| |
Meet
Your Neighbor: Donovan Anderson
Advocate for children with special education needs
by: Maceo Thomas
East of the River,
March 2008
The plaque on Donovan Anderson’s office bookshelf from his former
co-workers at the District of Columbia Public Schools (DCPS) is gushy
with accolades - “In appreciation from your colleagues and friends for
your dedication, commitment, loyalty and personal integrity in advancing
the needs of special education children in the District of Columbia.”
The Jamaican native and 22 year resident of DC fell in love with the
city when he arrived for law school and never left.
He has been advocating for DC families around special education needs
for nearly twenty years, both inside and outside the system. After
spending nearly ten years within the school system, Donovan has had his
own successful law firm since 2000.
Anderson arrived at DCPS after graduating from Georgetown Law School. As
a young lawyer developing policy and representing the school system he
learned the ins–and-outs of special education issues and loved it. “I
especially loved working within the school system to help make policy
decisions to better help kids.”
Then came the weekend in 1999 and he now candidly recalls his dismissal
after a series of articles was published examining school system
failures. “I was the head that rolled for the Washington Post.”
“I thought, I was a low man on the totem pole,” he says with some
chuckles. “I didn’t think it would be me. On Monday, I went to work and
it was me.”
With the plaque and subsequent supportive Post articles on him, he feels
vindicated. “I think it was the best thing that could have happened to
me.”
Within three months of his departure he started his own law firm
specializing in representing families of children with special education
needs. Currently it is a one man shop, but at times he has employed
other lawyers to handle the workload.
“Now, I can help one child at a time.” And he does with little fanfare
or publicity. He has been around long enough that he receives most of
his business from referrals or court ordered cases.
Anderson leaves his home in Hillcrest and heads to his private office in
Anacostia at the Big Chair where his phone rings non-stop. “I don’t
think a lot of parents realize that their child is entitled to a free
and appropriate education,” he says describing scenarios where
children’s needs are not being met by the school system, both DCPS and
the charter schools.
“To this day, it never amazes me what the school system does to these
children, “he says, actually incredulously. When parents come to him he
takes on the challenge of solving their problems.
He describes the school system’s obligation to investigate why children
are regularly suspended, or coming to school every day and still failing
all classes.
“I’ll file a [special education due process] hearing request [with the
DC Office of State Enforcement Investigative Division] against the
school system putting them on notice that they are suspending these kids
25, 30, 40 days already in the school year. [DCPS has] an obligation to
investigate what is going on and how they can solve this problem.”
This process, overseen by an independent contractual hearing officer,
takes seventy five days from start to finish. The first 15 days, the
school system meets with the parents to try to resolve the problem.
After 15 days if the problem is not resolved, a hearing is scheduled
within the next 45 days where both sides present their case.
“Invariably we’ll go to a meeting and DCPS will say ‘Yes, you are right,
we should have done this.’”
“In the seventeen years, the school system has gotten progressively
worse.” He attributes much of this problem to the failure of the school
system to create programs that address the needs of children. His job
often means finding children alternative placement outside of the city.
A huge supporter of the Prospect Learning Center for elementary children
who are learning disabled he sees no replication of that model for
middle or high school students.
As for high school students who are autistic, he continues his critique
on the lack of special education programming while parsing his words
carefully, “[DCPS] will tell you [programs for autistic students] work,
but in my professional opinions these kids are being warehoused - they
are not being taught.”
Parents come to him, in his estimation essentially because “DCPS fails
to create new programs for these kids.” He highlights some of his cases
where he finds children being “warehoused” because the schools lack the
specific programs, and staff for many of DC children. “That’s what it is
– programs, programs, programs, the school system have failed to create
programs.”
|
|