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Petition on IDEIA 2004 Implementation :
We Stand in Agreement to Maintain Strong NJ Special Education Law
Sign Now!

IDEIA 2004 Press Release / Press Work Volunteers Needed
MS 2000 Version of Petition to Print w/ Signature Block / MS2000 Petition Announcement for Posting

50 Strong For Our Children

We the undersigned, residents of NJ, parents, students, professionals and other supporters of students with disabilities call upon the NJ Department of Education, the Acting Governor of NJ and the Legislative Assembly and Senate  to continue to maintain and further strengthen NJ public special education law.

In response to the US passage of IDEA revisions in December, 2004, we believe that it is critical to the integrity of the commitment to all students with special needs, that the State of New Jersey fulfill the needs of students above those of lobbyists.   While the federal legislation allows a weakening of educational law on a state by state basis, we call upon NJ to at the very least hold the line to pre December 2004 revisions, and if changes are to be made, to elevate New Jersey's education of all students by strengthening the rights of students with special needs and their families.  Specifically, we stand in agreement around the following points of unity:

  1. We are opposed to the removal of short-term objectives or benchmarks in IEPs.  Short term objectives and annual goals provide the action plan toward achieving any improvement and are the cornerstone of accountability needed to see if an educational program is meeting the elements of long term goals.
  2. We oppose the possible election by NJ to become a pilot state for multi-year IEP review periods.  Regular self evaluation is integral toward greater success; lengthening the review period can lead to stagnation and apathy.
  3. We are opposed to the weakening of the rules governing who must attend an IEP meeting and to the allowance of participation through written documents, phone conferences or telecommunication.  The current multi-discipline decision process is critical to a global perspective of a student’s strengths and areas that need further development.  Face to face interactions are integral to high quality, open teamwork meetings that are in the best interest of the student’s progress.
  4. We support mid-year progress reports that reference the extent to which a goal has been met and extent to which progress is sufficient to meet the goal by the end of the year.  Such reporting is an opportunity to be responsive to changing needs as well as being another measure of accountability that is essential toward the appropriate education of our children.
  5. In disciplinary matters regarding students with disabilities, we are opposed to the weakening of the manifestation determination language and call upon NJ to keep the current standards regarding when a behavior is a manifestation of the student's disability.  Families are already the powerless partners in such disputes, up against challenges from school districts with far greater resources.
  6. The stay-put provisions in matters of dispute concerning placement in interim alternative educational settings must be maintained.  The stay-put provision gives parents recourse to prevent district unilateralism.
  7. We are opposed to the lengthening of the time for which a student with disabilities can be removed to an interim alternative educational setting from 45 days to 45 school days (from 6 weeks to 9 weeks).  Students with disabilities need to be protected from unreasonably long disruption to their free, least restrictive and appropriate public education.
  8. We are opposed to any reduction in the frequency of notification of parents of their rights and safeguards.  Regulations are ever changing and parents need to have an up to date point of reference whenever new educational plan negotiations are occurring.
  9. We oppose the implementation of a statute of limitations on the rights of parents to hold a district legally accountable.  The effects of the actions of school districts with regard to children with disabilities last a lifetime.  Limits on accountability could encourage disregard for the best interests of our children.
  10. We oppose the imposition of a state run resolution meeting once parents resort to due process proceedings.  Offering such resolution assistance on a volunteer basis could be beneficial but forcing parents into that practice could deter parents from advocating in the best interests of their disabled children.   If such sessions are to be offered or are made mandatory, the state must assure that they are meaningful by having them facilitated by a trained, independent and impartial facilitator.
  11. We oppose increasing the age of transition to 16 as many students with disabilities require several years to achieve the independent life and occupational skills needed once they move beyond the public education system.

Sign Now!

Click here to read updated list of signers to petition.
(Petition signer list is updated daily and manually so you will not see your name appear immediately.  Check back later!)

Writing A Letter to Support Strongest Possible Implementation of IDEIA 2004 in NJ

[ If you can help out with a Spanish translation of this petition, please let us know at Advocate@StudentAdvocate-NJ.org ]

Questions:

Who should sign the petition?  Any NJ adult resident who agrees with it.

Is the petition only for parents of special needs students?  No, the petition is for all who agree with it.  We need support from all sectors of NJ.

Should I sign if I am a professional employed by a local school district, a school board member, an educator for a private school or service provider, a local government official?  Yes, Ms. Gantwerk is seeking input from all quarters and particularly from educators so your joining us in taking this position will further strengthen our efforts.

What should I do if I want to protect strong special education law but I do not agree entirely with this petition as it is worded?  Click here for tips on drafting a letter to Special Education Director Barbara Gantwerk.

What can my organization do about this situation?  Organizations can sign on to the petition as an organizational endorsement of this position.  Additionally, organizations can draft their own positions standing for the strongest possible NJ special education law.  We can post those positions at this website or - if you post it at your own website - we can set up pointers to the position at your site.

How can I keep better informed and participate in a more frequent discussion on how best to prevent the weakening of NJ special education law?  Join the low volume list serve NJStrongIDEA@yahoogroups.com by sending a message to NJStrongIDEA-subscribe@yahoogroups.com .

To sign petition, please complete the on-line form:

Sign Now!

Would you like to add your name to this petition? 

Yes No

Is it ok for your name to appear on the website petition page?
          Yes No

Please provide the following contact information.  (Only town and zip will be listed at website - the rest is so we can contact you about follow up activities!):

Name
Organization
Street Address
Address (cont.)
City
State/Province
Zip/Postal Code
Country
Home Phone
FAX
E-mail
URL

Would you write a letter to NJ Department of Education Director of Special Education Barbara Gantwerk and other state officials? Yes No

Will you contact Acting Governor Codey and your local NJ State Senators and Assembly persons to let them know your concerns about IDEIA 2004 and that you have signed this petition?
Yes No

Are you willing to send a note to your friends and colleagues letting them know about this petition, that you signed it and that you want them to join us by also signing?
Yes No

Are there organizations that you belong to or can approach to see if the group would sign on to the petition as an organization?
Yes No

What organizations?


Do you want to participate in the low volume list serve NJStrongIDEA@yahoogroups.com ?
Yes No

Do you want your comments below to appear at our website?
Yes No

Please provide any additional comments.

 

 

FOLLOW UP FOR SIGNATORIES OF IDEIA 2004 PETITION

Ask the Advocate

NJ Complaint Form (MS Word) (PDF)


On Line Public Hearing on IDEIA 2004

Survey on NJ OSEP Complaint Process

Suggestions

Past Activities

IEP Wkshp

Rec. Programs for those w/ Disabilities

An Evening of Educational Advocacy
September 8, 2005 Edison, NJ


What The Student Advocate Has Done for Our Children Lately . . .

NJ IDEIA 2004 Organizing Committee
Minutes of IDEIA 2004 meeting on Thu., May 26

Student Rights Radio Discussion, October 31

Effort to Reach Gubernatorial Hopefuls and Acting Governor / Candidates

IDEA: An Update Dec. 5, 2005
Middletown


January 18, 2006: Hold a Candle Light for Our Children's Rights

50 Strong For Our Children

No. Jersey Radio Interview Aired, 1/22

Petitioning for Rights Children:  Legal in Princeton

 Interview on NJ IDEIA Rights - Racial Disparities in Sp-Ed

Call is Heard in Montgomery Twp: Inclusive Recreation

NJSAU Minutes 2/18/2006

Playing and Singing for Our Rights, 4/1/6

Better IDEA Laws for Special Education Students?
Better IEPs?  Anything is Possible!


April 1 Report: Student Advocacy Union -  Fundraising Concert

Mobilization for Rights of Our Children,  May 17, 2006, Trenton

Nationwide Internet Radio Rally for Sp-Ed Parent Rights
9pm EST, Sat. May 20


Parents’ Rally @ Statehouse in Trenton Thursday, June 8, 2006

Piscataway Parents Mtg, June 19, 2006