4. Ensure, to the extent consistent with the number and location of children
with disabilities residing in the LEA who are enrolled in private schools, that the
children receive special education and related services and that the amounts
expended for those services are equal to a proportionate amount of federal, special
education funds.
5. Make available to the public, upon request, all documents relating to the
LEA's eligibility for special education funds and regularly publicize information
regarding the special education procedures and services of the LEA.
6. Ensure that children with disabilities who are enrolled in private schools and
facilities are provided free special education and related services, in accordance with
an IEP, if an LEA places or refers the children to private schools or facilities.
7. Develop a plan, including a program narrative, for the provision of special
education and related services.
8. Annually provide a special education performance report to all parents of
children enrolled in the LEA.
9. Serve children with disabilities who are attending a charter school under
contract with the LEA in the same manner as it serves children with disabilities
attending schools of the LEA and provide special education funds to the charter
schools in the same manner as it provides those funds to schools of the LEA.
10. Comply with federal law concerning alternative educational placement.
Current law requires the division for learning support, equity and advocacy
(the division) in the department of public instruction (DPI) to, among other things,
coordinate the development of special education programs in the state, approve
special education programs, develop a training program for special education
personnel and make available to the public information about special education
programs in the state. This bill requires the division to assume the additional
responsibility of determining whether significant discrepancies are occurring among
LEAs in the rate of long-term suspension and expulsions of children with disabilities
compared to rates for nondisabled children.
Current law requires a parent or a physician, nurse or teacher at a state or
county residential facility or a psychologist, social worker or administrator of a social
agency who has reasonable cause to believe that a child has EEN to report the name
of the child and any other information required to the school board for the district,

the governing body of the state or county residential facility in which the child resides
or to the division. In addition, each school board is responsible for screening each
child who resides in the school district and has not graduated from high school to
determine if there is reasonable cause to believe that the child is a child with EEN.
The school board must appoint a multidisciplinary team (M-team) to evaluate the
child. If the M-team reports that the child is a child with EEN and the report is
approved by the director of the M-team, the M-team must recommend the child to
the school board for special education. In addition, if a child who is placed in a child
caring institution is suspected of being disabled, the M-team must evaluate the
child.
Once a child has been recommended to the school board for special education,
the school board must appoint staff to develop an IEP for the child. After the IEP has
been completed, the director of special education in the school district develops a
placement offer for the child that is based upon and designed to carry out the child's
IEP. The placement offer must specify the way in which and the level at which special
education and related services are to be delivered and the location at which services
will be provided. The school board must send a copy of the child's placement offer to
the parent within 90 days of the date on which the school board received a referral
for an evaluation or initiated a reevaluation for the child. The school board may ask
the parent to agree in writing to a specific extension of time beyond the 90-day period
or, if the parent refuses, ask the division for an extension if the school board
demonstrates that it has acted in good faith and that there is good cause to grant the
extension. The director of special education must then place the child in an
appropriate placement as near as possible to the place where the child resides.
Under this bill, the LEA must appoint an IEP team that is responsible for
evaluating a child with a disability to determine the child's eligibility or continued
eligibility for special education and related services, to develop the IEP for the child
and to determine the educational placement for the child. The IEP team is also
required to evaluate a child in a child caring institution who is suspected of being
disabled. If the parents of the child or the LEA determines at any point during the
evaluation, development of the IEP or placement of the child that additional time is
needed for meaningful parental participation, the LEA must provide it. The bill does
not affect the required parental notification of placement within the 90-day period.
This bill also provides that, if the parents of a child with a disability who
previously received special education and related services under the authority of a
LEA enroll the child in a private elementary or secondary school without the consent
of or referral by the LEA, a court or a hearing officer may require the LEA to
reimburse the parents for the cost of that enrollment if the court or hearing officer
finds that the LEA had not made FAPE available to the child in a timely manner
before the enrollment. The cost of this reimbursement, however, may be reduced or
denied if any of the following applies: 1) at the most recent IEP meeting that the
parents attended before removal of the child from the LEA, the parents did not
inform the IEP team of their concerns, their rejection of the placement proposed by
the LEA to provide FAPE to their child and their intent to enroll the child in a private
school at public expense; 2) at least 10 business days before the removal of the child

from the LEA, the parents did not give written notice to the LEA of their concerns,
their rejection of the placement and their intent to enroll the child in a private school
at public expense; 3) before the parents' removal of the child from the LEA, the LEA
notified the parents of its intent to evaluate the child, but the parents did not make
the child available for the evaluation; or 4) a court finds that the parents' actions are
unreasonable. The reimbursement may not be reduced, however, if the parent is
illiterate and cannot write in English, if doing so would likely result in physical or
serious emotional harm to the child, if the LEA prevented the parent from providing
notice or if the parents had not received notice of their responsibility to notify the
LEA of their intentions.
Under current law, a parent of a child with EEN may file a written request with
DPI whenever the school board proposes or refuses to initiate or change the child's
M-team evaluation, IEP or educational placement or to contest the payment of an
independent evaluation. The school board may also file a written request to override
a parent's refusal to or revocation of consent for a M-team evaluation, IEP or
educational placement or to contest payment of an independent evaluation. Upon
receipt of the written request for a hearing, DPI must appoint an impartial hearing
officer to conduct the hearing. Within 45 days after the decision of the hearing officer,
either party may appeal the decision to the circuit court for the county in which the
child resides.
Under this bill, the parent or an attorney representing the child may file a
written request for a hearing with the division. At least five business days before the
hearing, each party must disclose to all other parties all evaluations completed by
that date and recommendations based on the offering party's evaluations that the
party intends to use at the hearing. Within 45 days after the decision of the hearing
officer, either party may appeal the decision in the circuit court for the county in
which the child resides or in a U.S. district court. With some exceptions, a circuit
court may award reasonable attorney fees and actual costs to the parent of a child
with a disability who is the prevailing party.
The parties may also request a qualified mediator to resolve a dispute
concerning the proposal or refusal to initiate or change the evaluation, IEP, or
educational placement of a child with a disability, or the provision of FAPE. Once
engaged in mediation, either party may withdraw at any time, and no adverse
inference may be drawn from the fact that a party did not consent to mediation, that
a party withdrew from mediation or that mediation did not result in settlement of
the dispute. If, however, the parties resolve the dispute through mediation, the
resolution is legally binding.
The bill also requires the LEA to establish and maintain procedures to ensure:
1) that the parents of a child may examine all records relating to the child and may
participate in meetings about the identification, evaluation and educational
placement of the child, and the provision of FAPE to the child, and may obtain an
independent educational evaluation of the child; 2) that the rights of the child are
protected by the assignment of an individual, who may not be an employe of DPI, the
LEA or any other agency that is involved in the education or care of the child, to act
as a surrogate for the parents whenever the parents of the child are not known, the

LEA cannot, after reasonable efforts, locate the parents, or the child is a ward of the
state; 3) that the parents of the child receive written notice whenever the LEA
proposes to initiate or change, or refuses to initiate or change, the identification,
evaluation or educational placement of the child, or the provision of FAPE to the
child; and 4) that the parents are offered an opportunity to use mediation to resolve
disputes concerning the evaluation, IEP or placement of the child.
This bill requires the state superintendent of public instruction to resolve
interagency disputes concerning the placement of a child in a nonresidential
educational program or in a child caring institution. Finally, the bill provides that
a school board, cooperative education service agency (CESA) and a CWDEB may
enter into an agreement with a county administrative service agency to allow
employes of the school board, CESA or CWDEB to evaluate a child to determine
eligibility for early intervention services and to develop a written plan for providing
early intervention services to an eligible child and the child's family.
For further information see the state and local fiscal estimate, which will be
printed as an appendix to this bill.
The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in senate and assembly, do
enact as follows:
AB674, s. 1 1Section 1. 15.377 (1) of the statutes, as affected by 1997 Wisconsin Act 27, is
2amended to read:
AB674,6,133 15.377 (1) Council on the education of the blind. There is created in the
4department of public instruction a council on the education of the blind consisting
5of 3 members, who shall be visually handicapped have a visual impairment and shall
6have a recognized interest in and a demonstrated knowledge of the problems of the
7visually handicapped
children who have visual impairments, appointed by the state
8superintendent of public instruction for staggered 6-year terms. "Visually
9handicapped"
"Visual impairment" means having a) a visual acuity equal to or less
10than 20/70 in the better eye with correcting lenses, or b) a visual acuity greater than
1120/70 in the better eye with correcting lenses, but accompanied by a limitation in the
12field of vision such that the widest diameter of the visual field subtends an angle no
13greater than 20 degrees.
AB674, s. 2
1Section 2. 15.377 (4) of the statutes, as affected by 1997 Wisconsin Act 27, is
2repealed and recreated to read:
AB674,7,183 15.377 (4) Council on special education. There is created in the department
4of public instruction a council on special education to advise the state superintendent
5of public instruction about the unmet educational needs of children with disabilities,
6in developing evaluations and reporting on data to the federal department of
7education, in developing plans to address findings identified in federal monitoring
8reports, in developing and implementing policies relating to the coordination of
9services for children with disabilities and on any other matters upon which the state
10superintendent wishes the council's opinion; and to comment publicly on any rules
11proposed by the department of public instruction regarding the education of children
12with disabilities. The state superintendent of public instruction shall appoint the
13members of the council for 3-year terms, and shall ensure that a majority of the
14members are individuals with disabilities or parents of children with disabilities and
15that the council is representative of the state population, as determined by the state
16superintendent. The council shall be composed of individuals who are involved in,
17or concerned with, the education of children with disabilities, including all of the
18following:
AB674,7,1919 (a) Teachers of regular education and teachers of special education.
AB674,7,2120 (b) Representatives of institutions of higher education that train special
21education and related services personnel.
AB674,7,2222 (c) State and local education officials.
AB674,7,2323 (d) Administrators of programs for children with disabilities.
AB674,7,2524 (e) Representatives of agencies other than the department of public instruction
25involved in the financing or delivery of related services to children with disabilities.
AB674,8,1
1(f) Representatives of private schools and charter schools.
AB674,8,32 (g) At least one representative of a vocational, community or business
3organization that provides transition services for children with disabilities.
AB674,8,44 (h) Representatives from the department of corrections.
AB674,8,55 (i) Parents of children with disabilities.
AB674,8,66 (j) Individuals with disabilities.
AB674, s. 3 7Section 3. 20.255 (1) (d) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB674,8,138 20.255 (1) (d) Principal repayment and interest. A sum sufficient to reimburse
9s. 20.866 (1) (u) for the payment of principal and interest costs incurred in financing
10the acquisition, construction, development, enlargement or improvement of
11institutional facilities for the individuals with hearing impaired impairments and
12visually handicapped visual impairments under s. 115.52 and reference and loan
13library facilities under s. 43.05 (11).
AB674, s. 4 14Section 4. 20.255 (2) (b) (title) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB674,8,1515 20.255 (2) (b) (title) Aids for handicapped special education.
AB674, s. 5 16Section 5. 20.255 (2) (bh) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB674,8,1917 20.255 (2) (bh) (title) Aid to county handicapped children's children with
18disabilities
education boards. The amounts in the schedule for aid to county
19handicapped children's children with disabilities education boards under s. 121.135.
AB674, s. 6 20Section 6. 20.255 (2) (br) of the statutes, as affected by 1997 Wisconsin Act 27,
21is amended to read:
AB674,9,222 20.255 (2) (br) (title) Aid for handicapped special education transportation.
23The amounts in the schedule for the payment of handicapped special education
24transportation aid under s. 115.88 (2). If the amount appropriated under this
25paragraph is insufficient to pay the full amount of aid under s. 115.88 (2), the balance

1shall be paid from the appropriation under par. (b). No moneys may be encumbered
2from the appropriation under this paragraph after June 30, 1993.
AB674, s. 7 3Section 7. 20.866 (2) (zh) of the statutes, as affected by 1997 Wisconsin Act 27,
4is amended to read:
AB674,9,115 20.866 (2) (zh) Public instruction; state schools and library facilities. From the
6capital improvement fund, a sum sufficient for the department of public instruction
7to acquire, construct, develop, enlarge or improve institutional facilities for the
8individuals with hearing impaired impairments and the visually handicapped
9individuals with visual impairments and reference and loan library facilities. The
10state may contract public debt in an amount not to exceed $7,367,700 for this
11purpose.
AB674, s. 8 12Section 8. 36.25 (19) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB674,9,1713 36.25 (19) Model school special education program. (a) The board may
14establish at the University of Wisconsin-Madison a model school for children with
15exceptional educational needs disabilities, as defined in s. 115.76 (3) (5). The school
16shall utilize practical demonstration techniques to train teachers and other support
17personnel under s. 115.28 (7) (c).
AB674,9,2318 (b) The board may enter into an agreement with the school board of any school
19district to provide special education and other related services through the model
20school to children with exceptional educational needs disabilities. The board may
21charge tuition for children served in the model school. Tuition charges made under
22such agreements shall be based on the net cost of providing the special education and
23other related services.
AB674, s. 9 24Section 9. 46.21 (1) (d) of the statutes, as affected by 1997 Wisconsin Act 27,
25is amended to read:
AB674,10,8
146.21 (1) (d) "Human services" means the total range of services to people,
2including mental illness treatment, developmental disabilities services, physical
3disabilities services, relief funded by a relief block grant under ch. 49, income
4maintenance, youth probation and parole services, alcohol and drug abuse services,
5services to children, youth and families, family counseling, exceptional educational
6early intervention services for children from birth to the age of 3 and manpower
7services. "Human services" does not include child welfare services under s. 48.48 (17)
8administered by the department in a county having a population of 500,000 or more.
AB674, s. 10 9Section 10. 46.23 (2) (a) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB674,10,1510 46.23 (2) (a) "Human services" means the total range of services to people
11including, but not limited to, health care, mental illness treatment, developmental
12disabilities services, relief funded by a block grant under ch. 49, income
13maintenance, probation and parole services, alcohol and drug abuse services,
14services to children, youth and aging, family counseling, exceptional educational
15special education services and manpower services.
AB674, s. 11 16Section 11. 46.56 (1) (m) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB674,10,2217 46.56 (1) (m) "Service coordination agency" means a county department,
18agency, school district, cooperative educational service agency or county
19handicapped children's children with disabilities education board designated in an
20interagency agreement by a coordinating committee to provide intake and service
21coordination for one or more target groups of eligible children with severe disabilities
22and their families.
AB674, s. 12 23Section 12. 46.56 (3) (a) 6. of the statutes is amended to read:
AB674,11,324 46.56 (3) (a) 6. The largest school district in the county and any cooperative
25educational service agency, if it provides special education in the county, or any

1county handicapped children's children with disabilities education board in the
2county, and any other school district in the county that is willing to participate in the
3program, at the discretion of the administering agency.
AB674, s. 13 4Section 13. 46.56 (3) (d) 1. d. of the statutes is amended to read:
AB674,11,105 46.56 (3) (d) 1. d. Review determinations by the service coordination agency
6regarding eligibility, assessment, appropriate services, or funding of services at the
7request of any applicant, recipient, parent or participating county department,
8agency, school district, cooperative educational service agencies or county
9handicapped children's children with disabilities education boards. The committee
10shall adopt written procedures for conducting reviews.
AB674, s. 14 11Section 14. 46.56 (5) (a) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB674,11,1512 46.56 (5) (a) The identity of every county department, agency, school district,
13cooperative educational service agency or county handicapped children's children
14with disabilities
education board, technical college district or other organization that
15will participate in the program.
AB674, s. 15 16Section 15. 46.56 (8) (a) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB674,11,2217 46.56 (8) (a) Referrals to the program may come from any county departments,
18agencies, school districts, cooperative educational service agencies, county
19handicapped children's children with disabilities education boards, technical college
20districts, courts assigned to exercise jurisdiction under chs. 48 and 938 or any other
21organization or the child with severe disabilities or his or her family may contact the
22administering agency or service coordination agency to request services.
AB674, s. 16 23Section 16. 46.56 (8) (g) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB674,12,624 46.56 (8) (g) The service coordinator shall assemble the results of all prior
25relevant assessments and evaluations documenting the service needs of the child

1with severe disabilities and the child's family, including multidisciplinary
2individualized education program team evaluations under s. 115.80 (3) 115.782 or
3independent educational evaluations, court-ordered evaluations under s. 48.295 or
4938.295, family support program evaluations, community integration program or
5community options program assessments, and any other available medical,
6psychiatric, psychological, vocational or developmental evaluations.
AB674, s. 17 7Section 17. 46.56 (15) (d) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB674,12,118 46.56 (15) (d) In order to apply for funding, at least one school district,
9cooperative educational service agency or county handicapped children's children
10with disabilities
education board serving children with severe disabilities in the
11county must participate in the program.
AB674, s. 18 12Section 18. 48.14 (7) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB674,12,1313 48.14 (7) Appeals under s. 115.81 115.80 (7).
AB674, s. 19 14Section 19. 48.345 (intro.) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB674,12,22 1548.345 Disposition of child adjudged in need of protection or services.
16(intro.) If the judge finds that the child is in need of protection or services, the judge
17shall enter an order deciding one or more of the dispositions of the case as provided
18in this section under a care and treatment plan, except that the order may not place
19any child not specifically found under chs. 46, 49, 51, 115 and 880 to be
20developmentally disabled, mentally ill or to have exceptional educational needs a
21disability specified in s. 115.76 (5)
in facilities which exclusively treat those
22categories of children. The dispositions under this section are as follows:
AB674, s. 20 23Section 20. 48.345 (12) (d) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB674,12,2524 48.345 (12) (d) This subsection does not apply to a child with exceptional
25educational needs
a disability, as defined under s. 115.76 (3) (5).
AB674, s. 21
1Section 21. 48.428 (3) (e) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB674,13,32 48.428 (3) (e) The authority to act as the child's parent under ss. 115.80, 115.81
3subch. V of ch. 115 and s. 118.125.
AB674, s. 22 4Section 22. 48.60 (4) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB674,13,65 48.60 (4) (a) In this subsection, "child with exceptional educational needs a
6disability
" has the meaning given in s. 115.76 (3) (5).
AB674,13,127 (b) Notwithstanding ss. 115.85 (2), 121.78 (3) (a) and 121.79 (1) (a), a child
8welfare agency shall pay for the costs incurred by a school district in providing
9special education and related services to a child with exceptional educational needs
10a disability who is a resident of the child welfare agency, if the child was placed in
11the child welfare agency pursuant to the interstate compact on the placement of
12children under s. 48.988.
AB674, s. 23 13Section 23. 51.05 (5) of the statutes, as affected by 1997 Wisconsin Act 27, is
14amended to read:
AB674,13,2415 51.05 (5) School activities. If an individual over the age of 2 and under the
16age of 22 and eligible for schooling special education and related services under ss.
17115.76 (2) and 115.85
subch. V of ch. 115 is committed, admitted or transferred to or
18is a resident of the Mendota mental health institute or Winnebago mental health
19institute, the individual shall attend a school program operated by the applicable
20mental health institute or a school outside the applicable mental health institute
21which is approved by the department of public instruction. A school program
22operated by the Mendota mental health institute or Winnebago mental health
23institute shall be under the supervision of the department of public instruction and
24shall meet standards prescribed by that agency.
AB674, s. 24
1Section 24. 51.06 (2) of the statutes, as affected by 1997 Wisconsin Act 27, is
2amended to read:
AB674,14,103 51.06 (2) School activities. If an individual over the age of 2 years and under
4the age of 22 years and eligible for schooling special education and related services
5under ss. 115.76 (2) and 115.85 subch. V of ch. 115 is admitted to, is placed in or is
6a resident of a center, the individual shall attend a school program operated by the
7center or a school outside the center which is approved by the department of public
8instruction. A school program operated by the center shall be under the supervision
9of the department of public instruction and shall meet standards prescribed by that
10agency.
AB674, s. 25 11Section 25. 51.42 (3) (ar) 7. of the statutes is amended to read:
AB674,14,1312 51.42 (3) (ar) 7. Acknowledge receipt of the notification received under s. 115.85
13(4)
115.812 (2).
AB674, s. 26 14Section 26. 51.437 (4m) (g) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB674,14,1615 51.437 (4m) (g) Acknowledge receipt of the notification received under s. 115.85
16(4)
115.812 (2).
AB674, s. 27 17Section 27. 70.11 (10m) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB674,14,2218 70.11 (10m) (title) Lions foundation camps for visually handicapped children
19with visual impairments. Lands not exceeding 40 acres and the buildings thereon
20owned by the Wisconsin Lions Foundation and used as camps for visually
21handicapped
children with visual impairments, so long as the property is used for
22such purposes and not for pecuniary profit of any individual.
AB674, s. 28 23Section 28. 70.11 (22) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB674,15,624 70.11 (22) (title) Camps for handicapped persons with disabilities. Lands not
25exceeding 10 acres and the buildings thereon owned by the Wisconsin Easter Seal

1Society for Crippled Children and Adults, Incorporated, and known as Camp
2Wawbeek, used for camps for physically handicapped children and adults with
3orthopedic impairments
and not to exceed 371 acres of wooded and meadowland
4adjacent thereto used in connection therewith, excluding a caretaker's home and 10
5acres of land in connection therewith, so long as the property is used solely for such
6purposes and not for pecuniary profit of any individual.
AB674, s. 29 7Section 29. 79.03 (3) (b) 4. a. of the statutes, as affected by 1997 Wisconsin Act
827
, is amended to read:
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