Title 20 › Chapter 33— EDUCATION OF INDIVIDUALS WITH DISABILITIES › Subchapter II— ASSISTANCE FOR EDUCATION OF ALL CHILDREN WITH DISABILITIES › § 1416
The U.S. Secretary of Education must watch how the law is carried out, enforce it, and make sure each State watches and enforces the law for its local school districts. The main goal is to help children with disabilities do better in school and to make sure States follow the rules that most affect student outcomes. The Secretary and each State must focus on three priority areas: providing a free appropriate public education in the least restrictive setting; making sure the State’s oversight functions work (for example, finding children who need services, monitoring, dispute resolution, and transition services); and preventing racial or ethnic groups from being unfairly placed in special education because of wrong identification. The Secretary may also use other data States give. Each State had to have a performance plan in place not later than 1 year after December 3, 2004. States must send their plan to the Secretary, review it at least once every 6 years, set clear measurable targets, collect reliable annual data on the priority areas, report annually on local school district performance to the public and to the Secretary, and avoid releasing any personally identifiable information or data that are not statistically reliable. The Secretary reviews and normally approves State plans unless, within 120 days of getting a plan, the Secretary finds it does not meet the rules. If the Secretary finds problems, the State gets written notice, a chance for a hearing, and a request for more information about the specific problems. The State has 30 days to respond; if it resubmits, the Secretary must decide within 30 days after resubmission or before the original 120-day deadline, whichever is later. The Secretary also reviews each State’s performance report every year and decides if the State meets requirements, needs assistance (2 consecutive years), needs intervention (3 or more consecutive years), or needs substantial intervention. For assistance, the Secretary can offer or require technical help, direct State funds to problem areas, or label the State a high-risk grantee. For intervention, the Secretary may take the actions above and can also require a corrective plan or compliance agreement, withhold not less than 20 percent and not more than 50 percent of the State’s relevant funds for each year of the determination until problems are fixed, try to recover funds, stop further payments, or refer matters for enforcement, including to the Department of Justice. For substantial failures, the Secretary may recover funds, withhold payments, or refer cases to the Inspector General or Department of Justice. Before withholding funds, the State must get reasonable notice and a hearing, and payments may be suspended while a hearing is pending. The Secretary must report to specified congressional committees within 30 days after taking enforcement action. If a State gets notice that it needs help or is out of compliance, the State must tell the public. A State may seek review in the Federal court of appeals within 60 days of the Secretary’s action. The Secretary must also check that States can collect and report needed data and must provide technical help (using funds reserved under statute) to improve state data systems.
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Legislative History
Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 1416
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60