Mont. Admin. R. 10.16.3662 - STATE COMPLAINT PROCEDURES
(1) An
organization or individual may file a written signed complaint alleging the LEA
or public agency as defined in
34
CFR 300.33 violated the Individuals with
Disabilities Education Act (
20
U.S.C., sections 1401 through
1485 ) or its
implementing regulations (34 CFR, part 300), the Montana statutes pertaining to
special education (Title 20, chapter 7, part 4, MCA), or the administrative
rules promulgated by the Superintendent of Public Instruction governing special
education (ARM Title 10, chapter 16).
(2) The state complaint must:
(a) allege a violation that occurred not more
than one year prior to the date the complaint is filed;
(b) state the name and address of the
affected child, if applicable, and the name of the school or public agency
where the violation allegedly occurred;
(c) contain a statement that the agency has
violated a requirement of federal or state special education laws or
regulations;
(d) state the nature
of the problem and the facts on which each allegation is based; and
(e) state a proposed resolution of the
problem to the extent known and available to the complainant.
(3) The complaint must be filed
with the OPI Dispute Resolution Office, Office of Public Instruction, P.O. Box
202501, Helena, Montana 59620-2501 and a copy provided by the complainant to
the LEA, or public agency serving the child. An insufficient complaint not
meeting the requirements in (2) may be returned to the complainant.
(4) Within ten calendar days of filing, the
dispute resolution office shall send written notice to the complainant and the
LEA or public agency that a complaint has been filed.
(a) The written notice shall include a copy
of the complaint .
(b) If the
complaint addresses matters listed in
34 CFR
300.503(a)(1) and (2)
relating to the identification, evaluation, or educational placement of a
student with a disability, or the provision of a free appropriate public
education to the student, the written notice shall inform the complainant of
the right to request a due process hearing under
34 CFR
300.507 and ARM
10.16.3508 through
10.16.3531.
(c) The written notice shall inform the
parties of the Early Assistance Program as set forth in ARM
10.16.3660.
(5) The EAP shall have up to 15 business days
from the filing of the complaint to assist the parties to resolve the dispute.
If successful, the complaint will be dismissed. If the EAP process is not
successful, the dispute resolution office shall immediately notify the
responding party to prepare and submit its written response of the complaint to
the dispute resolution office and send a copy to the complainant within ten
calendar days. An extension may be granted based on reasonable
necessity.
(6) Upon receipt of the
response, the dispute resolution office shall begin an appropriate
investigation.
(7) The complainant
will have ten calendar days to submit additional relevant information to the
dispute resolution office, either orally or in writing.
(8) Following an appropriate investigation,
the dispute resolution office shall review all relevant information and make an
independent determination as to whether a violation of a federal or state
statute, regulation, or rule concerning IDEA special education has occurred . A
final report shall be issued within 60 days of filing of the complaint unless
an extension of the 60-day period is required by exceptional circumstances
which exist with respect to the particular complaint or the timeline was
modified during the Early Assistance Program process.
(9) The final report shall address each
allegation in the complaint and list findings of fact and conclusions of law,
including the reasons for the decision. If the final report concludes that an
allegation is true and corrective action is required to comply with federal or
state law, corrective action shall be ordered including timelines for
implementation of such action. The Superintendent of Public Instruction will
provide technical assistance at the request of the local educational or public
agency. The Office of Public Instruction shall retain the investigative files
as a confidential agency record pursuant to the appropriate retention
schedule.
(10) At any time during
this process, if the dispute resolution office determines the complaint has
been resolved and compliance is achieved, the parties shall be informed and the
complaint shall be dismissed.
(11)
If within the timelines identified in the Final Report the LEA has not
implemented the corrective action required by the final report, the
Superintendent of Public Instruction shall take appropriate sanctions against
the local educational or public agency. Such sanctions may include:
(a) recommending to the Board of Public
Education withholding state education funds;
(b) denial in whole or part IDEA, Part B
federal funds; or
(c) recommending
to the Board of Public Education a change in accreditation status.
(12) Prior to implementing the
final report order, and prior to implementing sanctions against the LEA or
public agency, and if the LEA or public agency alleges that the office has
violated a state or federal special education statute, regulation, or rule in
ordering the corrective action required by the final report, the Superintendent
of Public Instruction shall provide the local educational or public agency with
a hearing in accordance with
34 CFR
76.401, and the Montana Administrative
Procedure Act,
2-4-601 through
2-4-711,
MCA.
(13) There is no right to
appeal a final report issued as a result of a state complaint.
Notes
20-7-402, MCA; IMP, 20-7-403, 20-7-414, MCA;
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