Education Law – The Hearing Process At the Superintendant’s Designee Level

June 27, 2011  |   Posted by :   |   Education Law   |   Comments Off

Once the school Principal has decided that a student should be suspended for more than 10 days, the matter must be referred to an administrator designated by the Superintendant of schools, hence the name Superintendant’s Designee. In Baltimore County there are usually a half dozen of these hearing officers who divide the county up geographically. […]

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Education Law: Expulsions, Suspensions, and Zero Tolerance

June 01, 2011  |   Posted by :   |   Education Law   |   Comments Off

Baltimore County Public Schools are among the strictest in the state in terms of zero tolerance. The Baltimore Sun recently reported that zero tolerance policies grew out of events like the school shootings at Columbine. In my opinion, this is incorrect. Zero tolerance policies occurred much earlier in an attempt to address the racially disparate […]

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Education Law Prom Season Expulsions and Suspensions: Zero Tolerance v. Common Sense

May 20, 2011  |   Posted by :   |   Education Law   |   Comments Off

May is prom season and school officials are waiting to impose their zero tolerance, Draconian sanctions on high school seniors just a few weeks from graduation. The most common scenarios include a student acting visibly intoxicated once they get into the dance–vomiting, staggering, or  reeking of alcohol–who is then coerced into giving up the names […]

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Education Law In Maryland

May 19, 2011  |   Posted by :   |   Education Law   |   Comments Off

My intention is to regularly update this space with information about school expulsion and suspension cases in both the public and private sectors from kindergarten to post graduate students. I will also include information about special education matters including Section 504, IEP and Due Process hearings at the Office of Administrative Hearings(OAH). I also represent […]

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