The Dallas Independent School District said Friday that it has failed to serve more than 2,000 students with disabilities going back to the 2017-18 school year.
The announcement came after by the district.
Dallas ISD deputy chief of Teaching and Learning Derek Little said the district expected to find some unserved students because of last year鈥檚 March through August pandemic shutdown. When schools closed, students weren鈥檛 able to get evaluations, which are needed for services. But Little said the problem went deeper than that 鈥 it was systemic.
鈥淲e have not always had adequate progress monitoring structures in place to receive referrals and to ensure they鈥檙e processed effectively and quickly," Little said.
Dustin Rynders, an attorney with , was shocked by the news.
鈥淥ur office has a lawsuit against Austin ISD because we were shocked to learn they were 900 evaluations behind,鈥 Rynders said. 鈥淭o hear Dallas ISD has twice that number of students who should鈥檝e been evaluated several years ago is nothing short of appalling.鈥
Little said the district has work to do finding and evaluating those students who have special education needs but received no services in recent years. He acknowledged some probably dropped out or left the district.
鈥淲e will go back and provide additional services that have been missed if the student is owed those services or therapies. We鈥檙e not just going to start services fresh in the fall," Little said. "We鈥檒l also go and provide owed service or compensatory time to the students that have been missed the past couple of years.鈥
Little saidthere鈥檚 no time to waste. He said the district is committed to transparency in efforts to eliminate the backlog, and will spend $1 million to help solve the problem it created.
鈥淲e鈥檙e going to aggressively start a hiring campaign for some key positions, including licensed school psychologists, where we鈥檒l offer signing bonuses and retention bonuses to those key roles who are vital to this evaluation process,鈥 he said.
Meanwhile, Rynders said he鈥檒l evaluate the district.
鈥淎ny plan will not only need to expedite the evaluations at this point but also provide for compensatory education," he said. "There also needs to be a hard look at what allowed this to occur. I mean, that鈥檚 a degree of dysfunction within a department that isn鈥檛 easily remedied.鈥
Rynders said Disability Rights Texas will work with the Dallas ISD qualified students get the special education services they need and are legally entitled to. The district says it鈥檚 starting the catch-up work now. The effort could take months 鈥攊nto September, according to Little.
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