2000 Ron Paul 33:1
Mr. PAUL.
Mr.
Speaker, I
appreciate the opportunity to express my opposition to H.R. 4055, which
authorizes over $160 billion in new federal spending for programs
imposed on local school districts by the Individuals with Disabilities
Education Act (IDEA). While I share the goal of devoting more resources
to educating children with learning disabilities, I believe that there
is a better way to achieve this laudable goal than increasing spending
on an unconstitutional, failed program that thrusts children, parents,
and schools into an administrative quagmire. Under the system set up by
IDEA, parents and schools often become advisories and important
decisions regarding a childs future are made via litigation. I have
received compliments from a special education administrator in my
district that unscrupulous trial lawyers are manipulating the IDEA
process to line their pockets at the expenses of local school
districts. Of course, every dollar a local school district has to spend
on litigation is a dollar the district cannot spend educating children.
2000 Ron Paul 33:2
IDEA may also force
local
schools to deny children access to the education that best suits their
unique needs in order to fulfill the federal command that disabled
children be educated in the least restrictive setting, which in
practice means mainstreaming. Many children may thrive in a mainstream
classroom environment, however, some children may be mainstreamed
solely because school officials believe it is required by federal law,
even though the mainstream environment is not the most appropriate for
that child.
2000 Ron Paul 33:3
On May 10, 1994,
Dr. Mary
Wagner testified before the Education Committee that disabled children
who are not placed in a mainstream classroom graduate from high school
at a much higher rate than disabled children who are mainstreamed. Dr.
Wagner quite properly accused Congress of sacrificing children to
ideology.
2000 Ron Paul 33:4
Increasing IDEA
spending also
provides incentives to over-identify children as learning disabled,
thus unfairly stigmatizing many children and, in a vicious cycle,
leading to more demands for increased federal spending on IDEA. Instead
of increasing spending on a federal program that may actually damage
the children it claims to help, Congress should return control over
education to those who best know the childs needs: parents. In order
to restore parental control to education, I have introduced the Family
Education Freedom Act (H.R. 935), which provides parents with a $3,000
per child tax credit to pay for K-12 education expenses. My tax credit
would be of greatest benefit to parents of children with learning
disabilities because it would allow them to devote more of their
resources to ensure their children get an education that meets the
childs unique needs.
2000 Ron Paul 33:5
In conclusion, I
would remind
my colleagues that parents and local communities know their children so
much better than any federal bureaucrat, and they can do a better job
of meeting a childs needs than we in Washington. There is no way that
the unique needs of my grandchildren, and some young boy or girl in Los
Angeles, CA or New York City can be educated by some sort of Cookie
Cutter approach. Thus, the best means of helping disabled children is
to empower their parents with the resources to make sure their children
receive an education suited to their childs special needs, instead of
an education that scarifies that childs best interest on the altar of
the Washington-knows-best ideology.
2000 Ron Paul 33:6
I therefore urge my
colleagues to join with me in helping parents of special needs children
to provide their children with an education by repealing federal
mandates that divert resources away from helping children and, instead,
embrace my Family Education Freedom Act.
This chapter appeared in Ron Pauls Congressional website at http://www.house.gov/paul/congrec/congrec2000/cr050400idea.htm