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Great News for Children who live in RHCs! DRW has obtained a wonderful settlement on behalf of eight students who live at the Frances Haddon Morgan Center. As a result of our lawsuit, the Bremerton School District partnered with the Division of Developmental Disabilities to create more space at the high school and agreed to place kids in educational settings that meet their individual needs. No longer will these students be segregated at the institution. No longer will they be excluded from the high school community. No longer will they be treated differently from other district residents just because they live in a state facility. We are hopeful that other school districts will see the settlement as a road map to full inclusion of children with disabilities. Read the press release below and see the attached Settlement Agreement for more information. These items are also available in the Current Activities section of our website at www.DisabilityRightsWA.org.
Contacts: Seth Galanter, Morrison & Foerster, at 202.887.6947 Settlement Stops the Unlawful Segregation of Students with Autism from the Public School Grounds Washington, DC (June 18, 2008) – With a challenge to its refusal to allow eight students with autism to be educated on school grounds pending in a federal court of appeals, the Bremerton School District entered into a settlement agreement with their parents and the State of Washington that allows the students to return to public school in the fall, to be educated alongside their non-disabled peers as federal law requires. The students all voluntarily reside within the school district at the Francis Haddon Morgan Center (FHMC), a state-run institution for people with developmental disabilities. They had previously received their education in Bremerton public schools. The federal lawsuit was brought by the students in response to a plan to segregate the educational services of these students to the institution, instead of providing the services in a public school. Disability Rights Washington, a federally funded disability rights organization, filed the lawsuit on behalf of the students, saying that taking these youths out of public school violated state and federal education and anti-discrimination laws. “Every day that the students were kept out of the public school harmed them, and harmed their non-disabled peers, by denying both of them the opportunity to learn in a diverse and natural environment. This kind of discrimination is an issue that has been coming up increasingly around the State and around the country,” says Regan Bailey, Director of Legal Advocacy for DRW. Joining DRW on appeal to represent the students was Seth Galanter, a lawyer from Morrison & Foerster who took on the case pro bono. “It’s ironic that this case had to be filed in Washington, where the nation’s first special education law was enacted over 30 years ago,” commented Galanter. “This agreement shows that school districts, working with parents and with state officials, can reach practical solutions that protect the rights of all students,” he concluded. Evidence submitted in the case showed that the students were harmed by the move to a classroom in the institution and by the isolation from their schoolmates. One of the parents’ lawyers, David Carlson, Associate Director of Legal Advocacy at Disability Rights Washington, said, “These students have the right to develop and flourish alongside all the other students in the public-school system and to single them out as the only students who were not allowed to attend class at the local school was blatantly discriminatory.” "Brianna needs to interact in society - not to be segregated. She starves and desires to be a part of the school community, and that would not have happened without this lawsuit," commented Janet Littlefield, aunt and guardian of one of the eight disabled students represented in the lawsuit. # # # About Disability Rights Washington About Morrison & Foerster
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