Supreme Court unanimously rules for deaf student in education case

Authored by pbs.org and submitted by DayanNight

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court ruled unanimously Tuesday for a deaf student who sued his public school system for providing an inadequate education. The case is significant for other disabled students who allege they were failed by school officials.

The case the justices ruled in involves Miguel Luna Perez, who attended public school in Sturgis, Michigan. Perez’s lawyers told the court that for 12 years the school system neglected the boy and lied to his parents about the progress he was making, permanently stunting his ability to communicate.

The justices ruled that after Perez and his family settled a complaint against the school system — with officials agreeing to pay for additional schooling and sign language instruction — they could pursue money damages under a different federal law. Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote in an eight-page opinion for the court that the case “holds consequences not just for Mr. Perez but for a great many children with disabilities and their parents.”

It remains difficult for Perez, who emigrated to the United States from Mexico at age 9, to make himself understood. Perez’s lawyers say the school system failed him by providing an aide who was not trained to work with deaf students, did not know sign language and in later years left him alone for hours at a time. After over a decade, Perez did not know any formal sign language and communicated through invented signs that anyone unfamiliar with his unique signing did not understand, his lawyers have said.

Meanwhile, the school awarded him inflated grades and his parents believed he was on track to earn his high school diploma. Just before graduation, however, his family was told he qualified only for a “certificate of completion.”

LISTEN: Supreme Court hears case on deaf student and assistance in public schools

His family responded by pursuing claims under two laws: the broad Americans with Disabilities Act, which prohibits discrimination against disabled people, and the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act. The latter guarantees children with disabilities a free public education that is tailored to their specific needs.

Perez’s family and the school district ultimately settled the IDEA claims. The district agreed to pay for extra schooling and sign language instruction for Perez and his family, among other things, and he graduated from the Michigan School for the deaf in 2020. After the settlement, the family went to federal court and, under the ADA, sought monetary damages, which are not available under the IDEA.

Lower courts said Perez was barred from pursuing his ADA claims because of language in the IDEA, but the Supreme Court disagreed. Gorsuch wrote: “We clarify that nothing” in the IDEA “bars his way.”

Perez’s lawyer Roman Martinez said in an emailed statement: “We are thrilled with today’s decision. The Court’s ruling vindicates the rights of students with disabilities to obtain full relief when they suffer discrimination. Miguel and his family look forward to pursuing their legal claims under the Americans with Disabilities Act.”

The superintendent of Sturgis Public Schools, Arthur Ebert, who joined the district after the settlement, said in an email that he was “not in a position to comment on the details or the outcome of the case.” But he said that he believes “that every experience provides us with an opportunity to learn and grow.”

“Through this too,” he said, “we will gain knowledge, insight, and understanding that will help us maximize every student’s true potential.”

The Biden administration had also urged the court to side with Perez. The case is Perez v. Sturgis Public Schools, 21-887.

mnemonikos82 on March 23rd, 2023 at 03:12 UTC »

Schools have always acted in their financial best interest in dealing with students with disabilities. They'll only ever provide the accommodations and resources that cost the least. The ability to sue for monetary damages means the cost of doing the bare minimum just went up. Hopefully schools will now have a financial incentive to provide real and meaningful accommodations and resources to students with disabilities. It'll cost a heck of a lot more if they don't.

Edit: I am aware that there are lots of school districts without the funds to do much more than they already are, but it's a demonstrably false narrative that all public schools are underfunded. I've worked in education and/or social services with direct ties to public schools most of my career, almost always with students with disabilities, and I've seen schools treat those students like cast aways in most of the school districts I've worked in. Some schools do this out of necessity because they truly are underfunded, but there are a lot of schools that do it because it's the easiest place to cut money.

Dirty_Quesadilla on March 23rd, 2023 at 03:10 UTC »

Wow, this Court actually did something, dare I say, human?

DayanNight on March 23rd, 2023 at 02:18 UTC »

As horribly sad as Perez' treatment is in the first place, this opens doors for a sadly neglected populous in the United States. We can only hope this sets a precedent for our school system to take better care of those with disabilities.