Civil Rights Lawyers Ask Court to Block Laws Illegally Denying Homeless Children Equal Access to Education (11/6/2007)
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
HONOLULU –
Advancing their class action lawsuit, Lawyers for Equal Justice (LEJ) and the
ACLU of Hawaii today filed a motion in federal court seeking an order to
immediately halt state officials from enforcing laws and policies that block
access by homeless children to public education. These measures are in violation
of federal law.
“As we meet with
homeless families and social service providers across the state, the number of
children who have been or are being denied access to basic public education
continues to grow. The state’s
blatant violations of federal law have harmed children statewide and must be
immediately corrected,” said William Durham of LEJ. “Congress has given the
state funds to fulfill an important national mandate. There is no excuse for the
state’s negligence – every day that goes by results in more children being
denied an education.”
The latest round
of legal actions includes requests to bar the state from carrying out specific
practices that violate federal law such as denying homeless children entrance to
school because they lack certain documentation, which has led to children
missing school for days and weeks at a time. The state has also failed to
provide transportation, which forces families of extremely limited means to fend
for themselves and results in children being consistently tardy or absent from
school.
The initial
legal complaint, filed October 2, 2007, on behalf of several homeless parents
and their children, charged the state with a systemic failure to provide
homeless children with equal access to a free and appropriate public education
in violation of the McKinney-Vento Act and the Fourteenth Amendment to the
United States Constitution.
Lawyers want
state officials responsible for overseeing the education and welfare of homeless
children and their families to remove obstacles to the enrollment and attendance
of homeless children at public school, to provide transportation to and from
school, to coordinate with other government agencies to serve homeless children,
and to ensure that homeless children have the same access to public education as
all other children. In a companion motion, the lawyers have also asked the court
to order that the plaintiffs represent all homeless students and their parents
statewide.
Plaintiff Olivé
Kaleauti said, “All I want to do is help my sons get a good education. I feel
like no matter how hard I try to do this, the schools keep putting up barriers
that prevent my children from going to school. My children and others like them
are being punished for being homeless – but it’s not their
fault.”
ACLU of Hawaii
Legal Director Lois Perrin said, “Over one year ago the U.S. Department of
Education notified the state that they were failing to comply with federal law,
yet the state has done nothing to correct those deficiencies. While the state
drags its feet, homeless children are denied an education. A preliminary
injunction is necessary to avoid the immediate, profound and lasting harms on
the lives of homeless children caused by the state’s
non-compliance.”
Any homeless
child or parent who has been denied access to school or transportation to public
school and wants to tell his or her story confidentially or publicly should
contact LEJ at (808) 779-1744 or the ACLU of Hawaii at (808)
522-5905.
The lawsuit
names as defendants Judy Tonda, Department of Education (“DOE”) Homeless
Coordinator; Patricia Hamamoto, DOE Superintendent; Robert McClelland, DOE
Systems Accountability Office Director; Board of Education members Karen
Knudsen, John Penebacker, Herbert Watanabe, Breene Harimoto, Dr. Eileen Clarke,
Dr. Lei Ahu Isa, Kim Coco Iwamoto, Mary Cochran, Maggie Cox, Cec Heftel, Denise
Matsumoto, Donna Ikeda, and Garrett Toguchi; and Chiyome Fukino, Department of
Health Director.
LEJ and the ACLU are working with Paul
Alston, Roman Amaguin, Steve Tannenbaum and Shellie Park-Hoapili of Alston Hunt
Floyd & Ing.
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