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Policy committee holds changes to student-assignment rules, asks for clearer IEP language

March 10, 2024 | Upper Dublin SD, School Districts, Pennsylvania


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Policy committee holds changes to student-assignment rules, asks for clearer IEP language
The Upper Dublin School District policy committee on a March policy-committee meeting deferred final action on proposed changes to Policy 206 governing student assignments and variance requests, directing administrators and the solicitor to draft clearer language limiting non-IEP exceptions and to develop an exception form.

Administrator Speaker 4 presented historical variance data, saying the district saw between 17 and 46 variance requests in recent years and noted 33 requests this year. "We tried to break them out...school preference requests are really where the majority of our requests are," Speaker 4 said, giving the committee an example that 12 students who live in Jarrett Town attend Fort Washington by request.

Board members pressed for specificity. Speaker 6 said school-preference requests are "nebulous" and argued that only educationally driven placements should supersede attendance-area assignments. "If there really is a need, we would reflect that in the IEP," Speaker 6 said, urging the board to rely on the Individualized Education Program process for special-education placements.

Members also debated grandfathering and transportation. Speaker 9 urged protections for families already approved to remain in their assigned choices and asked whether transportation should follow an IEP-based placement. Speaker 4 said current practice is that parental-request approvals generally do not carry district-provided transportation, but agreed that transportation should be provided when placements result from IEP-determined needs.

To manage edge cases, administrators added an "exception to board policy" form to the Administrative Regulations related to Policy 003. Speaker 4 described the process: families could complete the form, the superintendent would review and make a recommendation, and any exception would be placed on a board agenda with identifying details redacted. "Superintendent made their recommendation to approve it, and it was added to a board agenda, and the board took action," Speaker 4 said as an example of past practice.

The committee instructed staff and counsel to refine policy language to explicitly tie special-education placement changes to IEP determinations, clarify how grandfathering will operate, and draft transportation and exception-process language. The committee left Policy 206 at first reading and requested the item return to the policy committee next month for further refinement.

What happens next: administrators will work with the solicitor to revise Policy 206 and associated ARs to (1) define IEP-driven placement language, (2) specify grandfathering and transportation expectations, and (3) formalize a superintendent-led exception form to be brought back for committee review.

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