kids disability rights cases stalled as trump began to overhaul education department

Kids' Disability Rights Cases Stalled As Trump Began To Overhaul Education Department

It was obvious to Christine Smith Olsey that her son was not doing well at school, despite educators telling her to leave it to the experts. The second-grade student stumbled over words, and other kids teased him so much he started to call himself "an idiot."

Though her son had been receiving speech and occupational therapy, Smith Olsey said his Denver charter school resisted her requests for additional academic support . She filed a complaint with the state and then, in September, the Education Department's Office for Civil Rights.

In January, her son's case came to a halt.

"I have to postpone meetings with you to discuss the case," a department mediator wrote to her on Jan. 23, three days after President Donald Trump's inauguration. "I am sorry for the inconvenience. I will be in touch as I am able."

As Trump began to reshape the Education Department , investigations and mediations around disability rights issues came to a standstill.