JCC/Lifestart Special Needs School Fair: Sep 27th

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The JCC Manhattan and NYL Lifestart’s annual Special Needs School Fair will be held on September 27th from 5:30pm-7:30pm at the JCC Manhattan’s building (334 Amsterdam Avenue at West 76th Street). This is an important event for parents whose children are approaching transitional moments into elementary school, middle school, or high school—or simply if the current school placement is no longer appropriate. Representatives from special needs private schools serving the New York City community will be there to provide information and answer your questions.

There is no cost to attend for parents. Families can register here.

Renovations to Our Brooklyn Office

It’s begun! Today we broke ground (or floor and wall, as the case may be), on renovations to our Brooklyn office, which will result in us having much more space to accommodate our growing roster of talented attorneys and support staff. We anticipate that these renovations will be complete in early October.

This doesn’t change anything for our clients. Mail should still be sent to our usual Brooklyn address. It will be collected there daily. Our phone and fax numbers also remain unchanged, however the best way to reach your case manager is through email. If you don’t know the email address of the person you need to reach, please email info@skyerlaw.com and your email will be promptly forwarded to the correct individual. Voicemails will also be returned daily.

We are hard at work on your cases in temporary office space and at our Manhattan office. We look forward to showing you our new Brooklyn digs this fall!

Operation Backpack 2018

Image: Brand new children's backpacks stuffed with school supplies.

Image: Brand new children's backpacks stuffed with school supplies.

Last year, #OperationBackpackNYC provided 18,000 children staying in New York City homeless and domestic violence shelters with a new backpack full of every grade-specific school supply they needed for the new school year.

Skyer Law is proud to be part of this Volunteers of America drive each year. And there are still a few days left to participate! Collection sites all over NYC are accepting backpacks until Friday, August 3rd. Get your "Fill A Backpack" shopping list for every grade level on the Volunteers of America website. This is a wonderful activity for parents to do with children as you go about your own back-to-school shopping.

Volunteers of America-Greater New York is grateful to work with sponsors, partners, and volunteers who understand the importance of this cause and the children it supports.


IMPORTANT NOTICE: ON AUG 6TH OUR BROOKLYN OFFICE WILL TEMPORARILY CLOSE FOR RENOVATIONS. PHONE/MAIL REMAIN THE SAME.

 

It’s Time to Demand a School Bus Tracking App

Image: A school bus drives through the city at night.

Image: A school bus drives through the city at night.

THE YEAR IS 2018. Our city government has an app to allow the public to track the progress of snow plows in real time. Meanwhile, approximately 6,000 school buses equipped with GPS monitoring systems ferry disabled schoolchildren back and forth from school each day—but parents and schools are not allowed to access the data.

It’s obvious that an app to allow parents and teachers to see where a school bus is would make a huge, positive difference in the day-to-day lives of children with disabilities and their families, and in the operational efficiencies of the schools these kids attend. Apps like these are widely available in school districts across the country and there is no reason for New York City to be so behind the times.

We are therefore thrilled to announce that our discussions around this issue with New York Council Member Ben Kallos of Manhattan have led to the drafting of a bill to require the Office of Pupil Transportation (OPT) to make an app available to parents and schools showing the real time location of their children’s school buses via GPS technology. We expect this legislation to be introduced in September. Everyone who cares about special education busing will need to make their voices heard to ensure that this proposal is swiftly enacted.

According to OPT, over 600,000 schoolchildren ride the bus every day in New York City. Many of these are students with disabilities who receive busing as a special education service mandated on their IEPs. The youngest disabled children, toddlers in Early Intervention and preschool-aged children in CPSE, are also frequently bused to receive their services and attend center-based programs. Students with disabilities may have complex medical issues, or they may not be potty trained, others are nonverbal or low-verbal or use assistive technology to communicate, and many more have significant behavioral concerns and become dysregulated waiting for the bus or during longer rides. While most of the time kids do well on the bus and enjoy riding it, too many vulnerable children are impacted by chronically late buses and unreasonably long routes.

An app that shows where the school bus is in real time will make a huge difference because:

  • Children will spend less time waiting unnecessarily in extreme weather or when it would negatively impact their health, regulation, and safety. Parents will instead be able to make informed decisions about when to go outside to meet a late bus;
  • Schools will be able to make informed decisions about staffing to meet late buses;
  • Bus drivers and escorts will spend less time fielding phone calls and texts from worried parents and schools and instead focus on safe driving and the kids in their care; and
  • Emergency services will be able to quickly rescue a missing child when minutes and seconds count.

Schools, parent groups, and others who support the safety of students with disabilities in busing are encouraged to email Council Member Kallos’ office to be added to the list of endorsers. We will keep our email list and our Facebook page updated with advocacy opportunities once the bill is introduced.


IMPORTANT NOTICE: ON AUG 6TH OUR BROOKLYN OFFICE WILL TEMPORARILY CLOSE FOR RENOVATIONS. PHONE/MAIL REMAIN THE SAME.

NYC Must Address Tuition Reimbursement Delays

Image: A piggy bank drowning.

Image: A piggy bank drowning.

In 2014, Mayor Bill De Blasio announced his Special Education Initiative, pledging to ease the burden on parents with private special education tuition and fee claims by expediting decisions, reducing extended legal battles, reducing paperwork, and expediting payments.

We were cautiously optimistic. But four years later, we are heartbroken for our families. The city took something already broken and found new ways to shatter it.

The best thing you can say about the change we’ve seen since 2014 is that the DOE’s decision to settle on a ten-day notice is being made a little more quickly than in the past. However, the execution of settlement agreements is far too often deferred for many months longer. Depressingly, paperwork requirements have actually increased with the supposed move to “monthly” payments. And, most disastrously for our modest income families (and schools accepting Connors or pendency placements), payments to parents and schools are more delayed than ever.

This is a citywide problem affecting every lawyer in our bar and every school and private provider of special education services. Schools, parents, and attorneys can dot every ‘i’ and cross every ‘t,’ and call with polite reminders until they are hoarse, but the only thing dividing the parent or provider who receives a timely payment from the one who must refinance their loan is luck of the draw. It isn’t fair, and it isn’t right.

Last year, Council Members Dromm, Kallos, and Garodnick wrote to the Mayor to describe how these systemic delays were impacting their constituents. The DOE's General Counsel Howard Friedman wrote back and acknowledged the delays, but pointed the finger at the NYC Comptroller and “new administrative systems.”

We began the 2017-18 school year hopeful, but sober, and unfortunately we have not seen any real effort to address these issues. Earlier this week, we wrote to Mayor De Blasio and Chancellor Carranza to once again detail our concerns and demand that the City make good on its promises to the families of special needs children in New York City. We will keep you updated on any replies we receive. If you wish, you can forward this letter to your local City Council Member with a personal note about your own family’s experience. Every bit of advocacy helps.