Over half of states are not living up to their obligations under federal special education law, with many receiving a failing grade from the U.S. Department of Education multiple years in a row.

Just 20 states earned a โ€œmeets requirementsโ€ designation from the Education Department this year for serving students with disabilities ages 3 to 21 under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.

Meanwhile, 26 states were labeled โ€œneeds assistance,โ€ including 23 which have received that mark for two or more consecutive years. Another four states and Washington, D.C. were listed as โ€œneeds intervention.โ€

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The determinations released this summer are the result of a review mandated under IDEA and are based on data from the 2024 fiscal year. Per the law, the Education Department assesses each stateโ€™s progress in meeting the lawโ€™s expectations annually and assigns them to one of four categories โ€” meets requirements, needs assistance, needs intervention or needs substantial intervention.

The outcome carries significant weight. If states do not achieve the โ€œmeets requirementsโ€ status for two or more years, the Education Department must take enforcement action, which can include requiring the state to access technical assistance or directing funds to the areas deemed inadequate, among other measures.

This yearโ€™s results are not all that different than those from recent years. Last year, the Education Department found that only 19 states qualified for the โ€œmeets requirementsโ€ status and there were 20 states that received that designation the year prior.

However, the determinations come as the Education Department is planning to shift many responsibilities of its Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services, or OSERS, to the Department of Health and Human Services, prompting questions about the future of special education oversight.

โ€œIDEA is a federal guarantee, and a childโ€™s access to special education shouldnโ€™t depend on where they live. But these determinations show that implementation is still uneven across the country,โ€ said Robyn Linscott, director of education and family policy at The Arc of the United States. โ€œThat should be a call to strengthen federal oversight, not weaken it or move special education responsibilities to an agency that wasnโ€™t built to oversee education. Students with disabilities and their families need clearer accountability, more technical assistance and stronger investment so their rights are protected wherever they live.โ€

The states designated as โ€œmeets requirementsโ€ include Alabama, Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Missouri, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Texas, Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyoming.

An analysis from The Advocacy Institute, a nonprofit that focuses on improving the lives of people with disabilities, shows that just five states โ€” Kansas, Massachusetts, Missouri, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin โ€” have received the โ€œmeets requirementsโ€ designation for each of the last 13 years. However, the group notes that the methodology used by the Education Department makes it โ€œmathematically impossibleโ€ for all states to meet that standard โ€œdue to the heavy use of scoring based on rank-ordering of states.โ€

A separate Education Department determination of IDEA programs for children from birth through age 2, found that 22 states qualified as โ€œmeets requirements,โ€ while 27 states and Washington, D.C. were labeled โ€œneeds assistance,โ€ half of which achieved that designation for two or more years in a row. One state โ€” Louisiana โ€” was designated as โ€œneeds intervention.โ€

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Founded inย May 2012ย byย Joshua Stuartย andย Tim Correll,ย Ability 4 Usย is an organization dedicated to empowering and amplifying the voices of the differently abled community. While its official charter began in 2012, the seeds of the organization were sown much earlier in a more casual, yet equally impactful, setting.

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