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Toronto Star, November 10, 2003
Disabled teen sets precedent School board forced to comply
Classroom options were too limited
TESS KALINOWSKI EDUCATION REPORTER
In a case that suggests you can fight city hall, a Burlington
family has set a precedent that may help the province's disabled
children.
For the first time since Ontario passed its special education
legislation in 1980, the agency that determines how school systems
treat the disabled has ruled in favour of parents who disagreed
with the classroom options offered to their son.
The Halton District School Board had already created a new
class to suit Burlington high school student Aaron Etherington's
needs prior to the tribunal's decision. But his mother, Stephanie
Etherington, says the ruling is still a relief, because it guarantees
her autistic son will remain in that class.
David Baker, the Toronto lawyer who represented Aaron, says
the ruling by the Ontario Special Education Tribunal could signal
new hope for parents dissatisfied with the public school settings
in which their disabled children are placed.
Although there have been cases where the tribunal has ordered
boards to supply more support services for disabled children
in integrated classes, "This is the first case that says
what you (the student) were being provided according to the
special education plan is wrong. You (the board) have to change
your special education plan," Baker says.
The decision means the tribunal, which for years ruled in
favour of school boards, may be more willing to consider parents'
complaints, says Baker, an expert in disability law.
Stephanie Etherington says the Halton board offered Aaron,
15, two class placement options when he was preparing to attend
high school: he could either go into a rotating class schedule
requiring him to move about the school between classes at General
Brock High School, or he could go into a classroom of 24 students
his mother describes as profoundly physically or mentally handicapped
at Lord Elgin High School.
His parents felt Aaron would not be able to cope with the
rotating class schedule, but thought his abilities far exceeded
the latter situation.
Aaron doesn't look disabled and has significant learning
potential but he has difficulty with social interaction, his
mother says.
Last January, he acquired a special skills dog and left school
for several months to train with the dog at an Oakville centre.
The Etheringtons returned Aaron to school in May, expecting
him to go into the severely handicapped class at Lord Elgin,
but were delighted to find the board had set up a small, special
class with five other students with similar disabilities.
Etherington says the board explained the change as being
in response to having Aaron's dog in the school.
Their lawyer believes the class was set up in response to
the impending tribunal hearing. "They recognized what they
had been offering didn't comply (with Aaron's needs),"
Baker says.
"What's changed since the tribunal is that the board
can't go back to having Aaron in that big developmental education
class where he was totally demoralized and floundering."
Baker says the tribunal has so consistently ruled in favour
of school boards that families like the Etheringtons had given
up on the appeal process.
"The implications (of this decision) are that parents
who are taking their kids to private schools because they don't
think they can get the appropriate education (in public school)
should be rethinking that."
Although it's expensive to hire a lawyer to argue such an
appeal - up to $10,000 in a worst-case scenario - private schools
and professional supports typically cost parents of disabled
children much more.
"I've talked to people who are looking at $60,000 to
provide a private education and these schools are sprouting
all over the place because the parents just give up and say
they can't wait - `We need to be responding to our kids' needs
now,' Baker says.
"The thing that's frustrating for me is that these people
are a minority, that when there are perceived economic pressures
on education, it is far easier to cut special education than
to do things that affect the majority of students."
The Halton board's superintendent of special education, Brenda
Kearney, says that because Aaron was moved into a small, specialized
class prior to the tribunal's decision, the only change the
school board had to make was the name of the class.
The tribunal ordered the board to call Aaron's class "Communication,"
but Kearney says that's inappropriate because the word refers
to a disability in itself.
She says the Halton board will proffer some alternative suggestions
to the tribunal.
"The ruling is a good ruling because it's the best of
all worlds for everybody," Kearney says.
"It's very positive for the board. It's very positive
for the parents."
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