By Lorelei Laird
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01 Jul, 2018
The first clue that a teacher had been shutting Cecilia and Kevin Wilson’s son, Ryleigh, into a school closet appeared on Facebook. The first-grader frequently had emotional outbursts in fall 2012. Administrators at Mint Valley Elementary School in Longview, Washington, often asked the parents to take him home. During a particularly bad incident on Halloween that year, they arrived at the school to find Ryleigh being restrained by the principal, as the child screamed and hyperventilated. After that, the Wilsons say Ryleigh resisted going to school and became afraid to be left alone. They began to understand his behavior when another Mint Valley parent posted pictures of the school’s “isolation booth” to Facebook in November of that year. The booth was a closet-size, lightless, windowless room with padded walls. The pictures circulated among Longview parents, and when Ryleigh heard his parents discussing it, he said he’d been shut into it multiple times that fall. On Halloween, it was because he left his seat without permission. Washington state law at the time permitted isolation rooms to be used only with parental permission as a type of therapy for special education students. Ryleigh was not in special education, and the Wilsons hadn’t even known the booth existed before the Facebook pictures. They and four other families, who also were unaware of this practice until the Facebook posts, sued the district in 2015. The parents lost. Their attorney Tara Lawrence of Portland, Oregon, says the plaintiffs were stunned by the verdict. Advocates for disabled students say this kind of loss is not unusual. Though isolation of juveniles is forbidden in federally funded mental health care facilities, as well as in federal prisons, no similar provision exists for schools. State laws, if they exist at all, are a patchwork. Some apply only to disabled students, some to all students, and other causes of action have had only mixed success. Juries unfamiliar with the needs of disabled students may defer to teachers’ judgment. “It’s hard to win these cases, legally,” says Mary Griffin, a lawyer and education program director of the Washington Autism Alliance & Advocacy. “I’ve always thought it was bias. But … this Mint Valley thing was very disturbing because she still didn’t win when she took out all the kids that had [disability diagnoses].” NOT A TIMEOUT Disabled students are disproportionately affected by seclusion policies. According to the U.S. Department of Education Office for Civil Rights, special-needs students were just 12 percent of all students in 2013-2014, but they represented 57 percent of those put into seclusion. Black kids were also overrepresented; they were 19 percent of the student population with individualized education plans, which were authorized by federal disability rights law that year, but were 36 percent of those secluded. Seclusion is not considered a timeout or a moment in a quiet area. The Department of Education defines seclusion as involuntary confinement in a space that the student is prevented from leaving. Using that definition, a 2014 report from the U.S. Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee said research has found there’s no therapeutic benefit to the practice. State laws, school policies and IEPs often authorize seclusion as a last resort in an emergency or permit it as a way to calm highly emotional students. But in practice, the Senate report found that it can be misused, with students sent to isolation as a punishment, sometimes for long periods or repeatedly over the course of a semester. “Anecdotally, [we] just hear stories of kids being secluded for shockingly minor behaviors,” says Annie Acosta, director of fiscal and family support policy for the Arc, a Washington, D.C., disability rights organization. As with Mint Valley, the Senate report found that many schools don’t tell the parents when they’re using seclusion—even when the law requires it. But like the Wilsons, those families will still notice the effects. “I think just the violation of one’s autonomy and civil rights by being held against their will is a really traumatic experience for a lot of kids,” says Acosta. This may be particularly acute for children whose disability prevents them from speaking because they can’t tell anyone. Seclusion also subtracts from instructional time, which can be significant if done frequently. It’s also not a long-term solution to the problem behavior. In fact, Seattle education attorney Katherine George says it can backfire. “In some cases, removing the kid to isolation in response to disruptive behavior encouraged the behavior, because it removed the kid from whatever was bothering him or her,” says George, who helped write a Washington state law limiting the use of isolation and physical restraints. The legal recourse for those families is limited, attorneys say. Families may sue over violations of state law, but 16 states permit nonemergency seclusion, according to a report compiled by attorney and parent advocate Jessica Butler. Disability rights laws apply under some circumstances, but families using the most directly appropriate law, the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, must usually exhaust their administrative remedies before suing. As a result, plaintiffs often end up using tort law and constitutional claims. The Mint Valley plaintiffs cited unreasonable seizure, due process violations and unconstitutional policies under the Fourth and 14th amendments, as well as negligence, outrage and the right to an education guaranteed by the Washington state constitution. The results of those lawsuits have been mixed. The challenge, Acosta says, is that “it has to shock the conscience, and unfortunately courts don’t quite see these cases as doing that.” SAFETY MATTERS Congress has considered addressing isolation in schools several times in the past decade. The Keeping All Students Safe Act, introduced several times from 2009 to 2014, varied, but the 2014 version would have banned seclusion and permitted families to sue over violations. The bill never passed, but it was considered long enough to attract some opposition. One opponent was AASA, the School Superintendents Association. Advocacy director Sasha Pudelski says the association opposes using seclusion as discipline, but prefers to leave regulation to the states. “It’s not clear that one state’s policy is better than another state’s policy, for a variety of reasons,” she says. “Given the very few number of students that this impacts, it’d be inappropriate to craft federal policy around it.” Though the number of students affected may be small in proportion to the total number of students enrolled in the nation’s schools, it’s still significant. The Department of Education reported nearly 29,000 incidents of student isolation during the 2013-2014 school year, the most recent data available. Total school enrollment last year was 50.7 million. Deborah Rigsby, program director for lobbying and federal legislation at the National School Boards Association, says seclusion is a tool for ensuring everyone’s safety, which her organization’s members would like to draw on when appropriate. She emphasizes that seclusion would be discussed with parents when creating an individualized education plan and revisited yearly when the IEP is reviewed. “Our goal is the safety of students and school personnel,” she says. But parents have a right to reject IEP conditions they don’t agree with, and Griffin does not recommend that most parents sign IEPs authorizing seclusion. Legally, she says, “it becomes what the school’s supposed to do.” Acosta agrees, noting that there’s no educational value in seclusion. “We at the Arc don’t believe that this should be allowed in the IEP, because the IEP is about learning,” she says. They do agree with Rigsby that training—and adequate funding for that training—is important in a special education context. Acosta says there’s a pervasive lack of training on special education, and the misuse of seclusion is just one way that it shows up. Griffin also thinks the misuse may arise when school personnel resist changing the way they’ve always handled misbehavior. In the case of disabled kids, they may also not realize that special-needs students are genuinely different. “Society tends to see these behaviors as poorly behaved children from parents who don’t know how to control their children,” she says. But disability advocates say that behavior is often related to the disability. That may be true for Ryleigh, now 11, who was eventually diagnosed with ADHD. He’s also been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and severe anxiety, which the complaint says were caused by his trips to the booth. He has still not returned to public school. Read original article here .