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            Title T.R. v. Kingwood Township Board of Education

 

            Date 2000

            By Alito

            Subject Misc

                

 Contents

 

 

Page 1





LEXSEE 205 F3D 572


T.R.; E.M.R., ON BEHALF OF THEIR MINOR CHILD, N.R., Appellants v. KINGWOOD TOWNSHIP BOARD OF EDUCATION, HUNTERDON CO., NEW JERSEY


No. 99-5021


UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT



205 F.3d 572; 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 3585


November 18, 1999, Argued

March 9, 2000, Filed


PRIOR HISTORY:   **1   On Appeal from the United

States District Court for the District of New Jersey. (No.

97-2129  (MLC)).  District  Judge:   Honorable  Mary  L. Cooper.


DISPOSITION:  Affirmed  the  holding  of  the  District Court  that  the  1996-97  Kingwood  IEP  provided  N.R. with an FAPE. Vacated the District Court's holding that the Kingwood placement constituted the least restrictive environment,  and  remanded  for  additional  proceedings consistent with this opinion.


LexisNexis(R) Headnotes



COUNSEL:   MICHAELENE   LOUGHLIN   (Argued), Loughlin                 &             Latimer,     Hackensack,        NJ.           JANET J.              STOTLAND,         The          Education               Law         Center     of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, Counsel for Appellants.


LINDA D. HEADLEY, CANDICE SANG-JASEY, New Jersey  Protection  and  Advocacy,   Inc.,   Trenton,   NJ, Counsel for Amici Curiae in Support of Appellants.


BRIAN   J.   DUFF,   ESQ.   (Argued),   Lamb,   Hartung, Kretzer, Reinman & DePascale, Jersey City, NJ, Counsel for Appellee.


JUDGES: Before:  ALITO, BARRY, and STAPLETON, Circuit Judges.


OPINIONBY: ALITO


OPINION:


*575   OPINION OF THE COURT


ALITO, Circuit Judge:


Plaintiff N.R., through his parents, T.R. and E.M.R.,


brought this action against the Kingwood Township Board of  Education  ("the  Board")  under  the  Individuals  with Disabilities Education Act ("IDEA"),   **2    20 U.S.C.

§§ 1400-91 (1994), requesting reimbursement for private school tuition and support services. N.R. claims that the Board's proposed placement failed to provide him with a meaningful educational benefit in the least restrictive en- vironment, as required by the IDEA. The District Court granted summary judgment in favor of the Board.


We   affirm   the   District   Court's   holding   that   the Kingwood placement provided N.R. with a sufficient edu- cational benefit to constitute a "free and appropriate pub- lic  education."  However,  we  vacate  the  court's  holding that  the  Kingwood  placement  constituted  the  least  re- strictive environment, and we remand for a determination of whether the Board failed to consider any appropriate, state-qualified alternate placements within a reasonable distance of N.R's residence.


I.


N.R. was born on September 7, 1991, and was classi- fied as preschool handicapped in 1994. During the sum- mer of 1996, N.R.'s parents met with Board officials to discuss an Individualized Education Program ("IEP") for N.R. for the 1996-97 school year. The Board's child study team determined that N.R. had the   *576   skills to begin kindergarten in the fall of 1996 and **3   recommended his placement in the Kingwood School's regular kinder- garten program. On August 2, 1996, however, T.R. and E.M.R. rejected this proposed placement, stating that they planned to send N.R. to preschool for another year. n1


n1 N.R. would have turned five the week that school began, and New Jersey law does not require a parent to enroll a child in kindergarten until the child has reached the age of six.


205 F.3d 572, *576; 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 3585, **3

Page 2



At that time, Kingwood Township did not offer a regu- lar preschool program for non-disabled children. Rather, the Township offered a single, half-day preschool class composed of half disabled children and half non-disabled children. The Board drafted a new IEP which provided for N.R.'s placement in this class, with afternoon place- ment  in  the  school's  resource  room.  N.R.'s  parents  re- jected  this  proposal  and  informed  the  Board  that  they planned to have N.R. spend the next year at the Rainbow Rascals Learning Center ("Rainbow Rascals"), a private day-care center that N.R. had attended the previous year. At **4   the time, Rainbow Rascals was not accredited as a preschool by the State of New Jersey or by any inde- pendent educational accreditation agency. Nevertheless, T.R. and E.M.R. requested that the Board pay for N.R.'s tuition at Rainbow Rascals and provide supplemental spe- cial education services there.


The Board filed for due process, seeking a determi- nation  that  its  1996-97  IEP  provided  N.R.  with  a  free appropriate  public  education  in  the  least  restrictive  en- vironment as required by the IDEA. The Administrative Law Judge found that Kingwood Township's kindergarten program satisfied the IDEA's requirements and that the Board  should  not  be  liable  for  the  parents'  decision  to keep N.R. at Rainbow Rascals.


In  April  1997,  N.R.'s  parents  filed  suit  on  his  be- half in District Court. They alleged,  inter alia,  that the ALJ had erred in finding that the Board's proposed IEPs had offered N.R. a free appropriate public education in the least restrictive environment. The parties filed cross- motions for summary judgment,  and the District Court granted  summary  judgment  in  favor  of  the  Board.  The District Court found that the 1996-97 IEP (consisting of placement in Kingwood's half-day preschool class **5  and  resource  room)  provided  N.R.  with  a  free,  appro- priate  public  education  by  offering  more  than  a  trivial education  benefit.  See  T.R.  v.  Kingwood  Township  Bd. of  Educ.,  1998  U.S.  Dist.  LEXIS  21685  (D.N.J.  1998). The court pointed to testimony by the Board's expert wit- nesses, Dr. Frances Hobbie and Dr. Leslie Callanan, who stated that the Kingwood program would meet N.R.'s edu- cational needs. The court also referenced the testimony of Darlene Johnson, the teacher of the Kingwood preschool class,  who stated that she was familiar with N.R.'s IEP and would work to implement it on a daily basis.


In   addition,   the   District   Court   found   that   the Kingwood class constituted the least restrictive environ- ment for N.R. under the IDEA. See 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS

21685, at *8. Finally, the court held that Rainbow Rascals could not be considered as a possible placement for N.R. because it was not accredited by the state. See 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21685, at *31.



N.R. and his parents appeal, seeking reimbursement for N.R.'s tuition at Rainbow Rascals and for his therapy costs for the 1996-97 school year.


We  exercise  jurisdiction  pursuant  to  20  U.S.C.  §

1415(i)(2). We exercise plenary **6   review of the legal standard applied by the District Court. See Polk v. Central Susquehanna Intermediate Unit 16, 853 F.2d 171, 181 (3d Cir. 1988). However, we must accept the District Court's findings  of  fact  unless  they  are  clearly  erroneous.  See Oberti v. Board of Educ. of Borough of Clementon Sch. Dist., 995 F.2d 1204, 1220 (3d Cir. 1993).


II.


The IDEA requires states receiving federal funding under  the  Act  to   *577    have  "in  effect  a  policy  that ensures all children with disabilities the right to a free ap- propriate public education." 20 U.S.C. S1412(1). Where a state fails to satisfy this statutory mandate, parents have a right to reimbursement for private school tuition. See Burlington v. Department of Educ. of Commonwealth of Mass., 471 U.S. 359, 370, 85 L. Ed. 2d 385, 105 S. Ct. 1996

(1985). Appellants argue that the District Court erred in finding that the Board's 1996-97 IEP provided N.R. with a free appropriate public education because the Court ap- plied  an  incorrect  legal  standard  and  failed  to  conduct an independent review of the record. We reject this ar- gument. Although it appears that the District Court did apply an incorrect legal **7   standard, it is also apparent that the Board introduced more than sufficient evidence to prove, under the proper standard, that the Kingwood preschool placement provided a free and appropriate ed- ucation (hereinafter "FAPE") for N.R.


The Supreme Court has construed the statute's FAPE mandate to require "education specially designed to meet the unique needs of the handicapped child, supported by such services as are necessary to permit the child 'to ben- efit' from the instruction." Hendrick Hudson Dist. Bd. of Educ. v. Rowley, 458 U.S. 176, 188-89, 73 L. Ed. 2d 690,

102  S.  Ct.  3034  (1982).  The  education  provided  must

"be sufficient to confer some educational benefit upon the handicapped child," id. at 200, although the state is not required to "maximize the potential of handicapped chil- dren." Id. at 197 n.21. Prior to the District Court's decision in this case, our Court interpreted Rowley to require that an IEP offer "more than a trivial or de minimis educa- tional benefit." Oberti, 995 F.2d at 1213; see also Polk,

853 F.2d at 179 (IDEA "calls for more than a trivial edu- cational benefit"). Specifically, we said that a satisfactory

**8   IEP must provide "significant learning" and confer

"meaningful benefit." Polk, 853 F.2d at 182, 184.


The  District  Court,  in  apparent  reliance  on  these precedents, focused its review on "whether N.R.'s  IEP


205 F.3d 572, *577; 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 3585, **8

Page 3



was sufficient to confer an educational, nontrivial benefit on  him,"  and  concluded  that  it  was.   T.R.,  32  F.  Supp.

2d  at  728.  However,  in  our  most  recent  explication  of the  FAPE  standard,  our  Court  squarely  held  that  "the provision of merely 'more than a trivial educational ben- efit' does not meet" the meaningful benefit requirement of Polk. Ridgewood Bd. of Educ. v. N.E., 172 F.3d 238,

247 (3d Cir. 1999). By failing to inquire into whether the Board's IEP would confer a meaningful educational ben- efit on N.R., the District Court applied the incorrect legal standard on this issue. n2


n2 Although the District Court did cite to Polk, it  explicitly--and  erroneously--applied  a  "more than trivial benefit" standard. See T.R., 32 F. Supp.

2d at 728.



Nevertheless,   **9   we believe that the evidence on which the District Court relied amply satisfies the some- what  more  stringent  "meaningful  benefit"  test.  As  the District Court noted, both Dr. Callanan and Dr. Hobbie testified to the benefits N.R. would receive from resource- room  work  in  the  areas  of  communication  and  motor skills.  (App.  32,  45.)   Dr.  Hobbie  also  noted  the  edu- cational advantages of the Kingwood preschool program, including small class size, a full-time aide, and the pres- ence  of  supplemental  staff  and  a  child  study  team  on premises. (App. 38-39.)  Darlene Johnson, the teacher of the Kingwood preschool class, testified that she would im- plement N.R.'s IEP on a daily basis in her class. (App. 34-

35.) The District Court's decision to credit this testimony is a finding of fact and is entitled to deference in the ab- sence of clear error. See Oberti, 995 F.2d at 1220. In light of this credible evidence, we believe that the Board satis- fied its burden to show that N.R. would receive a mean- ingful educational benefit from the Kingwood preschool program.


*578   Appellants also argue that the District Court failed to give adequate consideration to N.R.'s individual potential in concluding that **10    the Kingwood IEP was appropriate. In Ridgewood, this Court reiterated that the educational benefit of an IEP "must be gauged in re- lation  to  a  child's  potential."  172  F.3d  at  247  (quoting Polk, 853 F.2d at 185). To fulfill this mandate a district court must "analyze the type and amount of learning" of which the student is capable. Ridgewood, 172 F.3d at 248. Contrary to appellants' suggestion, the District Court did address N.R.'s specific needs in its analysis. The Court noted that "Dr. Frances Hobbie stated that the Kingwood preschool program would . . . suit N.R.'s needs," and the Court cited to the portion of Dr. Hobbie's testimony that specifically discussed those needs.   T.R., 32 F. Supp. 2d at 728. For example,  Dr. Hobbie discussed the specific




benefits that N.R. could obtain from resource room work:


I like some individual attention to the areas of need. . . . I would definitely think that it would be tremendously beneficial for N.R.  to have some speech language therapy indi- vidually . . . certainly in the resource center I would like to see him get some really indi- vidual work on speech language.


As far as the motor **11    component where he has some difficulty, that again could be worked on in that special program.


(App. 45.)


The District Court also cited Dr. Callanan's testimony, in which she further addressed N.R.'s specific needs and capabilities. See T.R., 32 F. Supp. 2d at 729. Dr. Callanan opined  that  "N.R.'s  particular  difficulties"  did  not  ne- cessitate  a  full-day  preschool  program.  (App.  8.)   She noted  that  N.R.'s  participation  in  lunch  and  recess  in the Kingwood program would provide "additional time for  socialization."  (App.  8.)      She  further  testified  that N.R. would benefit from time in the resource center at Kingwood  because  of  "his  need  for  additional  time  to rehearse  skills"  (App.  20)  and  noted  that  "N.R.'s  mo- toric sic  difficulties and his communication difficulties could be greatly benefitted by resource center placement."

(App. 32.) This testimony--which was referenced by the District  Court  in  support  of  its  holding--explicitly  as- sessed  the  Kingwood  IEP  in  light  of  N.R.'s  individual needs and potential.


In sum,  the District Court's failure to enunciate the correct "meaningful benefit" test is not fatal to its deter- mination that the 1996-97 IEP offered N.R. a **12   free appropriate public education. Even under the proper stan- dard,  the evidence in the record is more than sufficient to support a finding that the Kingwood program would confer on N.R. a meaningful educational benefit in light of his individual needs and potential.

III. A.


The IDEA also contains a "mainstreaming" compo- nent,  which  requires  states  to  establish  "procedures  to assure that,  to the maximum extent appropriate,  handi- capped children . . . are educated with children who are not handicapped." 20 U.S.C. § 1412(5)(B) (1994). n3 We have interpreted this mandate to require that a disabled child be placed in the least restrictive environment (here- inafter "LRE") that will provide him with a meaningful educational benefit. "The least restrictive environment is the one that, to the greatest extent possible, satisfactorily


205 F.3d 572, *578; 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 3585, **12

Page 4



educates  disabled  children  together  with  children  who are not disabled,  in the same school the disabled child would  attend  if  the  child   *579    were  not  disabled." Carlisle Area Sch. v. Scott P., 62 F.3d 520, 535 (3d Cir.

1995). Appellants contend that the District Court erred in finding that the Kingwood preschool program was the

**13   LRE for N.R. We agree with the appellants that the Court failed adequately to investigate potential alter- native placements,  and we remand for consideration of this issue.


n3 In 1997, Congress amended the IDEA, re- codifying the definition of least restrictive environ- ment  at  20  U.S.C.  §  1412(a)(5)(A)  (1998  Supp.) and  adding  a  new  provision  that  requires  that state  special  education  funding  formulas  not  re- sult in restrictive or segregated placements, see 20

U.S.C. § 1412(a)(5)(B) (1998 Supp.). Because the Kingwood IEP was formulated prior to 1997, the amendments do not apply in this case.



In Oberti, this Court adopted a two-part test for as- sessing compliance with the LRE requirement. First, the Court must determine "whether education in the regular classroom, with the use of supplementary aids and ser- vices, can be achieved satisfactorily." Oberti, 995 F.2d at

1215. Factors the Court should consider in applying this prong are:  (1) the steps the school **14    district has taken to accommodate the child in a regular classroom;

(2)  the  child's  ability  to  receive  an  educational  benefit from  regular  education;  and  (3)  the  effect  the  disabled child's presence has on the regular classroom. See id. at

1215-17. Second, if the Court finds that placement out- side  of  a  regular  classroom  is  necessary  for  the  child's educational benefit, it must evaluate "whether the school has mainstreamed the child to the maximum extent appro- priate, i.e., whether the school has made efforts to include the child in school programs with nondisabled children whenever possible." Id. at 1215. These requirements ap- ply to preschool children, see 34 C.F.R. § 300.552, and the Board bears the burden of proving compliance with the IDEA's mainstreaming requirement. See Oberti, 995

F.2d at 1215.


B.


The peculiar facts of this case make a mechanical ap- plication of the Oberti test difficult. As the District Court correctly noted, the Kingwood preschool program "can- not  be  described  as  a  typical  'regular  class,'  nor  is  it  a typical  special  education  class;  half  of  the  children  in the class are handicapped,  and any preschool child liv- ing in **15   Kingwood Township may apply to attend the program." T.R., 32 F. Supp. 2d at 730. Nevertheless,



it  is  clear  that  the  Kingwood  preschool  class  is,  under the terms of the IDEA, more restrictive than a "regular," fully-mainstreamed preschool class would be. Indeed, the Kingwood program's statement of philosophy states that it  "has  been  designed  to  meet  the  needs  of  Kingwood Township students ages three through five who have an identified disabling condition or a measurable develop- mental impairment and who would benefit from special education." (App. 100) (emphasis added).


Certainly, the IDEA does not contemplate "an all-or-- nothing educational system in which handicapped chil- dren attend either regular or special education." Oberti,

995  F.2d  1204,  1218  (quoting  Daniel  R.R.  v.  State  Bd. of Educ., 874 F.2d 1036, 1050 (5th Cir. 1989)). However, we believe that, under the IDEA's strict mainstreaming re- quirement, a hybrid preschool program like Kingwood's would  ordinarily  provide  the  LRE  only  under  two  cir- cumstances: first, where education in a regular classroom

(with the use of supplementary aids and services) could not be achieved satisfactorily or,   **16   second, where a regular classroom is not available within a reasonable commuting distance of the child.


The record contains no indication that N.R. could not have been educated satisfactorily in a regular classroom. Indeed, the Board's own experts admit that N.R.'s place- ment  in  Kingwood's  regular  kindergarten  class  (which was  rejected  by  the  parents)  would  be  fully  appropri- ate. (App. 31-32, 40-41, 46-47, 50-51.)  Based on this undisputed testimony, it seems clear that N.R. could have received a meaningful educational benefit from a regu- lar classroom. Moreover, there is no contention that his behavior would have been disruptive to other students.


Of course,  a district that does not operate a regular preschool  program  is  not  required  to  initiate  one  sim- ply in order to create an LRE opportunity for a disabled child. See 34 C.F.R. § 300.552,  Note (1996). However, the school district is required   *580   to take into account a  continuum  of  possible  alternative  placement  options when formulating an IEP, including "placing children with disabilities  in  private  school  programs  for  nondisabled preschool children." Id. Under these circumstances, the District Court erred in not inquiring into whether **17  regular classroom options were available within a reason- able distance to implement N.R.'s IEP, and we remand so the District Court may consider this question.


C.


We  next  address  the  appellants'  contention  that  the Board and the District Court erred specifically in failing to include Rainbow Rascals in the continuum of available programs. Appellants claim that Rainbow Rascals would have  provided  N.R.  with  a  free  and  appropriate  public


205 F.3d 572, *580; 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 3585, **17

Page 5



education in the least restrictive environment and that the state's placement of N.R. in the Kingwood preschool pro- gram, rather than in Rainbow Rascals, was in error.


As  a  substantive  matter,  it  seems  likely  that  the Rainbow  Rascals  program,  aside  from  its  lack  of  ac- creditation,  could  have  provided  N.R.  with  an  FAPE. For example, the Board's experts admitted that N.R. had made substantial gains during his 1995-96 placement at Rainbow Rascals. (App. 25, 48.)   In addition, Rainbow Rascals' classroom was fully mainstreamed and thus less restrictive under the IDEA than the Kingwood preschool program.  Therefore,  unless  the  state  was  barred  from considering  Rainbow  Rascals  on  its  continuum  of  al- ternative  placements  for  some  other  reason,  the  Board would **18   have been required to approve the Rainbow Rascals placement as the one providing an FAPE in the LRE.


Nevertheless, we agree with the District Court's con- clusion that the Board was not required to consider place- ment in Rainbow Rascals because that program was not properly  accredited  under  New  Jersey  law.  Under  20

U.S.C. § 1401(a)(18)(D), the "free and appropriate public education"  required  under  IDEA  must  "meet  the  stan- dards of the State educational agency." Although federal regulations envision placing disabled children in "regular" private school classes, the universe of private programs that a state may consider is at least partly defined by state law.


Under  the  state  regulations  in  place  at  the  time  the

1996-97 IEP was formulated, New Jersey's program op- tions for IDEA placement included "an approved private school for the handicapped," and "an accredited nonpublic school which is not specifically approved for the educa- tion of children with educational disabilities." N.J.A.C.S

6:28-4.2 (1997). n4 The regulations defined an "approved private school for the handicapped" as "an incorporated entity approved by the Department of Education . . . to provide special **19   education and related services to pupils with educational disabilities." N.J.A.C. § 6:28-1.3

(1997). It is undisputed that Rainbow Rascals lacked such approval.


n4            The          sections  of             the           New         Jersey Administrative Code dealing with special education were repealed and recodified as amended in 1998. However,  the  pre-amendment  regulations  govern this case.


- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ---End Footnotes- - - - -

- - - - - - - - - - - -


The regulations also permitted placement in a non- approved, accredited private school "with the consent of



the  Commissioner   of  Education   or  by  an  order  of  a court of competent jurisdiction." N.J.A.C. § 6:28-6.5(a)

(1997). Accreditation under this regulation required "the on-going,  on-site  evaluation  of  a  nonpublic  school  by a governmental or independent educational accreditation agency which is based upon written evaluation criteria that address educational programs and services, school facil- ities and school staff." N.J.A.C. § 6:28-6.5(b)(1) (1997). Rainbow Rascals was not accredited as a preschool by any state or independent agency at the time the IEP was **20  formulated, and there is no showing that its personnel pos- sessed the professional certifications and licenses required by N.J.A.C. § 6:28-6.5(b)(5). Indeed, Rainbow Rascals' only license at the time was as a day-care center. (App.

119.)  Accordingly,   *581   it was not eligible for place- ment under this regulation, even with the consent of the state Department of Education. n5


n5 The special education regulations in force in 1996 did contain what was apparently a general waiver provision, which provided that "exceptions to the requirements of this chapter shall be made only with prior written approval of the Department of  Education  through  its  county  office  .  .  .  for  a period not to exceed one year." N.J.A.C. § 6:28-

4.6  (1997).  Nevertheless,  we  do  not  believe  that the  IDEA  required  New  Jersey  to  make  an  ex- ception for an unaccredited, unapproved program like Rainbow Rascals. Requiring a state to ignore its substantive educational standards by forcing it to make an exception whenever a non-qualifying school provides a somewhat less restrictive envi- ronment than an approved school (which also of- fers  the  student  an  FAPE)  would  effectively  re- place state standards with the federal courts' case- by-case determinations of educational appropriate- ness. Such a reading would render § 1401(a)(18)(D) a virtual nullity. As the Supreme Court emphasized in Rowley, the IDEA was not intended to "displace the primacy of states in the field of education" but rather "to assist them in extending their educational systems to the handicapped." 458 U.S. at 208.


**21


Because Rainbow Rascals was neither approved nor accredited as a preschool under New Jersey law, it was ineligible for placement consideration by the state under

§ 1401(a)(18)(D). n6 Accordingly, the Board did not err by failing to consider it when preparing N.R.'s IEP.


n6 The dissent suggests that New Jersey's ac- creditation requirement was a mere formality, un- connected to any substantive criteria. This is untrue.


205 F.3d 572, *581; 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 3585, **21

Page 6



The accreditation regulations in effect at the time required, inter alia, that there be ongoing, on-site evaluation  of  the  school  by  a  government  or  in- dependent  accreditation  agency  based  on  written evaluation criteria,  see N.J.A.C.  § 6:28-6.5(b)(1)

(1997); that personnel providing educational or re- lated services hold appropriate educational certifi- cations, see N.J.A.C. § 6:28-6.5(b)(5) (1997); and that the pupil receive a program comparable to that required to be provided by the public schools under the relevant statutes and regulations, see N.J.A.C. §

6:28-6.5(b)(6) (1997). There is no record evidence that  Rainbow  Rascals  met  any  of  these  substan- tive criteria. Moreover, the dissent's contention that

"the State at the relevant point in time was not ac- crediting private preschools" is without basis in the record. Even if the state had imposed some sort of accreditation moratorium, Rainbow Rascals would still have been free to qualify for IDEA placement by obtaining accreditation from a private agency-- as it in fact did the following year. In short, there is no evidence that New Jersey's accreditation and approval standards were being used systematically to avoid the state's affirmative obligations under the IDEA.


**22  D.


Finally,  appellants  contend  that,  even  if  Rainbow Rascals was not an available option for state placement, they are nevertheless entitled for reimbursement for their own unilateral placement under Florence County School District Four v. Carter, 510 U.S. 7, 126 L. Ed. 2d 284, 114

S. Ct. 361 (1993). In Florence, the school district proposed a placement which the court found failed to provide the child with an FAPE. The parents rejected the placement, and  enrolled  the  child  in  a  private  program  which  was not on the state's "approved list," but which did provide a  substantive  FAPE.  The  Supreme  Court  held  that  the parents were entitled to reimbursement even though the school lacked state approval, because the state standards requirement of 20 U.S.C. § 1401(a)(18)(D) applies only to placements made by a public authority. See id. at 13-

14; see also Warren G. v. Cumberland County Sch. Dist.,

190 F.3d 80 (1999).


Florence does not require reimbursement for appel- lants'  Rainbow  Rascals  placement.  Both  Florence  and Warren G. involved disputes over the FAPE requirement. They did not address the situation we face in this case,

**23   where both the state-chosen (accredited) school and the parent-chosen (unaccredited) school would pro- vide an FAPE, but where the unaccredited school would



arguably provide a less restrictive environment. Extending Florence to these circumstances would require a state to ensure the maximally optimal LRE placement for each child, even if such   *582   a placement is not available in any qualifying school within a reasonable distance.


Florence's own language forecloses such an interpre- tation. Florence gives parents the right to reimbursement for a unilateral placement in a non-qualifying school only

"if a federal court concludes both that the public place- ment violated IDEA and that the private school placement was proper under the Act." Florence, 510 U.S. at 15 (em- phasis added). By its terms, this is a two-pronged inquiry. The threshold question here focuses on the first prong-- viz.,  whether  the  Board's  proposed  placement  violated the IDEA by failing to consider Rainbow Rascals. The parental reimbursement mandate comes into play only if we answer yes to this initial question.


Florence, while holding that parents are not bound by

§ 1401(a)(18)(B)'s state standards requirement,   **24  did  not  suggest  that  the  state  is  required--or  even  per- mitted--to overlook that statutory mandate and consider placements that do not meet its substantive educational standards. Such a reading would go against the plain lan- guage of the statute and render the state standards require- ment  of  §  1401(a)(18)(D)  a  nullity.  Because  we  have found  that  the  Board  did  not  err  in  rejecting  Rainbow Rascals  as  a  potential  placement,  we  cannot  find  that the "public placement violated IDEA" on these grounds. Of  course,  if  the  District  Court  on  remand  finds  that the Board improperly failed to consider other potential placements that met New Jersey's substantive standards

(see part III(B), supra), the state may have failed to meet its  obligations  under  the  IDEA  and  reimbursement  for the Rainbow Rascals placement may be available under Florence.


IV.


We affirm the holding of the District Court that the

1996-97  Kingwood  IEP  provided  N.R.  with  an  FAPE. We vacate the District Court's holding that the Kingwood placement  constituted  the  least  restrictive  environment, and  remand  for  additional  proceedings  consistent  with this opinion.


DISSENTBY: STAPLETON


DISSENT: STAPLETON, Circuit Judge, Dissenting: The **25    Court concludes that,  although "public

agencies that do not operate programs for non-disabled preschool children are not required to initiate such pro- grams," the federal regulations do impose upon them an affirmative duty to make all reasonable efforts to find al-


205 F.3d 572, *582; 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 3585, **25

Page 7




ternatives that will provide the LRE.  34 C.F.R.  § 300.552

Note (1987); see also 34 C.F.R. § 300.551. This includes the  alternative  of  "placing  children  with  disabilities  in private school programs for non-disabled preschool chil- dren." 34 C.F.R.  § 300.552 Note. I agree.


The   Court   also   concludes,   quite   properly,   that Rainbow  Rascals  was  available  to  provide  N.R.  with  a free and appropriate public education in a wholly inte- grated environment. It nevertheless relieves the Board of Education of any duty to provide N.R. access to that ed- ucation because Rainbow Rascals was not "accredited or approved" under the applicable state regulation at the time the placement decision was made. I would have no quar- rel with this holding if the record indicated that Rainbow Rascals failed to meet educational criteria established by the State. See 20 U.S.C. § 1401(a)(18)(D) (the FRAP re- quired under IDEA must "meet **26   the standards of the State educational agency."). The record in this case, however, does not suggest there are any such criteria that Rainbow Rascals failed to meet. What the record does af-



firmatively establish is that the State at the relevant point in time was not accrediting private preschools, and that although state law provided for a waiver of the "accred- ited or approved" requirement, see N.J. Admin. Code §

6:28-4.6 (Supp. 1994), no request for a waiver was made. n1 If a state can so easily avoid   *583    its affirmative duty to provide a free and appropriate public education in the least restrictive environment, the promise of the IDEA will be illusory for many. For that reason, I respectfully dissent. I would reverse and remand with instructions to grant tuition reimbursement.


n1 In addition to placement in accredited pri- vate schools, state law also authorized placement in preschools "in approved facilities." N.J. Admin. Code  §  6:28-1.1(e)(3)  (Supp.  1994).  The  record does not reflect, however, that the State maintained any list of preschools in "approved facilities."


**27


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