fi~an public after the 1999 shooting at

Columbine High School that killed fifteen students and wounded two dozen more. Susan P.

Limber, Addressing Youth Bullying Behaviors, in American Medical Association Educational

Forum on Adolescent Health: Youth Bullying 5 (2002), available at http://www.ama-

assn.orglamallpub/uploadlmml39/youthbullying.pdf. As part of the investigation that followed

the Columbine massacre, the Secret Service examined thirty-seven shooting incidents. They

determined that in two-thirds of those cases, the shooter described feeling bullied, persecuted, or

threatened at school. Bill Dedman, Secret Service Findings Overturn Stereotypes, Chicago Sun-

Times Report, Oct. 15-16,2000, at 9; Limber, supra, at 5. "I just remember life not being much

fun, a shooter recalls. 'Reject, retard, loser.' I remember stick boy a lot 'cause I was so thin."

Dedman, supra, at 9.

More recently, stories of bullied victims taking their own lives have become common.

See, e.g., John Schwartz, Bullying, Suicide and Punishment, N.Y. Times, Oct. 3, 2010, at Al

(discussing the suicides of three teens as a result of online bullying); Limber, supra, at 5 (noting

that internationally the study of bullying was triggered by the suicides of three young boys in

Norway in the 1980s). Some one third of students are engaging in aggressive behavior directed

at their peers, oftentimes with the goal of increasing their popularity. Tara Parker-Pope, Web of

Popularity, Achieved by Bullying, N.Y. Times blog, (Feb. 14,2011,5:03 p.m.), available at

http://well.blogs.nytimes.coml20 11/02/14/web-of-popularity-weaved-by-

bullyingl?scp= 1&sq=Tara%20Parker-Pope%20bully&st=cse.

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National leaders and educators continue to work toward a solution. President Obama

held a summit and announced new federal programs that aimed at "dispel[ing] the myth that

bullying is just a hannless rite of passage or inevitable part of growing up." Jackie Calmes,

Obama Focuses on Antibullying Efforts, N.Y. Times, March 10,2011, at A18.

Presidential summits and school shootings achieve headlines, but the day-to-day adverse

affects of bullying in damaging educational opportunities to students are as real as they are

unnoticed. It is a problem that affects the school perfonnance, emotional well-being, mental

health, and social development of school children throughout the United States. Tonja R. Nansel

et. aI., Cross-national Consistency in the Relationship Between Bullying Behaviors and

Psychosocial Acljustment, 158 Archive of Pediatric and Adolescent Med. 730, 733-35 (2004).

Whether a child is the victim, aggressor, or merely a bystander, research shows that those in a

close vicinity to bullying are adversely marked. Id. See also, Macklem, supra, at 44, 90-92.

1. What Constitutes Bullying

Bullying is not a new phenomenon; literature is blotted with bullies, and many people

have had personal experience with a schoolyard antagonist. Dan Olweus, Bully at School: What

We Know and What We Can Do 1 (1993). The bully-victim relationship is characterized by a

real or perceived imbalance of power and encompasses . .a variety of negative acts that are carried II . ,"

out repeatedly over time. Id. at 9; Nels Ericson, U.S. Dep't of Justice Office of Juvenile Justice

and Delinquency Prevention Fact Sheet, Addressing the Problem ofJuvenile Bullying 1 (200 I),

available at http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffilesl!ojjdp/fs200127.pdf. Negative actions can broadly

be described as inflicting or attempting to inflict discomfort upon another. Olweus, supra, at 9.

Bullying takes three forms: physical (e.g. hitting); verbal (e.g. taunting); and psychological (e.g.

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, ',1 "y','

engaging in social exclusion). Ericson, supra, at~. Indirect, psychological bullying, in the form

of exclusion and isolation is often less visible, but not less corrosive. Olweus, supra, at 10.

"The consensus among physicians and social scientists, educators and youth development

organizations, civil rights advocates and law enforcement is that bullying is neither inevitable nor

normal .... " Julie Sacks and Robert S. Salem, Victims Without Legal Remedies: Why Kids Need

Schools to Develop Comprehensive Anti-Bullying Policies, 72 Alb. 1. Rev. 147, 147-48 (2009).

Despite this consensus, bullying continues to occur at an alarming rate. A study by a group of

psychologists provides an illustration. While observing groups of kindergarten and first grade

students, researches noted an incident of bullying on the playground every three to six minutes.

James Snyder et. al., Observed Peer Victimization During Early Elementary School: Continuity,

Growth. and Relation to Riskfor Child Antisocial Depressive Behavior, 74 Child Dev. 1881,

1885 (2003).

"(T)he highest prevalence of bullying is among elementary-school aged children." Gwen

M. Glewet. ai., Bullying Psychological Adjustment, and Academic Performance in Elementary

School, 159 Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent Med.1 026, 1026 (2005). Younger students of

both sexes are the most likely to be singled out as victims. J.F. Devoe and S. Kaffenberger, U.S.

Dep't of Educ., Student Reports on Bullying: Resultsfrom 2001 School Crime Supplement to the

National Crime Victimization Survey 14 (2005), available at

http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2005/2005310.pdf.Children who struggle academically are more likely

to be victims or be both victim and aggressor. Glew, supra, at 1030. Bullying can be carried out

by an individual or a group. Olweus, supra, at 9~' ihb"y'ictim of school bullying is most often a

single person. 1d.

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Initially, victimization is situational; "only over time does the field of children who are

consistently victimized become narrowed on the basis of ongoing experience." Snyder, supra, at

1881; Macklem, supra, at 66 (finding that once a child is labeled a victim, his status within the

peer group drops). This leads to a subset of children being caught up in a "vicious cycle in

which victimization and maladjustment feed off one another." Snyder, supra, at 1881. In

particular, girls who are unable to develop supportive peer relationships are at an increased risk

, I for persistent ostracism and rejection. [d. at 1895.

"Youth who are victimized are likely marginalized from the mainstream peer group,

lacking access to pro social peers who provide role models of appropriate social skills, and also

protection against bUllying." Nansel, supra, at 735. The most common place for victimization

in elementary school is the playground, followed by the classroom and gym class. Glew, supra,

at 1029.

a. Cyberbullying

With changes in technology, the Internet has become the venue where widespread hurtful

bullying is inflicted by and on young people. See Jan Hoffman, As Bullies Go Digital, Parents

Play Catch-up, N.Y. Times, Dec. 5,2010, ati}i (ex~ining the widespread nature of bullying

on the Internet and difficulties schools have in stopping it); Schwartz, supra (discussing the

suicides of three teens as a result of online bullying).

The Internet has become a fertile area for bullying behavior. Cyber-bullying is defined as

"willful and repeated harm inflicted through the use of computer, cell phones and other

electronic devices." Sameer Hinduja and Justin W. Patchin, Overview ofCyberbullying, in

White House Conference on Bullying Prevention, at 21 (March 10,2011), available at

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http://www.stopbullying.gov/references/white_ho.Use~conference/index.htm!. About 20 percent

of eleven to eighteen year-olds have been cyberbullied at some point in their lives. Id.

Cyberbullying differs from traditional bullying in several ways. First, a cyberbully can

attack anonymously. Id. at 22. Second, the bullying can go viral, with many people harassing

the same target at once. Id. Third, the bully does not see the emotional toll his bullying creates,

allowing the culprit to push further than he or she might in a face-to-face relationship where the

adverse effects are clearly perceived. Id. at 23. Fourth, many parents and teachers do not have

the technological know-how to monitor these actions. Id.

b. Increased State Efforts to Address Bullying

Legislatures across the country have been taking note of the problem in schools. In ( i-,_'l \' ' 1,'.1' recent years, forty-five states have passed laws dea]mgwith bullying and harassment in schools.

Arne Duncan, Secretary of Education, Secretary of Education Bullying Law and Policy Memo,

Dec. 16,2010, available at http://www2.ed.gov/policy/gen/guidisecletter/IOI21S.htm!. In

September 2010, New York's Dignity for Students Act was enacted; it goes into effect in July

2012. See New York Education Law, §§ 10-17 (2010) (protects students against discrimination

on the basis ofrace, color, nation of origin, ethnic group, religion, disability, sexual orientation,

or gender). See also, New York Civil Liberties Union, The Dignity For All Students Act (2010),

available at http://www.nyclu.org/files/publications/OnePager_DASA.pdf. The Act requires

incidents of bullying to be reported to the state Department of Education on at least an annual

basis and the development of appropriate codes of conduct. Id. at § 12. ("No student shall be < - ,,:,!: "\ " subjected to harassment by employees or students on' school property or at a school function; nor

shall any student be subjected to discrimination based on a person's actual or perceived race,

color, weight, national origin, ethnic group, religion, religious practice, disability, sexual

16

orientation, gender, or sex by school employees or students on school property or at a school

function."); Jd. at §13 ("The board of education and the trustees or sole trustee of every school

district shall create policies and guidelines that shall include, but not be limited to ... [p Jolicies

intended to create a school environment that is free from discrimination or harassment .... "); Id.

at § 15 ("The commissioner shall create a procedureimder which material incidents of

discrimination and harassment on school grounds or at a school function are reported to the

department at least on an annual basis .... "). See also, Erin Cargile, Lawmakers Move

Education Bill Forward, Austin News, April 14, 2011, available at

http://www.kxan.comldpp/news/texas_lege/Lawmakers-move-bullying-bill-forward.

2. Distinguishing Bullying From Horseplay

Every disagreement among children does not amount to bullying. "What distinguishes

bullying from other forms of childhood aggression, whether a hard-fought basketball game or

rough-and-tumble play, is unequal and coercive power." Philip C. Rodkin, Bullying and

Children's Peer Relationships, in White House Conference on Bullying Prevention, at 33 (March , , ••• F ~ ,': L.~ 10, 20 II), available at

http://www.stopbullying.gov/references/white_house_ conference/index.html. See also, Olweus,

supra, at 10 ("It must be stressed that the term bullying is not ... used when two students of

approximately the same strength ... are fighting or quarreling. "). Increased power need not be

actually present, but there must be at least a perceived advantage for the bully either physical or

psychological. Id.; Bonnie Bell Carter and Vicky O. Spencer, "The Fear Factor and Students

With Disabilities," 21 In!'l J. of Special Educ. II, 12 (2006).

The bully-victim connection can be viewed as the opposite of a healthy peer relationship.

Peers are equals on the same social standing, while a bullying nexus lacks equality of standing.

Rodkin, supra, at 33. It is the inequality, abuse,' and unfairness associated with bullying that

makes it incompatible with what we conceive of as the appropriate "American character." Id.

3. How Bullying Differs Between Boys and Girls

Children of both genders experience the gamut of bullying behavior. Olweus, supra, at

18. Boys are more likely to bully and to be bullied than girls. Id. When they do bully, boys are

inclined to engage in direct bullying such as hitting or taunting, while bullying among girls most

often takes the indirect forms of social exclusion or rejection. Id.; Macklem, supra, at 55;

Devoe, supra, at 4. Boys physically striking one another and girls harassing with their words has

become "an accepted part of peer culture." Rodkin, supra, at 35. Girls often bully by slandering

a classmate, spreading rumors about her, and manipulating friendships to harass their target.

Olweus, supra, at 19. Because bullying among girls is most often more subtle, it is

underreported. Macklem, supra, 55. Girls know that these actions are "mean," but they are

unlikely to report them as bullying. Id. Such harassment enables the bully to have "power over

others by controlling relationships and friendships." Macklem, supra, at 56. This form of

bullying brings with it the ability to damage the victim's reputation or status within the peer

group. Id. It is a behavior among girls developed early. Children are able to use this method as

early as five years old, and as they get older continue to rely on it. Id. at 57. This may be

because it is the most effective and tolerated form of bullying. Id. "Girls use relational bullying

earlier than boys, which may be due to the more sophisticated nature of relational aggression."

Id. at 60.

4. Why Kids BulJy

Children interact in various settings: school, home, church, neighborhoods. Within each

there are risk factors. Swearer, supra, at 3. How children interact in these various backgrounds

18

helps to define bullying and why children engage in it. Id. "There is no one single causal factor

for bUllying." Id.

When asked why certain children are selected for ridicule, students typically point to

external differences such as "obesity, red hair, an unusual dialect, or wearing glasses." Olweus,

supra, at 30. Research does not support this conclusion. Id. The one external characteristic that

is likely to playa role in whether a male child will be bullied is lack of physical strength. Id.

This does not hold true for girls, however, who are more likely to bully those who are actually

physically stronger than they are. Macklem, supra, at 55. Differences among students in areas

such as religion, disability, or ethnicity have the ability to affect the struggle for power among

young people and lead to a student being singled out as an object of harassment. Rodkin, supra,

at 35.

Several other factors playa major role in determining what makes students more likely to

bully. One is the climate of the school. When a school is not supportive or is negative, bullying

thrives. Swearer, supra, at 5. When teacher~ d~~~pl~Y·bullying or view it as kids being kids,

bullying rates are higher. Macklem, supra, at 27-29.

One study suggests that the aura of the school with respect to bullying has more to do

with whether bullying occurs than the behavior ofthe victim. Id. at 26. The school's

atmosphere includes the disciplinary system, preventive policies, the architecture of the building

itself, resources, support services, and morale. Id. School control is at its worst when staff and

dominant students model this behavior, bullying is ignored or reinforced, or it is accepted as

normal and expected. Id.

Parents playa role in determining whether someone is likely to bully. Bullies tend to

come from homes with "low cohesion, little warmth, absent fathers, high power needs [thatl

19 Case 1:10-cv-00752-JBW-VMS Document , 50 'II Filed 04/26/11 Page 20 of 51 PageID #: , ,<

<pageID>

pennit aggressive behavior, physical abuse, poor family functioning, and authoritarian parenting.

[Those who are both bully and victim] come from families with physical abuse, domestic

violence, hostile mothers, powerless mothers, uninvolved parents, neglect, low warmth,

inconsistent discipline, and negative environment." Swearer, supra, at 6. See also, Macklem,

supra, at 15-20 (discussing the potential correlation between family environment and bUllying.)

Bullying may also be the result of a life cycle where students believe it is simply their

turn to play the abusing role. Kathy Liguori, Time to Get to the Heart of Bullying, Newsday,

March 21,2011, at A36 (quoting a student who explained he was bullying a younger student

because he thought it was his turn to do so). Childten use bullying to demonstrate to their peer

group that they are able to dominate. Olweus, supra, at 35; Macklem, supra, at 38-39; Rodkin,

supra, at 33. In this way, bullying becomes a social event where the dominance ofthe bully is

put on display for an audience. Research demonstrates that in 90 percent of observed cases, a

bully was playing to an audience. Rodkin, supra, at 36. See also, Deborah A. Pepler et.a!., Peer

Process in Bullying, in Handbook of Bullying in Schools: An International Perspective 472

(2010) ("Even though a vast majority of students report that they find it unpleasant to report

bullying, the vast majority of bullying episodes have an audience."). "Thus the problem of

bullying is also a problem of the unresponsive bystander, whether that bystander is a classmate

who finds the harassment to be funny, or a peer who sits on the sidelines afraid to get involved, I • I·· , or an educator who sees bullying as just another piutof growing up." Rodkin, supra, at 36.

For those students who are connected with their social group, bullying serves as a way to

control their peers. Id. at 33. For those bullies who are excluded by their peers, bullying

represents a way to lash out at a social system that keeps them on the periphery. Id. A majority

, 20

of bullies who are marginalized are male; students being controlled by their peer group are

evenly split between both genders. Id. at 34.

These bullies who are integrated with,in ,thei~ peer social groups are easy to ignore or j '., !). II, \ J .

mischaracterize -leading two researchers to describe them as "hidden in plain sight." Id. at 36.

They have a variety of friends and possess strengths such as good social skills, athleticism, and

attractiveness. Id. at 34.

Culture is weighty in determining why someone will bully. Television, video games,

and the Internet may be linked to increased aggression and an increased likelihood for bullying

behavior. Macklem, supra, at 21-23. These influences, ifthey have any affect at all, are not as

strong as other cultural influences such as the neighborhood and the environment in which the

child is raised. Id. at 24.

5. Bullying and Students With Disabilities

The United States Department of Edu~ati~n lias"defined disability harassment as

"intimidation or abusive behavior based on disability that creates a hostile environment." U.S.

Dep't of Educ., Reminder of Responsibility Under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973

and Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act July, 25 2000, available at

http://www2.ed.gov/aboutloffices/listlocr/docs/disabharassltr.html(hereinafter DOE Reminder

of Responsibilities Letter). Studies have shown that students with a disability, whether it is

visible or non-visible, are subject to increased bullying that is often directed at the disability.

John Young, Ari Ne'eman, and Sara Geiser, Bullying and Students With Disabilities, in White

House Conference on Bullying Prevention, at 74 (March 10,2011), available at

http://www.stopbullying.gov/references/white_house_conference/index.htm!. These students are

also at more risk for bullying directed at factirs: ~ihJr"t~an their disability. Id. at 77. Harassing

21

conduct may take many fonns, including verbal acts and name-calling, as well as nonverbal

behavior, such as graphic written statements, or conduct that is physically threatening, hannful,

or humiliating. DOE Reminder of Responsibilities Letter, supra.

Overall, students with disabilities are less popular, have fewer friends, and struggle more

with loneliness and peer rejection, increasing the likelihood they will become the victim of

bullying. Carter, supra, at 12-21 (noting a study that indicated child with even mild leaming

disorder had fewer friends and another that indicated those who are bullied are more likely to be

alone at play time); Young, supra, at 74 ("Many students with disabilities have significant social

skills challenges, either as a core trait of their disability or as a result of social isolation due to

segregated environments and/or peer rejection. Such students may be at particular risk for

bullying and victimization."). Students who suffer from learning disabilities and emotional

disorders often lack social awareness, which makes them more vulnerable. Carter, supra, at 12.

Other research concludes that disabled students themselves are more likely to perpetuate bullying

behavior in response to being bullied. Swearer, supra, at 4.

Despite an increased focus in recent years on instructing special education students in

general education classrooms, there has not been a corresponding concern about the way these

children integrate socially in the classroom. Carter, supra, at II. Without healthy social . ',' :,', 1 II "j ~ i . interaction, students with disabilities become targets of harassment. One study found that four factors were predictive of a student being bullied: 1) receiving

extra help in school; 2) being alone at playtime; 3) having fewer than two friends; and 4) being

male. [d. at 14. While disabled students often receive extra help, they sometimes struggle to

make friends. In one study, learning disabled children reported that they were threatened,

22

assaulted, or had their possessions taken away from them with greater frequency than non-

learning disabled students. Id. at 18.

Some states have recognized that students who' ~uffer from a learning disability are at a

greater risk for bUllying than their non-disabled peers and that IEPs should take this into account.

In passing a comprehensive law dealing with school bullying, Massachusetts recently adopted

the following requirement:

Whenever the evaluation of the Individualized Education Program team indicates that the child has a disability that affects social skills development or that the child is vulnerable to bullying, harassment or teasing because of the child's disability, the Individualized Education Program shall address the skills and proficiencies needed to avoid and respond to bullying, harassment or teasing.

Mass. Senate No. 2404 (20 I 0) (emphasis added).

Massachusetts Advocates for Children sought to determine how often children along the

autism spectrum are harassed at school. Eighty-eight percent of those parents who responded

indicated their child was bullied while at school. Massachusetts Advocates for Children,

Targeted. Taunted, Tormented: the Bullying of Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder 2

(2009), available at http://www.massadvocates.org/documents/Bullying-Report.pdf. (finding that

verbal harassment was the most common form reported at 88.7 percent).

F. Effects on Children

If nothing is done to rectify the situation, a bully is likely to continue bullying and

victimization continues. Olweus, supra, at 27. Thus, without a change in the dynamic, a child

who suffers at the hands of a tormentor, is unlikely to be able to escape. And the effects of

bullying are likely to continue unabated. Id. at 21t: t~ch child can be bully, victim, or bystander.

And with each of those labels comes different, but often related consequences.

23

1. "ictirn

The typical victim of bullying is more anxious and insecure than her peers. Olweus,

supra, at 32. She is more likely to be quiet, sensitive, and have low self-esteem. Id It is

important to note, however, that not all victims react in the same way. Macklem, supra, at 63.

"Students who are bullied in schools have no escape from bullying other than feigning

illness and staying home which is a very temporary reprieve." Id. at 61. Not surprisingly, being

a victim is most strongly associated with a feeling that one did not belong at school and an

, <; ·;.I-:L increase in the classroom days missed. Id. at 70; Glew, supra, at 1030. "Feeling as though one

did not belong at school was most strongly associated with being the victim; the odds of

members of this group being a victim were 4.1 times higher than those who felt they belonged at

school" Glew, supra, at 1030. "For students who felt sad most days, their odds of being a

victim were 1.8 times higher than the odds of being a victim among those who did not feel sad

most days." Id Being sad most days is known to be a precursor to diagnoses of major

depression. Id.

"The take-home message is that elementary school-aged children ... who struggle

academically are more likely to be victims or bully-victims." Id. (defining a "bully-victim" as

one who both is the victim of bullying and the bully at 4ifferent times). Bullying brings with it a

whole host of other issues. It impairs concentration and leads to poorer academic performance.

Id. Additionally, victims are more likely to engage in antisocial behavior, have increased health

problems, and struggle to adjust emotionally. See Macklem, supra, at 68 ("Being the victim of

bullying is related to sliding grades, absenteeism, poor academic achievement, being lonely,

exhibiting withdrawal behaviors, difficulty acting assertively, or being aggressive."); Snyder,

supra, at 1881, 1887; Nansel, supra, at 733-34 ("Youth involved in bullying - as bully, victim,

24

or both - consistently reported significantly higher levels of health problems, poorer emotional

adjustment, and poorer school adjustment than non-involved youth. Victims and bully victims

also consistently reported significantly poorer relationships with classmates than uninvolved

youth.")

Victims who are friends of a non-victim peer are less likely to internalize problems such

as feelings of depression and sadness. Rodkin, supra, at 36. Even children as young as those in

first grade who have one friend and do not suffer in isolation, have fewer problems than children

who have no peer to rely upon. Id. "The victims are lonely and abandoned at school. As a rule,

they do not have a single good friend in their class." Olweus, supra, at 32. This solitude

perpetuates feelings of shame and unattractiveness, and a belief that the victim is stupid. Id.

Children with feelings of rejection and 10Ileliness, withdraw and have trouble making 1 • 1 - l' (', new friends. Macklem, supra, at 68. "Withdrawal because a child is rejected by peers places the

child at a greater risk [of isolation1than is the case for children who prefer to play alone or who

are socially anxious." Id. Victims have lower self-esteem and begin blaming themselves for

what is happening. Id. at 69 ("Self-esteem drops once a child becomes a victim .... They blame

themselves for being victimized, and give in quickly or respond in a disorganized manner when

they are teased or bullied."). "Self-views are unlikely to change for the better, unless the child

who has been victimized becomes more accepted in the group." Id.

The end of school does not bring an end to the damage done by years of harassment. As a

result of this trapped setting, where harassment is a repeated occurrence, victims carry lasting

emotional and psychological scars into adulthood: id.. ~t 68 (citing Olweus study that found

those who were bullied for at least three years in grades six through nine had higher rates of

depressive symptoms and lower self-esteem when they were twenty-three years old.)

25

2. Bully

Not surprisingly, a bully is likely to have an aggressive attitude. Olweus, supra, at 34.

He will probably have a positive attitude toward violence and a strong self-image. Id Typically,

he will be of average popularity and often will be surrounded by a small group of friends who

support him. Id at 35. . . 1 .'! ~ ; "The bullies don't do well later on." Macklem, ·supra, at 42. Despite his center position

in the school social hierarchy, the impact of being the bully will leave a lasting adverse mark.

Perpetrators of bUllying report being sad most days, and have somewhat the same depressive

symptoms as victims. Glew, supra, at 1030 ("Students who felt unsafe and sad most days had

2.5 and 1.5 times the odds of being a bully ... "). Bullies themselves typically have more health

problems and a poorer emotional adjustment than students not involved in bullying. Nansel,

supra, at 733-34; Macklem, supra, at 43; Glew, supra, at 1031.

Females who bully are more likely to have hostile inter-personal interactions in their

adulthood. Macklem, supra, at 43. They also may have more trouble adjusting to the role of

parent than students who were not bullies. Id

Bullying behavior may simply be the :b'egi~igg~f an antisocial behavioral pattern that

will endure during the tormentor's entire life. Id at 42. Those students who start bullying early

on in their academic lives are more likely to assault or sexually harass their classmates in high

school. Id As young people continue to grow up, bullying may be a precursor to violence in

dating. Id at 43.

"Bullies and bully-victims [but not victims1consistently reported significantly more

frequent alcohol use." Nansel, supra, at 734; Olweus, supra, at 35-36 ("Bullying can also be

viewed as a component of a more generally antisocial and rule-breaking (,conduct disordered')

26

behavior pattern. From this perspective, it is natural to predict that youngsters who are

aggressive and bully others, run a clearly increased risk of later engaging in other problem

behaviors such as criminality and alcohol abuse. A number of recent studies confirm their

general prediction.") Additionally, bullies are more likely than non-bullies to commit a felony in

the future. Olweus, supra, at 36; Macklem, supra, at 44 (finding in one longitudinal study that

"[b]ullying was clearly a precursor to later violent behavior for this group, although, of course,

not all bullies would persist along this pathway toward violence"). In one study, 60 percent of

boys identified as bullies in grades six to nine had at least one conviction by age 24, and 35 to 40

percent of them had three or more convictions. Olweus, supra, at 36. This is a four-fold

increase in the level of criminality over that of non-bullies. Victims had an average or below- , , ; l' i . ~ average chance of engaging in future criminality:' ''jd' .

"Chronic bullying has a cost for society as well as for the individual and, of course, the

victim." Macklem, supra, at 43. The children who they harass are left to try to move on after

years of uncontroverted harassment. The bullies themselves, through their own actions, are then

more likely to require social services, educational services, and criminal justice services. Id.

3. Bystander

Bullies typically operate in front of a crowd, and the students who act as onlookers do not

escape the effects of bullying. These students, who often watch, or even step away from the

bullying actions, are more likely to feel powerless and to be fearful at school. Macklem, supra, at

91-92. Bystanders feel as though they are incapable, of controlling the situation, and thus are not ,,l , , themselves safe. Id. at 91.

Students may go along with the group in the bullying behavior out offear that if they

were to speak up they might lose their space within the peer group and open themselves up to be

27

the next victim. Id. As time goes on, if bulling persists at a high level, bystanders become

desensitized and are less willing to step in to prevent the harassment. Id.

III. Law

A. Summary Judgment Standard

Summary judgment in an IDEA case is "mote than looking into disputed issues of fact;

rather, it is a 'pragmatic procedural mechanism' for reviewing administrative decisions." T.P. v.

Mamaroneck Union Free Sch. Dist., 554 F.3d 247,252 (2d Cir. 2009). A district court must

base its decisions on the preponderance of the evidence and give due weight to the prior

administrative proceedings. Id.

While the parties may call an IDEA action a motion for summary judgment, it is in

substance an appeal of an administrative determination. Lilibask v. Conn. Dep 'f of Educ., 397

F.3d 77, 83 n.3 (2d Cir. 2005). The court is not ruling in a typical summary judgment setting,

but instead it is determining whether the administrative record, combined with additional

evidence taken, establishes compliance with the IDEA. Wall v. Mattituck-Cutchogue Sch. Dist., , I, H 945 F.Supp. 501, 508 (E.D.N.Y. 1996). ("[S]ummaryjudgment appears to be the most

pragmatic procedural mechanism in the Federal Rules for resolving IDEA actions where, as here,

in addition to the record at the administrative level, 'additional evidence' is submitted to the

court. The inquiry, however, is not directed to discerning whether there are disputed issues of

fact, but rather, whether the administrative record, together with any additional evidence,

establishes that there has been compliance with IDEA's processes and that the child's educational

needs have been appropriately addressed.").

B. Obligations of Schools to Remedy Bullying

1. Due Process

28

The central question raised by this case is what actions, if any, a school is required to take

to stop bullying of disabled students. Generally, the Due Process Clause of the Constitution does

not require that the state "protect the life, liberty, and property of its citizens against invasion by

private actors." Deshaney v. Winnebago County Dep't o/Soc. Services, 489 U.S. 189, 195

(1989). The Due Process Clause forbids the state from itself depriving citizens of those rights,

but it does not require the state to provide aid, even when it may be necessary. Id. at 195-96.

("The Clause is phrased as a limitation of the State's power to act, not as a guarantee of certain

minimal levels of safety and security ... .Its purpose was to protect the people from the State, not

to ensure that the state protected them from each other.").

Nevertheless, there are limited circumstances where the state has created a danger or has

a special relationship with an individual, when it will be required to protect a person's right to

personal inviolability from private or public abuse. See Estelle v. Gamble, 429 U.S. 97 (1976)

(holding that a state is required to provide medical care to incarcerated individuals); Youngberg

v. Romeo, 457 U.S. 307 (I 982) (holding that the state must provide involuntarily committed

mental patients with services that insure their reasonable safety). See also, Yin Jin Gang v. City

o/New York, 996 F.2d 522,533-35 (2d Cir. 1993) (explaining the difference between claims that

arise out of a special relationship and those that arise when the state has created the danger). If it

removes an individual's ability to care for himself, "it is only just that the state be required to

care for him." Deshaney, 489 U.S. at 198-99 (quoting Estelle, 429 U.S. at 103-104). , - -, :' '\-1· The Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit apparently has not squarely been presented

with a claim that by failing to prevent harm to a student in their care, school officials have

violated substantive due process. DiStiso v. Wolcott, No. 3:05-cv-1910, 2010 WL 4365670, at

*20 (D. Conn. Oct. 19,2010); Bungert v. City o/Shelton, No. 3:02-CV-01291, 2005 WL

29

2663054, at *4 (D. Conn. Oct. 14, 2005). Where such claims have been brought elsewhere, they

have not been successful. See, e.g. Hasenfaus v. LaJeunesse, 175 F.3d 68, 71-74 (I st Cir. 1999)

(rejecting due process claim and fmding a lack of a constitutional duty to protect. Noting that the

court was "loath to conclude now and forever that , inaction , by a school toward a pupil could

never give rise to a due process violation" .. perhaps in narrow circumstances there might be a

'specific' duty."); Wyke v, Polk County Sch Bd., 129 F3d 560, 569 (11th Cir. 1997) (relying on

Deshaney to find that a school had no duty to protect a student in its care).

Where an elementary school student is required to attend school, and truancy laws

forcing attendance are in effect, that student may be "owed some duty of care." Pagano v,

Massapequa Pub, Schs" 714 F,Supp. 641, 643 (E.D.N.Y. 1989) ("We consider elementary

school students who are required to attend school, the truancy laws still being in effect, to be

owed some duty of care by defendants which mayor may not rise to the level required .... ").

(emphasis in original).

The Court of Appeals for the Second "Ci~cuii h~considered involuntary custody

sufficient for a finding ofa special relationship. Matican v. City ofNew York, 524 F3d 151,156

(2d Cir. 2008) ("Our own opinions have also focused on involuntary custody as the linchpin of

any special relationship exception.").

It is uncertain whether under the Due Process Clause, a public school has the duty to

protect an elementary school student from bullying where truancy laws are in effect. This

question need not be answered now since students have a right to be secure in school and schools

have a duty to prevent students from harassment under IDEA and Title IX.

2. Guaranteed Right to Be Protected From Abuse in School

30

Students can find a right to "be secure and to be let alone" in Supreme Court school First

Amendment jurisprudence. Tinker v. Des Moines Independent School District, 393 U.S. 503

(1969); see also, Daniel B. Weddle, You're On Your Own, Kid .... But You Shouldn 'I Be, 44 Val.

U. L. Rev 1083,1090 (2010). Tinker addressed the question of when a school could discipline a

student for private expression. In assessing the claim, the Supreme Court ruled that the proper

test is whether the student's expression created a material or substantial disruption of school

work or infringed on a student's right to be let alone. 393 U.S. at 508, 512-13.

First Amendment cases have held that "there is no constitutional right to be a bully."

Sypniewski v. Warren Hills Reg. I Bd. of Educ., 307 F.3d 243,264 (3d Cir. 2002). "Intimidation

of one student by another, including intimidation by name calling, is the kind of behavior school

authorities are expected to control or prevent." Id. One First Amendment case found that the

right to be let alone includes the right to be free from physical intrusions as well as psychological

attacks. Harper v. Poway Unified Sch. Disl., 445 F.3d 1166, 1178 (9th Cir. 2006), vacated as

mool, 549 U.S. 1262 (2007) ("Public school students who may be injured by verbal assaults on

the basis of a core identifying characteristic such as race, religion, or sexual orientation, have a

right to be free from such attacks while on school campuses. As Tinker clearly states, students

have the right to be secure and to be let alone. Being secure involves not only freedom from

physical assaults but from psychological attabk~ that ~a~se young people to question their self-

worth and their rightful place in society.") (internal quotations and citation omitted).

3. Title IX of the Civil Rights Act and Individuals with Disability Education

Act (IDEA)

Title IX, IDEA, and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act place upon schools the

affirmative duty to address bullying and harassment. The United States Department of

31

Education has been advising schools of their obligations, and possible liability under these

statutes, for at least ten years. DOE Reminder of Responsibilities Leter, supra. "Where the

institution learns that disability harassment may have occurred, the institution must investigate ; i...• JI;: t;,,'l. the incident(s) promptly and respond appropriately." Id.

Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act is distinct from the Individuals with Disability

Education Act, but both statutes require the same outcome - recipients of federal funds must

provide students with a free, appropriate public education. See 29 U.S.C. §701(c); McAdams v.

Ed. ofEduc. Of Rocky Point Union Free Sch. Dist., 216 F. Supp.2d 86, 93 (E.D.N.Y. 2002) ("the

ADA and the Rehabilitation Act claims seek relief for the alleged failure to provide [the student]

with appropriate educational services. The IDEA is precisely intended to remedy these types of

claims.").

Proof of a violation of Section 504 requires a plaintiff to prove: I) a disability; 2) that the

defendant was subject to the relevant statute; and .3) tIllit plaintiff was denied an opportunity to , ' , benefit scholastically because of the disability. See E.lf. v. Ed. ofEduc. ofShenendehowa Cent.

Sch. Dist., No. 08-4857-cv, 2009 WL 3326627 at * 4 (2d Cir. Oct. 16,2009). Guidance provided

under Section 504 is applicable to IDEA.

C. IDEA and Guarantees of a Free and Appropriate Education

1. General Requirements

IDEA provides procedural and substantive safeguards for special education children with

respect to the education programs tailored for them. The requirements in New York are well

established. The precise scheme governing students with special needs in New York was recently

summarized as follows: I •

"Under the IDEA, states receivi'ng fed~ral funds are required to provide 'all children with disabilities' a 'free appropriate public

32

education [(,FAPE')].'" Gagliardo v. Arlington Cent. Sch. Dist., 489 F.3d lOS, 107 (2d Cir. 2007) (quoting 20 U.S.C. § 1412(a)(I)(A)); Bd. of Educ. v. Rowley, 458 U.S. 176, 207, 102 S.Ct. 3034, 73 L.Ed.2d 690 (1982)). "To meet these requirements, a school district's program must provide special education and related services tailored to meet the unique needs of a particular child, and be reasonably calculated to enable the child to receive educational benefits." Id. (quoting Walczak v. Florida Union Free Sch. Dist., 142 F.3d 119, 122 (2d Cir. 1998) (internal quotation marks omitted)). "Such services must be administered according to an [Individualized Education Plan ('IEP')], which school districts must implement annually." Id. The IEP is "[t]he centerpiece of the IDEA's educational delivery system." D.D. ex rei. VD. v. NY. City Bd. of Ed., 465 F.3d 503, 507 (2d CiT. 2006). It is "a written statement that 'sets out, 'the chi~d's present educational performance, establishes annual and short-term objectives for improvements in that performance, and describes the specially designed instruction and services that will enable the child to meet those objectives.'" Id. at 508 (quoting Honig v. Doe, 484 U.S. 305,311,108 S.Ct. 592,98 L.Ed.2d 686 (1988)). "The IEP must provide 'special education and related services tailored to meet the unique needs of a particular child, and be reasonably calculated to enable the child to receive educational benefits.'" A.D. & MD. ex reI. E.D. v. Bd. of Ed., No. 08 Civ. 9424, 2010 WL 447371, at *2 (S.D.N.Y. Feb. 9, 2010) (quoting Gagliardo, 489 F.3d at 107). Substantively, the IEP must be "likely to produce progress, not regression, and [must] afford[] the student with an opportunity greater than mere trivial advancement." TP. ex rei. s.P. v. Mamaroneck Union Free Sch. Dist., 554 F.3d 247, 254 (2d CiT. 2009).

New York "has assigned responsibility for developing appropriate IEPs to local Committees on Special Education (,CSE'), the members of which are appoint~ "by ~chool boards or the trustees of school districts." Gagliardo, 489 F.13a at 107 (quoting Walczak, 142 F.3d at 123). "In developing a particular child's IEP, a CSE is required to consider four factors: (I) academic achievement and learning characteristics, (2) social development, (3) physical development, and (4) managerial or behavioral needs." Id. at 107- 08. "[T]he CSE must also be mindful of the IDEA's strong preference for 'mainstreaming,' or educating children with disabilities to the maximum extent appropriate alongside their non- disabled peers." Id. at 108.

"New York parents who disagree with their child's IEP may challenge it in an 'impartial due process hearing' before an

33

[impartial hearing officer (,IHO') 1appointed by the local board of education." Id (citations omittedj: !The IHO's decision may be appealed to a State Review' Officer' ("SRO"), "and the SRO's decision in tum may be challenged in either state or federal court." Id The district court may "receive the records of the administrative proceedings" and also "hear additional evidence." 20 U.S.C. § 1415(i)(2)(C). It conducts a "modified de novo" review of the administrative proceedings, MN v. NY City Dep't of Educ., --- F.Supp.2d ----, No. 09 Civ. 20, 2010 WL 1244555, at *4 (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 25,2010), and must base its determination "on the preponderance of the evidence," § 1415(i)(2)(C). The court has "broad authority to grant 'appropriate' relief, including reimbursement for the cost of private special education when a school district fails to provide a FAPE." Forest Grove Sch. Dist. v. TA., --- U.S. ----, 129 S.Ct. 2484, 2492,174 L.Ed.2d 168 (2009); see Sch. Comm. of Burlington v. Dep't of Ed of Mass., 471 U.S. 359, 369, 105 S.Ct. 1996, 85 L.Ed.2d 385 (J 985) (holding that IDEA authorizes reimbursement).

MH and E.K. v. New York City Department of Ed~cation, 712 F. Supp. 2d 125, 130-131 ; , . \" lth1 (S.D.N.Y. 2010); MS. v. New York City Dep't ofEduc.; 734 F. Supp. 2d 271,273-74 (E.D.N.Y.

2010).

Parents have a right to be involved in the decision-making process regarding their child's

IEP. Specifically, they must be given an opportunity to participate in meetings regarding the

education of their child and must be part of a group that makes decisions about that educational

placement. 20 U.S.C. § 1414(e); 34 C.F.R. § 300.50 1(b)(J)(i); 34 C.F.R. § 300.501(c)(J).

Educational placement refers to the individualized education plan developed and not a specific

location or program. K.L.A. v. Windham Southeast Supervisory Union, No. 08-1225-cv, 2010

WL 1193082, at *2 (2d Cir. Mar. 30, 2010).

IDEA has four purposes: 1) assure that children with disabilities have a free appropriate , \ I)':

education, which emphasizes special education and related services designed to meet their

unique needs; 2) assure that the rights of children with disabilities and their parents are protected;

3) assist states and local governments in providing education of all children with disabilities; and

34

4) assess and assure the effectiveness of efforts to educate all children with disabilities. See P.L.

94- 142 (1975); Us. Dep't of Educ., Thirty-five Years ofProgress in Educating Children With

Disabilities Through IDEA 5 (2010) (discussing the purpose of statue when it was passed); 34

C.F.R. § 300.1.

If the state fails to provide a free and appropriate public education, parents may enroll

their child in a private school and seek reimbursement. Frank G. v. Bd of Educ., 459 F.3d 356,

363 (2d Cir. 2006). When an IEP is inappropriate, the parents of the child have the burden of

proving their alternative placement was appropriate. Id The question posed is whether the

private placement is reasonably calculated to enable a child to receive an appropriate educational

benefit, which was not accorded in the public schools. Id at 364.

2. Exhaustion of Administrative Remedy

Before a district court may exercise subject matter jurisdiction over an IDEA case, a

plaintiff must first exhaust the administrative process. See 20 U.S.C. §1415(f); Smith v. Guilford

Bd of Educ., No. 06-1094-cv, 2007 WL 1725512, at *5 (2d Cir. June 14,2007); Po/era v. Bd of

Educ., 288 FJd 478, 483 (2d Cir. 2002). A plaintiff need not pursue administrative remedies if

doing so would be futile, or if the administrative process would not provide an appropriate

remedy. Id

Here, administrative remedies have been exhausted.

L.K.'s parents filed an administrative appeal of the June 4, 2008 IEP to an independent

hearing officer arguing that the placement ofL.K. in a CTT classroom at P.S. 6 was

inappropriate. The IHO found that the school had complied with both the procedural and

substantive requirements of the IDEA. Impartial Hearing Officer Op. at 26-31, July 21,2009.

The hearing officer determined that the IEP was reasonably calculated to enable the student to

35

receive educational benefits and thus denied the appeal. It found that the issue of bullying did

not bear on the appropriateness of the education program and related services, but rather on

whether the particular location was appropriate - and thus touched upon a different issue. [d. at

27. ("In this case, the issue of bullying is really a separate issue since it does not go to the heart

of whether the CTT program and related services recommended on the IEP were appropriate. At

best, it places in question the location of where such educational programs and related services

should be provided to the child.")

L.K. next appealed the decision of the IHO to the State Review Officer. The SRO

affirmed the IHO ruling, finding that the educational plan was designed to confer appropriate

educational benefits on L.K. State Review Officer Op. at 24, Oct. 22, 2009. • j '. '1-,-', " • • I find that the heanng record demonstrates that the dlstnct's recommended fourth grade CTT class included many of the programmatic elements that the student's private neurologist, school-based SEIT, and private speech-language pathologist testified were necessary for the student to learn and that the district's recommended program was designed to confer educational benefits to the student .... [d.

The hearing officer passingly referred to the issue of bullying in his decision. SRO Op. at 20,

24-26. When bullying was discussed the focus was on how the student had been progressing

academically despite these claims of bullying. [d. at 24-26. Ultimately, the SRO determined

that bullying did not deprive L. K. of a FAPE, though no specific test appears to have been used

in arriving at this conclusion. [d. at 26.

Although the student's school"b~sedSEIT testified that following incidents of inappropriate school interactions in the schoolyard and classroom, the student's demeanor would decline and she then had a harder time attending to class tasks and would focus on what happened, I find that the hearing record does not support a finding that these incidents rendered the recommended CTT program for

36

the 2008-2009 school year inappropriate to meet the student's needs. Id.

D. Bullying and IDEA

While the general requirements of IDEA are well established, the question of whether

bullying can be grounds for finding that a school district deprived a student of a free and

appropriate education is an open question in the' Secohct Circuit. There is, however, some

indication from this circuit's court of appeals that it might be willing to extend FAPE protections

to bullying. See Smith v. Guilford Board of Education, No. 06-1094-cv, 2007 WL 1725512 (2d

Cir. June 14, 2007). Three other circuit courts of appeals have expressly noted that bullying can

be a basis for denial of a F APE, but a common framework under which to analyze the issue has

not emerged. See ML. v, Fed. Way. Sch. Dist., 394 F.3d. 634 (9th Cir. 2005); Shore Regional

High Sch. Bd of Ed v. P.s., 381 F.3d 194 (3d Cir. 2004); Charlie F. ex reI. Neil F. v. Bd of

Educ., 98 F.3d 989, 993 (7th Cir. 1996). See also, Note, "Deliberately Different: Bullying as a

Denial of a Free Appropriate Public Education Under the Individuals with Disabilities Education

Act," 43 Ga. L. Rev. 191 (2008).

1. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit

In Smith v. Guilford Board of Education, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals vacated the

district court's granting of a motion for summary judgment in a FAPE case where the allegations

involved a diminutive student being bullied. No. 06-1094-cv, 2007 WL 1725512 (2d Cir. June

14, 2007). The court reasoned that the district court had "failed to consider whether Plaintiffs

sufficiently alleged a violation of the student's statutory right to a FAPE; instead, the court

considered his right to a F APE only to the extent that it might constitute a property interest

protected by procedural due process." Id. at *4. Though the student did suffer from attention

37

deficit hyperactive disorder, his complaint alleged that the bUllying was the result of his

diminutive size, and not his learning disability. Id. at *5. The court found that it was unable to

determine whether and to what extent liability may arise out of behavior unrelated to a student's

disability because the student's education plan was not before it. Id. It suggested that liability

might be founded on disability. Id. ("The underlying events described in the amended

complaint. .. surround [the student's] diminutive stature, not his ADHD. Because [the student's]

individual education plan is not before us on this appeal from the granting ofa Rule 12(c)

motion, we are unable to determine whether and to what extent liability may arise from conduct

unrelated to the triggering disability under the IDEA.").

2. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit

In finding that a student was denied a free and appropriate public education due to

bullying, the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit did not provide the rubric under which it

analyzed the plaintiff s claims. See Shore Regional High Sch. Ed. of Ed. v. P. s., 381 F.3d 194

(3d Cir. 2004). Instead it looked at the alleged conduct to find that the lack of a school

environment free from harassment was grounds for finding a denial ofFAPE. P.s., 381 F.3d at

197,201-202.

P.S. was socially isolated from his classmates and the victim of relentless physical and

verbal abuse. Id. at 195. The focus of ridicule was P.S. 's perceived effeminate nature and lack

of athletic prowess. Id. A long list of derogatory words were directed to P.S. Many times the ,i, i~'! tI i words turned into violence. Id. When new students came to school, they were told not to

associate with him. When P.S. sat down for lunch at a table, he quickly found himself sitting

alone. Id. The school administration was informed, but nothing happened. Ultimately, after an

IEP was developed that would have sent P .S. back to school with the same bullies who had

38

tonnented him, P.S. 's parents sent him to another school and sought reimbursement for their

expenses. Id at 196.

The appellate court credited an administrative law judge's assessment that P.S. was

deprived of a FAPE because of legitimate and real fears that harassment would continue in the

future. Id. at 197. Conclusive testimony at the .fld~i!1islrative hearing established that the school

"would not have been able to remedy the problem because, among other things, the same bullies

would be present at [the school]; bullies generally do not stop on their own; even 'intensive

interventions' are often not effective when they are not begun until after a course of harassment

has continued for some time .... " Id. at 201. In reaching its conclusion, the court recognized,

but did not consider, knowledge of the school district. It did note the improved educational

perfonnance ofP.S. upon switching schools, but it did not expressly factor this into its decision.

Instead, as a basis for reversing the district court, it relied on a lack of due weight given to expert

testimony. Id at 199.

Some commentators have pointed to the P.s. case as the model for the IDEA being used

to protect children with disabilities from harJssm~nt iiiheir schools. Paul M. Secunda, At the

Crossroads of Title IX and a New "IDEA "; Why Bullying Need Not be "A Normal Part of

Growing Up "for Special Education Children, 12 Duke J. Gender L. & Pol'y 1 (2005). It is a

model in need of a rule under which to analyze future claims.

3. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit

The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals found that "at least in principle" harassment can be

a denial ofa FAPE. Charlie F, 98 F.3d at 993. The case involved a teacher who invited students

to list their complaints about another student, which led to his loss of confidence, self-esteem,

and fistfights. Id. at 990. The court was unable to delve deeper into the merits of the claims

. '39 . ..

because the parents bringing the case on behalf of the child had not exhausted their

administrative remedies. Id. at 993. ("Both the genesis and the manifestations of the problem are

educational; the IDEA offers comprehensive educational solutions; we conclude, therefore, that

at least in principle relief is available under the IDEA .... The case is remanded with instructions

to dismiss for failure to use the IDEA's administrative remedies.").

4. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit

The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit has developed a test, which asks whether a

teacher was deliberately indifferent to bullying and the abuse so severe that a child can derive no

educational benefit. ML., 394 F.3d at 650. ("If a teacher is deliberately indifferent to teasing of

a disabled child and the abuse is so severe that the child can derive no benefit from the services

that he or she is offered by the school district, the child has been denied a FAPE.") (emphasis

added). The court based its reasoning on the gender discrimination case of Davis v. Monroe

County Board of Education, 526 U.S. 629 (1999), but seemingly modified Davis by requiring a

finding that no educational benefit was received. In Davis, the test required a showing that

harassment bars access to an educational opportunity or benefit. Id. See also Part III.D.5.a., infra

for a discussion of Davis.

The student involved in ML. only remained in his elementary school for five days, which

failed to give the school a chance to remedy the teasing. Id. at 651. Additionally, the court

found that the plaintiff had not demonstrated that the bullying interfered with his education. Id. I ' .' '/ . ,', ,'i(~ (describing testimony that the student was "happy as a little lark").

This test is too rigid and too narrow. It fails to acknowledge that a student may have her

academic success stunted as a result of harassment, but still achieve some success. A student

40

who received some educational benefit despite bullying might have received more if not faced

with the serious obstacle of peer harassment.

5. Possible Legal Standards

In recent years, stories of bullying have led to clilims under state and federal law with

limited success. See Susan L. Pollet, Bullying in Our Schools: Is there any Legal Help in Sight?,

N.Y.L.J. 4, col. 4, (May 3, 2007). Students have unsuccessfully brought cases under Title IX,

substantive due process, equal protection, and state tort law. See Sacks and Salem, supra; Daniel

B. Weddle, Bullying in Schools: The Disconnect Between Empirical Research and

Constitutional, Statutory, and Tort Duties to Supervise, 77 Temp. L. Rev. 641 (2004). Part of

the problem has been the way courts have looked at these issues as incident based rather than as

institutional deficits:

Current legal theories and approaches to bullying suffer from a common flaw: they view bullying from an incident- based perspective rather than from a school culture perspective. They focu,s on what school officials knew about a specific bullying incident rather than addressing what school officials have done to ensure a culture where bullying is unacceptable to everyone in the school. A serious gap exists between what educational research reveals about bullying prevention and what the law defines as adequate supervision. As a result, victims are left without protection in schools they must attend; and then, under both state and federal law, they are left without redress when their tormenters inflict serious and long- lasting injury.

Weddle, supra, at 658-59.

Because the federal appellate courts have not articulated a uniform test, legal theories

used in the context of Title IX, substantive due process and equal protection must be examined to

test their applicability in determining ifbullyingcal1 be, a basis for a denial of a FAPE. , ,.' ','1' '\ \ a. Title IX of the Civil Rights Act

41

Students' claims of sexual harassment under Title IX against schools are analyzed under

a test developed in Davis v. Monroe, which requires an examination of the basis for the

harassment, its severity and whether the school had actual notice. Davis, 526 U.S. at 640-53. A

plaintiff is required to prove I) that she was harassed due to her gender; 2) that it was severe,

pervasive and objectively offensive so that it altered her education; 3) the school district had

actual notice of the gender-based harassment; and 4) the school was deliberately indifferent to

the harassment. Id. See also, Doe v. East Haven Bd. of Educ., No. 05-2709-cv, 2006 WL

2918949, at *1 (2d Cir. Oct. 10, 2006).

At least two district courts have modified this test and applied it to situations where

students are being abused in school because of their disabilities. This modified test requires an

inquiry into whether: 1) the plaintiff is an individual with a disability who was harassed because

of that disability; 2) the harassment was sufficiently severe or pervasive that it altered the

condition of his or her education and created an abusive environment; 3) the defendant knew

about the harassment; and 4) the defendant was deliberately indifferent to the harassment. See

Werth v. Bd. of Dirs.of Pub. Schs., 472 F. Supp.2d 1113, 1127 (E.D. Wisc. 2007); K.M v. Hyde

Park Cen. Sch. Dist., 381 F. Supp. 2d 343, 358-60 (S.D.N.Y. 2005). See also Secunda, supra, at

14.

Deliberate indifference requires a finding that the state entity had actual knowledge of the

harassment and failed to respond adequately. Hayut v. State Univ. ofN y., 352 F.3d 733, 750

(2d. Cir. 2003). ("[Plaintiff] must also provide evidence that one or more of the individual

defendants, who admittedly are vested with authority to address the alleged discrimination and to

institute corrective measures on [plaintiffs] behalf, had actual knowledge of the discrimination

and failed adequately to respond.") (internal quotations and citations omitted). In applying

42

Davis, the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has stated that a school's failure to respond to

sexual harassment must be "clearly unreasonable in light of known circumstances." D. T. v. ,I i ' l i , ' , l'~ ,.

Summers Cent. Sch. Dist., No. 08-6207-cv, 2009 WL 3316419, at *2 (2d Cir. Oct. 15,2009)

(quoting Davis, 526 U.S. at 648). The deliberate indifference of the school must cause students

to be harassed or make them more vulnerable to such conduct. D. T., 2009 WL 3316419, at *2.

The principles behind this Title IX test are applicable to the case at hand. But they must

be interpreted to comport with IDEA, a distinct statute designed to protect student learning

opportunities. Reliance on the expert guidance provided to school districts by the Federal

Department of Education is appropriate. See references to United States Department of

Education directives in Part III.D.5.d., infra.

b. Due Process Under Section 1983

The right to be free from unjustified intru~ions on personal security is a historic liberty

protected by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Ingrham v. Wright, 430

U.S. 651, 673 (1977); Matican v. City ofNew York, 524 F.3d 151,155 (2d. Cir. 2008) ("Among

the liberties protected by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment is a right to be

free from ... unjustified intrusions on personal security.") (internal quotations and citation

omitted). This right must be examined in light of DeShaney, which does not require the

government to protect against intrusions from third parties absent a special relationship or state

created danger. See DeShaney, 489 U.S. at 196; Part III.B. 1., supra.

Merely proving an obligation is not enough to state a claim under Section 1983, but it is a

predicate for doing so. The plaintiff must also prove that the behavior at issue was "so

egregious, so outrageous, that it may fairly bb 'sai~ t()sh~ck the contemporary consciousness."

Matican, 524 F.3d at 155 (quoting County ofScar amen to v. Lewis, 523 U.S. 833,448 n.8

43

(1998». This rigorous standard assures that the Constitution is not demoted to the equivalent of

tort law. Id.

In Smith, a student was persistently harassed and bullied by other students. 2007 WL

1725512 at * 1. The school board knew about some or all of the abuse. The Court of Appeals for

the Second Circuit described this type of abuse as "highly unfortunate," but not "so brutal and

offensive to human dignity as to shock the consciousness." Id. at 2 (quoting Smith v. Half

Hollow Hills Cent. Sch. Dist, 298 F.3d 198, q3 (;?d Cir. 2002». Most importantly, while : ,d;" ,_ deciding Smith the court distinguished a due process property interest from an IDEA statutory

interest. Id. at 4. To rely on the due process test would make indistinguishable L.K.'s property

interest in education and her statutory rights to a free appropriate education -- a notion the Court

of Appeals for the Second Circuit rejected.

c. Equal Protection Under Section 1983

The Equal Protection Clause requires that similarly situated people be treated alike.

Prestopnik v. Whelan, No. 06-31 86-cv, 2007 WL 2389678, at *2 (2d Cir. Aug. 17, 2007). Such

a claim may be the result of membership in a protected class or result from an individual being a

member of a class of one. Id. To succeed on an equal protection claim in the harassment

context, a student must show that he was affdrded:a.low,er level of protection as opposed to other

students, and that this lower level of protection was the result of his disability. Nabozny v.

Podlesny, 92 F.3d 446,454 (7th Cir. 1996) (finding a reasonable fact-finder could determine that

a student was denied Equal Protection due to harassment based on his gender and

homosexuality); Weddle, supra, at 670-72 (referencing cases where students have brought Equal

Protection claims as a result of bullying and finding that students often are unable to demonstrate

44

that they are part of an identifiable class or that inaction was the result of membership in that

class).

A student seeking to succeed on a claim of violation of the Equal Protection Clause

against a school district must show that the harassment was the result of a government custom,

policy, or practice. Fitzgeraldv. Barstable Sch. Com., 129 S. Ct. 788, 797 (2009) (distinguishing

sexual harassment claims brought against a school under Title IX of the Civil Rights Act and

similar claims brought against the school under Section 1983 for Equal Protection).

Applying this test to bullying under the IDEA suffers from inadequacies similar to those

in applying the test developed under Due Process. To adopt it would take an IDEA violation

outside of the realm of its statutory protections and into that of more difficult to prove

constitutional violations.

d. Applicable Standard

The applicable standard should take into account administrative advice that has long been

given to schools in how to apply the IDEA and other child protective legislation. By giving

weight to this guidance, the expectations of the parties are not upset, and precise notice of

expected conduct is provided. To that end, under IDEA the question to be asked is whether

school personnel was deliberately indifferent to, or failed to take reasonable steps to prevent

bullying that substantially restricted a child with learning disabilities in her educational

opportunities.

This standard does not impose a new obligation on schools. For at least ten years the

Department of Education has informed schools that they are legally obligated to comply with it.

A school is responsible for aildressing harassment incidents about which it knows or reasonably should have known. In some situations, harassment may be in plain sight, widespread or well- known to students and staff, such as harassment occurring in

45

hallways, during academic or physical education classes, during extracurricular activities, at recess, on a school bus, or through graffiti in public areas. In these cases, the obvious signs of the harassment are sufficient to put the school on notice. In other situations, the school may become aware of misconduct, triggering an investigation that could lead to the discovery of additional incidents that, taken together, may constitute a hostile environment.

U. S. Dep't of Educ., Office of Civil Rights, Deru: Colleague Letter: Bullying and Harassment, at

2 (Oct. 26, 2010), available at http://www2.ed.gov/a\JoutJoffices/listJocr/letters/colleague-

20101 O.pdf (hereinafter DOE Bullying and Harassment Letter).

Earlier, the Department of Education had advised schools that "[ wJhen disability

harassment limits or denies a student's ability to participate in or benefit from an educational

institution's programs or activities, the institution must respond effectively. Where the

institution learns that disability harassment may have occurred, the institution must investigate

the incident promptly and respond appropriately." DOE Reminder of Responsibilities Letter,

supra.

Conduct need not be outrageous to fit within the category of harassment that rises to a

level of deprivation of rights of a disabled student. The conduct must, however, be sufficiently , I ,I .,:',' :...,r severe, persistent, or pervasive that it creates a hostile ·environment. Id. Where a student is

verbally abused repeatedly and suffers other indignities such as having his property taken or is

struck by his fellow students, and a school does nothing to discipline the offending students

despite its knowledge that the actions have occurred, the student has been deprived of substantial

educational opportunities. Id.

The rule to be applied is as follows: When responding to bullying incidents, which may

affect the opportunities of a special education student to obtain an appropriate education, a

school must take prompt and appropriate action. It must investigate if the harassment is reported

46

to have occurred. If harassment is found to have occurred, the school must take appropriate steps

to prevent it in the future. These duties of a school exist even if the misconduct is covered by its

anti-bullying policy, and regardless of whether the student has complained, asked the school to

take action, or identified the harassment as a form of discrimination. Compare, DOE Bullying

and Harassment Letter, supra, to Werth v. Ed. of Dirs.of Pub. Schs., 472 F. Supp.2d 1113, 1127

(E.D. Wisc. 2007); K.M v. Hyde Park Cen. Sch. Dist., 381 F. Supp. 2d 343, 358-60 (S.D.N.Y.

2005) (citing Davis, 526 U.S. at 640-53).

It is not necessary to show that the bullying prevented all opportunity for an appropriate

education, but only that it is likely to affect the opportunity of the student for an appropriate

education. The bullying need not be a reaction to or related to a particular disability. . , _,,\. ,1'1"\ In its October 2010 Bullying and Harassmentletter, the Department of Education

provides an illustration of when a school is required to act, and what type of response is required.

It is useful in applying the above test. A hypothetical student with a disability is verbally teased

by other students and on one occasion is tackled, hit with a binder, and has his personal affects

thrown in the garbage. DOE Bullying and Harassment Letter at 8-9. The student approaches

teachers and guidance counselors who suggest counseling, but they do nothing to punish the

bullies. Id. The bullying then continues and the student, who was once doing well, begins

showing the signs of victimization at the hands of other children. Id. at 9. The school in this

hypothetical responded in part to the bullying, in offering the student counseling to deal with

what he was going through. But it did not respond adequately. It did not fully investigate the :1 '

bullying or punish those who were perpetrating the harassment. In this example, the school

deprived the student of his educational benefit.

47

IV. Application of Law to Facts

T.K. has provided evidence of each element of the test. First, her parents have produced

witnesses who have testified that L.K., a disabled student, was isolated and the victim of

harassment from her peers. The school denies these allegations. The IHO erred in finding that

bullying went to placement and not to the adequacy of a program, and in making judgment about II the veracity ofthe witnesses' accounts. A fact finder CQuid conclude on this record that L.K. was

the victim of bullying.

Second, the parents allege that they sent letters and tried to speak to the principal about

the issue. There is evidence on both sides. The principal acknowledged knowing about an

incident of bullying but cannot recall what she did to investigate it. She admits receiving letters

that reveal incidents of bUllying. She acknowledges asking L.K.'s parents to leave a meeting

designed to discuss concerns about bUllying. This meeting was never rescheduled. Aides who

helped L.K. state that they tried to bring the bullying to the attention of their superiors but were

ignored. No determination was made by the IHO about whether school personnel had notice of

substantial bullying. ,. "i,',' 1",)' Third, L.K. presents evidence that could reasonably be construed as proving the school's

failing to take reasonable steps to address the harassment. The school has not provided

documentation that it either investigated claims of bullying or took steps to remedy the conduct.

This evidence was not touched upon by the fact finder.

Fourth, L.K.'s parents state that she withdrew emotionally, did not want to go to school,

and suffered social scars as a result of the bullying. The school district refutes this by pointing to

academic progress for L.K. Whether the harassment rose to a level that deprived L.K. of an

educational benefit was not decided in the administrative hearings. A student is not required to

48

prove that she was denied all educational benefit. She may not be deprived of her entire

educational benefit, but still may suffer adverse educational effects as a result of bullying. See

DOE Reminder of Responsibilities Letter, supra ("Harassment of a student based on disability

may decrease the student's ability to benefit from his or her education and amount to a denial of

FAPE."). To be denied educational benefit a student need not regress, but need only have her

educational benefit adversely affected. Id.

Academic growth is not an all-or-nothing proposition. There are levels of progress. A

child may achieve substantial educational gains despite harassment, and yet she still may have

been seriously hindered. Growth may be stunted providing an education below the level

contemplated by IDEA. In New York, IEP's are required to give children more than an

opportunity for just "trivial advancement." Mamaroneck Union Free Sch. Dist., 554 F.3d at 254.

The law recognizes that a student can grow academically, but still be denied the educational

benefit that is guaranteed by IDEA. Where bullying reaches a level where a student is

substantially restricted in leaming opportunities she has been deprived a F APE. Whether

bullying rose to this level is a question for the fact finder.

The suggestion that the rule applied here will open the floodgates to litigation since

bullying is so pervasive in our schools is rejected. First, this test requires that a student have a

disability since recovery is under the IDEA. Second, this test merely requires schools do what

the Department of Education has told them to do' f6i yeirs. Application of the test is unlikely to

substantially increase the cost of special education.

These are the same concerns faced when the Supreme Court found in Davis that a school

can be responsible for failing to remedy sexual harassment. There, the Court acknowledged the

burdens placed on school administrators, but stated "the standard set out here is sufficiently

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flexible to account both for the level of disciplinary authority available to the school and for the

potential liability arising from certain forms of disciplinary action." Davis, 526 U.S. at 649.

The IHO and the SRO both touched upon the issue of bullying, but they did not apply the

proper standard. The IDEA gives a court broad authority to grant appropriate relief. See Forest

Grove Sch. Dist., 129 S.Ct. at 2492. The motion !ifde'rendant for summary judgment dismissing

the case is denied.

V. Predetermination

There was no error in the IHO and SRO rejection of L.K. 's contention that her IEP was

predetermined, and her parents did not have an opportunity to take part in the creation of her

plan. L.K.' s parents did have a chance to take part in the special education committee meeting

that developed her IEP. The transcript of this meeting shows that there was a meaningful

discussion about what was the best plan for L. K. Experts stated their professional opinions about

what was needed for L.K. to have the best chance of developing academically. See Pis. Ex. J

(eighty-one page transcript of the discussion that took place during L.K.'s IEP meeting).

Changes to L.K. 's plan did in fact take place 'durin~ this' meeting. At the request ofL.K.'s

parents, it was during this meeting that she was reclassified from autistic to learning disabled.

Pis. Ex. J at 72.

Defendant's motion to dismiss plaintiff's claim for predetermination without an

opportunity for her parents to be heard is granted.

VI. Conclusion

The motion ofthe defendant for summary judgment is granted in part and denied in part.

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SO ORDERED.

Jack B. Weinstein Senior United States District Judge

Dated: April 25, 2011

Brooklyn, New York

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