Student Services
DEMITA HUBBARD
DIRECTOR OF STUDENT SERVICES
Emanuel County Schools Special Education Programs currently provide services for students ages 3 through 21. A continuum of services and delivery models are available in order to help students meet specific individual goals and objectives. Skills, abilities and attitudes needed for success in the community and society are the key focus of our special programs. Emanuel County Schools are dedicated to the notion that all students can learn. We strive to provide the best education possible for every student in his or her home school.
Emanuel County Schools Special Education Programs follow federal and state guidelines, rules and regulations. A committee team approach is used when making educational decisions regarding the most appropriate environments and services for each individual. Interagency, interschool and intra-school collaboration provides a community approach as we strive to help students reach their potential.
Services
- Child Find
- Specific Disabilities
- Alternate Diploma
- Georgia Special Needs Scholarship (School Choice)
- Service Animals
- 504 Act
Child Find
In accordance with the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA 2004), the Emanuel County School system seeks to ensure that all children with disabilities (birth through age 21) residing in our jurisdiction and who are in need of special education and related services or early intervention services are identified, located, and evaluated. This also includes those attending private school and home school. Final identification of students with disabilities and programming for such students occurs only after an appropriate evaluation and a determination by a Multidisciplinary Placement Team.
If the “child find” process indicates that the child/student may require special education and/or supportive services in order to participate in and benefit from the general education environment and curriculum, the student shall be referred to the Multidisciplinary Team to determine the student’s eligibility for special education services.
If you suspect that a student has a disability and has not been identified and is not being served, please contact:
Demita Hubbard
Director of Student Services
Emanuel County Schools
201 North Main Street
Swainsboro, Georgia 30401
(478) 237-6674
demita.hubbard@emanuel.k12.ga.us
Specific Disabilities
Specific Disabilities Identified In The Georgia Department Of Education Special Education Regulations And Procedures For Exceptional Students
The following descriptions are based upon the definitions for each of the categories of disabilities contained within Georgia's State Program Plan. This plan is approved by the United States Department of Education under Part B of the Individuals with Disabilities Act (IDEA)
Autism
A developmental disability significantly affecting verbal and nonverbal communication and social interaction generally evident before age three. Students may also engage in repetitive activities and stereotyped movements, resist change in daily routines, and exhibit unusual responses to sensory experiences. The term does not apply if the student's education performance is adversely affected primarily because the student has a serious emotional disturbance.
Emotional / Behavioral Disorders
(Georgia uses the term "Emotional and Behavioral Disorders" for the federal term "Serious Emotional Disturbance"). An emotional disability involving one or more of the following characteristics over an extended time:
- Inability to learn which cannot be explained by ability, health, vision or hearing deficits.
- Problems in relating to other children and adults Inappropriate behavior or feelings (e.g. extreme anger)
- Severe depression or unhappiness
- Tendency to develop physical symptoms or fears about person or school problems
Hearing Impairment
A hearing impairment which involves a hearing loss, whether permanent or fluctuating, that interferes with the acquisition or maintenance of auditory skills necessary for the normal development of speech, language and academic achievement.
Deaf
A hearing impairment in both ears so severe it significantly interferes with the understanding or use of normal speech and language without amplification, and thus adversely affects educational progress.
Hard-of-Hearing
A hearing impairment in both ears so severe it significantly interferes with the understanding or use of normal speech and language, without amplification, and thus hinders normal educational development.
Deaf-Blind
Hearing and vision impairments so severe that the combination causes severe communication and other developmental and educational problems which cannot be accommodated in special education classes for students who are only deaf or blind.
Intellectual Disability
(Georgia uses the term "Intellectual Disability" for the federal term "Mental Retardation"). Significantly sub-average general intellectual functioning exhibited concurrently with deficits in adaptive behavior, which adversely affect educational performance. Levels include mild, moderate, severe, and profound.
Orthopedic Impairment
Physical impairments resulting from disease, such as polio, conditions such as cerebral palsy, or from amputations or birth defects which are so severe as to interfere with educational performance.
Other Health Impairment
Persistent medical or health problems such as heart conditions, epilepsy, diabetes, etc., which adversely affect education performance.
Categorical
Preschool students who meet the criteria for one or more of the disability categories.
Significant Developmental Delay
(Ages three through seven) Georgia has established eligibility criteria for preschool students by categorical eligibility or significant developmental delay eligibility.
Preschool students who score at least two standard deviations below the mean in one or more of the following five skill areas:
- Cognition
- Adaptive Development
- Communication
- Physical Development (gross and fine motor)
- Social-Emotional Development
Specific Learning Disability
A disorder in one of the basic psychological processes involved in understanding or in using language, spoken or written, which may manifest itself in an impaired ability to listen, think, speak, write, spell, or do mathematical calculations. This term does not apply to students who have learning problems that are primarily the result of visual, hearing, or motor disabilities, intellectual disabilities, emotional or behavioral disorders, or environmental, cultural or economic disadvantage.
Speech-Language Impairment
Difficulties with understanding thoughts, expressing them or producing correct sounds, to a degree that interferes with normal communication, or adversely affects social, intellectual or educational growth. Such disorders include stuttering, poor articulation, language or voice impairment.
Traumatic Brain Injury
An acquired injury to the brain caused by an external physical force resulting in a total or partial functional disability and/or psychosocial impairment that adversely affects the student's educational program. The term does not apply to brain injuries that are congenital or degenerative in nature, or brain injuries induced by birth trauma or those resulting from internal occurrences such as stroke, tumor, or aneurysm.
Visual Impairment
Vision problems that, even with correction, are so severe that educational performance is adversely affected. This term includes:
- Functionally Blind A student who is legally blind and is unable to use print as the reading medium and who must receive instruction in Braille.
- Legally Blind A student who is legally blind is one whose visual acuity is 20/200 or less in the better eye after correction or who has a limitation in the field of vision that subtends an angle of 20 degrees. Some students who are legally blind have useful vision and may read print.
- Partially Sighted A student who is partially sighted is one whose visual acuity falls within the range of 20/70 to 20/200 in the better eye after correction. Some students with a visual acuity better than 20/70 will need specialized help for a limited time. The eligibility report shall document whether or not the visual loss constitutes an educational disability.
Alternate Diploma
(students who enter 9th grade during 2020-2021 year)
Only students with the most significant cognitive disabilities who take the GAA are eligible to receive the Alternate Diploma. The Alternate Diploma is the document awarded to students with the most significant cognitive disabilities who were assessed using the alternate assessment aligned to alternate academic achievement standards. While this diploma is standards-based and aligned with the state requirements for the Regular High School Diploma, it is not a Regular High School Diploma. For postsecondary and transition opportunities, many of those institutions will still allow it for transition opportunities and, like with the Regular Diploma, there would be admissions criteria for postsecondary institutions. The Alternate Diploma option will be available for students who entered ninth grade during the 2020-2021 school year and beyond. Students with the most significant cognitive disabilities who were in high school prior to the 2020-2021 school year who take the GAA and complete other requirements will still receive the Regular Diploma.
Georgia Special Needs Scholarship (School Choice)
Senate Bill 10 allows parents to exercise public and private school choice for their child/children who receive special education services. Parents may choose to transfer their child/children to another public school or private school in Georgia. To qualify for the Georgia Special Needs Scholarship Program, a student must meet all of the following requirements:
- Student Eligibility Criteria 1- A student must have a parent/guardian who currently lives in Georgia and has been a resident for at least one calendar year.
- Student Eligibility Criteria 2- A student was enrolled and completed a school year in a Georgia public school in a grade (Kindergarten through twelfth grade).
- Student Eligibility Criteria 3- A student was reported as attending a Georgia public school by a school district(s) during mandatory student counts conducted annually in October and March.
- Student Eligibility Criteria 4 - A student does not need to have an Individualized Education Plan for the entire school year to qualify for the Georgia Special Needs Scholarship Program.
- A student must have received special education services at some point during the school year through an individualized education plan.
- A student must be reported by a school district(s) in either an October or March full-time equivalent student count or in a final student record as a student who received special education services by the end of the previous school year.
Public School Choice Options:
Option 1: A parent/guardian can request a transfer to another public school within his/her school system as long as available space exists at the school, and the school has a program with the services agreed to in the student’s existing individualized education program. If the parent chooses this option, then the parent shall be responsible for transportation to the school.
Option 2: The parent/guardian may request a transfer to a school in another school system if there is available space, and the system and school has a program with the services agreed to in the student’s existing individualized education program. A school system must agree to accept the student; however, if the parent chooses this option and the school system accepts the child, then the parent shall be responsible for transportation to a school in that system.
Option 3: The parent/guardian may also request a transfer to one of the state schools for the deaf and/or blind operated by the State Board of Education. Acceptance into a state school will depend if that setting is appropriate for the student’s needs. If the parent chooses this option, then the parent shall be responsible for transportation to the state school. Please contact the Georgia Department of Education for more information about transferring to a state school.
Private School Choice Option:
If you are interested in transferring your child to a private school in Georgia, you may be able to take advantage of the Georgia Special Needs Scholarship. These scholarships provide funding that can be used to offset tuition costs at participating private schools in the state of Georgia.
For more information on the Georgia Special Needs Scholarship and the parent application process, please contact the Georgia Department of Education at 205 Jesse Hill Jr. Drive SE, Atlanta, GA 30334; Telephone (404) 656-2800; Toll Free Telephone: (800) 311-3627 (GA); Fax: (404) 651-8737; or Email.
For questions related to these school choice options, please contact Emanuel County Schools' Student Services Department at 478-237-6674.
Service Animals
The Emanuel County School System acknowledges its responsibility to permit individuals with disabilities to be accompanied by a “service animal” in its school buildings, in classrooms, and at school functions, as required by the Americans with Disabilities Act, 28 CFR Part 35. Please contact the Department of Student Services should you require more information regarding Emanuel County Schools' procedures/guidelines for service animals.
504 Act
What is 504
1. What is 504?
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973/Public law 93-112 is a comprehensive law that addresses the rights of handicapped persons (hereafter referred to as persons with disabilities except when quoting the law) and applies to all agencies receiving federal financial assistance. Eliminating barriers to education programs and services, increasing building accessibility, and establishing equitable employment practices are thoroughly and specifically addressed in Section 504 regulations. Section 504 states: No otherwise qualified handicapped individual shall, solely by reason of his/her handicap, be excluded from the participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subject to discrimination under any program or activity receiving federal financial assistance. The regulation makes it clear that the failure to provide a free appropriate public education to a student with disabilities covered by Section 504 is discrimination which violates the Act.
2. Who is responsible for the enforcement and investigation of compliance with Section 504?
The Office for Civil Rights (OCR) is responsible for the enforcement and investigation of compliance with Section 504. Federal financial assistance to a local school district is contingent on compliance with Section 504 and other civil rights laws. OCR may determine that federal funds should be withheld from local school systems that are not in compliance with civil rights legislation.
For Emanuel County Schools, Demita Clark-Hubbard, the Director of Student Services is the Student Program Accessibility/Section 504 and ADA Coordinator.
3. Who is eligible for 504?
In 1973, when the Rehabilitation Act was passed, "handicap" was the acceptable term for a mental or physical impairment. Today, the term "disability" is preferred and promoted. Under the provisions of Section 504, either term refers to a person who (1) has a physical or mental impairment which substantially limits one or more major life activities; (2) has a record of such an impairment; or (3) is regarded as having such an impairment. To qualify for protection under the law, the individual must have a physical of mental impairment that substantially limits a major life activity such as caring for one self, performing manual tasks, walking, seeing, hearing, speaking, breathing, learning, or working. Examples include Tourettes Syndrome, epilepsy, sickle-cell anemia, asthma, or a serious long-term illness or injury, if there is a resulting impact on a major life activity such as learning.
4. How are students with Attention Deficit Disorder or Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder handled?
When a school is informed that a student has Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) or Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), the school is required to utilize appropriate educational strategies.These strategies can be documented through the use of the Response to Intervention (RTI) model. RTI is a model in which a student with academic or behavioral difficulties is provided one or more research based interventions. The student's progress is monitored frequently to evaluate whether or not interventions are sufficient to assist the student in making progress. If, after a determined period of time, the student does not progress in spike of the interventions, referral to a 504 team to determine eligibility will be made.
For example, if behavior is the manifestation of the condition, then the successful development of a behavior management plan that meets the school's obligations under the federal law. If the student is manifesting attention problems, which are affecting learning, the school can develop strategies to address those within the regular classroom. In cases in which the ADD results in behavior or attention problems which are so severe that they cannot be accommodated within the regular classroom, Section 504 requires the school to provide special services which will enable the student to benefit from an educational program. Students with ADD or ADHD might qualify under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) as a student suffering from another health impairment (OHI). The school should determine if a referral to special education for consideration of OHI eligibility is appropriate.
5. Who determines if a student is eligible for 504?
Referrals begin at the local school level and are made to the 504 Contact Person. After the RTI process has been followed and a determination is made that the student is unable to progress, then the 504 team is convened to determine whether the student is eligible of a 504 accommodation plan.
6. How does the Student Support Team determine if a student is 504 eligible?
To qualify for protection under Section 504, the individual must have a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits a major life activity such as caring for one's self, performing manual tasks, walking, seeing, hearing, speaking, breathing, learning or working. Three questions to consider in determining whether a person's impairment substantially limits one or more major life activities: (1) What is the nature and severity of the impairment? (2) How long will it last or is expected to last? (3) What is its permanent or long-term impact or expected impact? Temporary, non-chronic impairments that do not last for a long time and which have little or no long-term impact usually are not considered to be disabilities.
7. What is a Section 504 Plan?
A Section 504 Plan is an educational plan describing what accommodations, special services, or related aids and services will be provided to meet the individual educational needs of the eligible student as adequately as the needs of nondisabled students are met. Although a written plan is not required by federal regulations, it is advised. It makes good sense that the plan be in writing. Parents should be notified and a copy of parental rights provided to them. A format for a plan is on a printable page at the end of this information.
8. What are a parent's rights under Section 504?
They are not the same nor as extensive as those provided under IDEA. They are listed on a printable page here and must be made available to parents of children who have a 504 plan. Section 504 Rights
9. What are the guidelines for special test accommodations under Section 504?
A Section 504 Plan must be on file for each student for whom modifications in standardized testing will be made. The plan should outline instructional modifications appropriate for the student during regular classroom instruction. Testing modifications consistent with these instructional modifications should also be outlined in the plan. It is not appropriate to make testing modifications unless the appropriate documentation is on file.
10. What are some examples of special services in the classroom and facility?
Below are samples in the areas of communication, organization/management, alternative teaching strategies, and student precautions.
Special Services in the Classroom and Facility
As individual students are identified, the classroom teacher may need specific training in the area of the identified disability (for example, training from a school nurse on danger signs of an impending asthma attack, or training from a physical therapist on correct positioning of a student who uses a wheelchair). The following classroom/facility special or related aids and services are examples of ways in which students with disabilities may be successfully assisted within the regular education environment.
I. Communication
A. There may be a need to modify parent/student/teacher communications. For example:
· develop a daily/weekly journal
· develop parent/student/school contacts
· schedule periodic parent/teacher meetings
· provide parents with duplicate sets of texts
B. There may be a need to modify staff communications. For example:
· identify resource staff
· network with other staff
· schedule building team meetings
· maintain on-going communication with building principal
C. There may be a need to modify school/community agency communication. For example, with parent consent:
· identify and communicate with appropriate agency personnel working with student
· assist in agency referrals
· provide appropriate carryover in the school environment
II. Organization/Management
A. There may be a need to modify the instructional day. For example:
· allow student more time to pass in hallways
· modify class schedule
B. There may be a need to modify the classroom organization/structure. For example:
· adjust placement of student within classroom (such as use of a study carrel, arrange proximity to teacher)
· increase/decrease opportunity for movement
· determine appropriate classroom assignment (such as open versus structured)
· reduce external stimuli
C. There may be a need to modify the district's policies/procedures. For example:
· allow increase in number of excused absences for health reasons
· adjust transportation/parking arrangements
· approve early dismissal for service agency appointments
III. Alternative Teaching Strategies
There may be need to modify teaching methods. For example:
· adjust testing procedures (such as length of time, oral administration, tape recorded answers)
· utilize materials that address the students learning style or modality impairment (such as visual, tactile, auditory)
· adjust reading level of materials
IV. Student Precautions
A. There may be a need to modify the classroom/building climate for health purposes. For example:
· use an air purifier in classroom
· control the temperature
· accommodate specific allergic reactions
B. There may be a need to modify classroom/building use to accommodate equipment needs. For example:
· plan for evacuation of students who use wheelchairs
· schedule classes in accessible areas
C. There may be a need to modify building health/safety procedures. For example:
· administer medication
· apply universal precautions
· accommodate special diets
Special Services and Related Aids
Services special and related aids must be appropriate to the needs of a specific student and must be designed to meet the individual needs to the same extent that the needs of students without disabilities are met. They may include:
- Interpreters for students with deafness
- Books on tape for students with significant vision problems
- Accessible restrooms
- Assignment sheets
- Tests and quizzes given orally
- Extra time for tests and exams or division of exams into parts
- Note taking assistance
- Peer tutoring
- Extra study time for vocabulary
- Acceptance of typed or dictated work
- Repetition of directions by student
- Preferential seating
- Use of study carrel
- Oral reading on a voluntary basis
- Use of a calculator
- Provision of defined limits
- Use of positive reinforcement
- Allowance for frequent breaks
- Modification of physical education program for a student with asthma
- Shorten school day
- Allowance for service dogs
- Allowance for students with diabetes to eat snacks
- Evacuation plan for a student with a mobility impairment
- Specialized transportation
- Accessible parking
- Ventilation
- Acoustically appropriate environment
- Modification of attendance incentive policy
- Administration of medication according to district policy
- Use of word processor or computer for written work
- Special diet
- Homebound instruction during illness
Student Rights
Notice of Student and Parent Rights Under Section 504
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, commonly referred to as "Section 504," is a nondiscrimination statute enacted by the United States Congress. The purpose of Section 504 is to prohibit discrimination and to assure that disabled students have educational opportunities and benefits equal to those provided to non-disabled students. For more information regarding Section 504, or if you have questions or need additional assistance, please contact your local system’s Section 504 Coordinator at the following address:
Demita Hubbard, Director of Student Services (504 Coordinator)
Emanuel County Board of Education
201 N. Main Street
Swainsboro, Georgia 30401
Phone: 478-237-6674
Email: demita.hubbard@emanuel.k12.ga.us
The implementing regulations for Section 504 as set out in 34 CFR Part 104 provide parents and/or students with the following rights:
1. Your child has the right to an appropriate education designed to meet his or her individual educational needs as adequately as the needs of non-disabled students. 34 CFR 104.33.
2. Your child has the right to free educational services except for those fees that are imposed on non-disabled students or their parents. Insurers and similar third parties who provide services not operated by or provided by the recipient are not relieved from an otherwise valid obligation to provide or pay for services provided to a disabled student. 34 CFR 104.33.
3. Your child has a right to participate in an educational setting (academic and nonacademic) with non-disabled students to the maximum extent appropriate to his or her needs. 34 CFR 104.34.
4. Your child has a right to facilities, services, and activities that are comparable to those provided for non-disabled students. 34 CFR 104.34.
5. Your child has a right to an evaluation prior to a Section 504 determination of eligibility. 34 CFR 104.35.
6. You have the right to not consent to the school system’s request to evaluate your child. 34 CFR 104.35.
7. You have the right to ensure that evaluation procedures, which may include testing, conform to the requirements of 34 CFR 104.35.
8. You have the right to ensure that the school system will consider information from a variety of sources as appropriate, which may include aptitude and achievement tests, grades, teacher recommendations and observations, physical conditions, social or cultural background, medical records, and parental recommendations. 34 CFR 104.35.
9. You have the right to ensure that placement decisions are made by a group of persons, including persons knowledgeable about your child, the meaning of the evaluation data, the placement options, and the legal requirements for least restrictive environment and comparable facilities. 34 CFR 104.35.
10. If your child is eligible under Section 504, your child has a right to periodic reevaluations, including prior to any subsequent significant change of placement. 34 CFR 104.35.
11. You have the right to notice prior to any actions by the school system regarding the identification, evaluation, or placement of your child. 34 CFR 104.36.
12. You have the right to examine your child’s educational records. 34 CFR 104.36.
13. You have the right to an impartial hearing with respect to the school system’s actions regarding your child's identification, evaluation, or educational placement, with opportunity for parental participation in the hearing and representation by an attorney. 34 CFR 104.36.
14. You have the right to receive a copy of this notice and a copy of the school system’s impartial hearing procedure upon request. 34 CFR 104.36.
15. If you disagree with the decision of the impartial hearing officer (school board members and other district employees are not considered impartial hearing officers), you have a right to a review of that decision according to the school system’s impartial hearing procedure. 34 CFR 104.36.
16. You have the right to, at any time, file a complaint with the United States Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights.
Hearing Procedures
Section 504 Hearing Procedures /Procedural Safeguards
1. Overview: Any student or parent or guardian (“grievant”) may request an impartial hearing due to the school system’s actions or inactions regarding your child's identification, evaluation, or educational placement under Section 504. Requests for an impartial hearing must be in writing to the school system’s Section 504 Coordinator; however, a grievant’s failure to request a hearing in writing does not alleviate the school system’s obligation to provide an impartial hearing if the grievant orally requests an impartial hearing through the school system’s Section 504 Coordinator. The school system’s Section 504 Coordinator will assist the grievant in completing the written Request for Hearing.
2. Hearing Request: The Request for the Hearing must include the following:
a.The name of the student.
b.The address of the residence of the student.
c.The name of the school the student is attending.
d.The decision that is the subject of the hearing.
e.The requested reasons for review.
f.The proposed remedy sought by the grievant.
g.The name and contact information of the grievant.
Within 10 business days from receiving the grievant’s Request for Hearing, the Section 504 Coordinator will acknowledge the Request for Hearing in writing and schedule a time and place for a hearing. If the written Request for Hearing does not contain the necessary information noted above, the Section 504 Coordinator will inform the grievant of the specific information needed to complete the request. All timelines and processes will be stayed until the Request for Hearing contains the necessary information noted above.
3. Mediation: The school system may offer mediation to resolve the issues detailed by the grievant in his or her Request for Hearing. Mediation is voluntary and both the grievant and school system must agree to participate. The grievant may terminate the mediation at any time.
If the mediation is terminated without an agreement, the school system will follow the procedures for conducting an impartial hearing without an additional Request for Hearing.
4. Hearing Procedures:
a.The Section 504 Coordinator will obtain an impartial review official who will conduct a hearing within 45 calendar days from the receipt of the grievant’s Request for Hearing unless agreed to otherwise by the grievant or a continuance is granted by the impartial review official.
b.Upon a showing of good cause by the grievant or school system, the impartial review official, at his or her discretion, may grant a continuance and set a new hearing date. The request for a continuance must be in writing and copied to the other party.
c.The grievant will have an opportunity to examine the child’s educational records prior to the hearing.
d.The grievant will have the opportunity to be represented by legal counsel at his or her own expense at the hearing and participate, speak, examine witnesses, and present information at the hearing. If the grievant is to be represented by legal counsel at the hearing, he or she must inform the Section 504 Coordinator of that fact in writing at least 10 calendar days prior to the hearing. Failure to notify the Section 504 Coordinator in writing of representation by legal counsel shall constitute good cause for continuance of the hearing.
e.The grievant will have the burden of proving any claims he or she may assert. When warranted by circumstances or law, the impartial hearing officer may require the recipient to defend its position/decision regarding the claims (i.e. A recipient shall place a disabled student in the regular educational environment operated by the recipient unless it is demonstrated by the recipient that the education of the person in the regular environment with the use of supplementary aids and services cannot be achieved satisfactorily. 34 C.F.R.§104.34). One or more representatives of the school system, who may be an attorney, will attend the hearing to present the evidence and witnesses, respond to the grievant testimony and answer questions posed by the review official.
f.The impartial review official shall not have the power to subpoena witnesses, and the strict rules of evidence shall not apply to hearings. The impartial review official shall have the authority to issue pre-hearing instructions, which may include requiring the parties to exchange documents and names of witnesses to be present.
g.The impartial review official shall determine the weight to be given any evidence based on its reliability and probative value.
h.The hearing shall be closed to the public.
i.The issues of the hearing will be limited to those raised in the written or oral request for the hearing.
j.Witnesses will be questioned directly by the party who calls them. Cross-examination of witnesses will be allowed. The impartial review official, at his or her discretion, may allow further examination of witnesses or ask questions of the witnesses.
k.Testimony shall be recorded by court reporting or audio recording at the expense of the recipient. All documentation related to the hearing shall be retained by the recipient.
l.Unless otherwise required by law, the impartial review official shall uphold the action of school system unless the grievant can prove that a preponderance of the evidence supports his or her claim.
m.Failure of the grievant to appear at a scheduled hearing unless prior notification of absence was provided and approved by the impartial review official or just cause is shown shall constitute a waiver of the right to a personal appearance before the impartial review official.
5. Decision: The impartial review official shall issue a written determination within 20 calendar days of the date the hearing concluded. The determination of the impartial review official shall not include any monetary damages or the award of any attorney’s fees.
6. Review: If not satisfied with the decision of the impartial review official, any party may pursue any right of review, appeal, cause of action or claim available to them under the law or existing state or federal rules or regulations.
§504 Coordinator. For general questions or concerns, the District’s §504 Coordinator may be contacted as noted below:
Demita Hubbard, Director of Student Services (504 Coordinator)
Emanuel County Board of Education
201 N. Main Street
Swainsboro, Georgia 30401
Phone: 478-237-6674
Email: demita.hubbard@emanuel.k12.ga.us
Submission of Written Documents. Initiation of a hearing, notification of the intent to be represented by an attorney, or submission of any other written documents pertinent to a hearing request should be sent to Demita Hubbard at the above address.
Personnel:
Demita Hubbard, Director of Student Services
478-237-6674
Tracy Coxwell, Assistant Director of Student Services
478-237-6674
Trena Houston, Parent Mentor
478-494-6384
Wendy Mack, Secretary
478-237-6674
fax: 478-419-1102