Title 20 › Chapter CHAPTER 33— - EDUCATION OF INDIVIDUALS WITH DISABILITIES › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - ASSISTANCE FOR EDUCATION OF ALL CHILDREN WITH DISABILITIES › § 1415
Agencies that get federal money for schools must set up clear rules to protect the rights of children with disabilities and their parents. Parents have the right to see and get copies of their child’s records, take part in meetings about testing, placement, and the child’s education, and get an independent evaluation. If parents are not known or can’t be found, the agency must appoint a surrogate (who cannot be an employee of the agency) and try to do so within 30 days of deciding a surrogate is needed. Schools must give parents written notice whenever they propose or refuse to change a child’s program, and that notice must explain what the school wants to do, why, the tests or records used, other options considered, and how parents can get help and learn their rights. Parents may try mediation (which must be voluntary, paid for by the State, and kept confidential) or file a complaint about identification, evaluation, placement, or provision of a free appropriate public education. Complaints generally must be filed within 2 years of when the parent or agency knew or should have known about the problem, unless State law says otherwise. A formal due process notice must include key details (child’s name, contact info, school, description of the problem, and proposed solution). If a complaint is filed, the school must respond within 10 days with specific explanations. The school must hold a meeting with parents and relevant IEP team members within 15 days to try to resolve the complaint, and if not resolved within 30 days a due process hearing can begin. Parties must share evaluations they will use at least 5 business days before a hearing. Hearing officers must be impartial and qualified. If disciplinary action is taken, schools may remove a child for up to 10 school days like other students, and in some serious cases (weapons, illegal drugs, or serious bodily injury) a child may be placed in an interim alternative setting for up to 45 school days. Within 10 school days of a proposed placement change for discipline, the IEP team and parents must decide if the behavior was caused by the disability or by a failure to follow the IEP; if it was, the team must do a functional behavioral assessment and a behavior plan and usually return the child to their placement. During any disputes, the child generally stays in their current placement unless parents and the agency agree otherwise, but special rules apply for interim settings in appeals. Parents and agencies can appeal local hearing decisions to the State and then file a civil action in court within 90 days of the hearing decision. Courts get the hearing records, can hear new evidence, and decide based on the preponderance of the evidence. The law also explains rules about attorneys’ fees, settlement offers, annual written notice of rights (and extra copies at certain events), native-language notices when possible, transfer of rights at the age of majority under State law, optional email notices, and the right to file separate complaints on different issues.
Full Legal Text
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Legislative History
Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 1415
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73