Since the "Keeping All Students Safe Act" was passed in the U.S. House more than a year ago, a new report says there have been dozens of cases in which restraints or seclusion or both have been used on students with disabilities.
The report, called "The Cost of Waiting," also includes examples from a previous report by the National Disability Rights Network called "School is Not Supposed to Hurt" and references a Government Accountability Office study of the use of these practices.
On Wednesday, U.S. Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., reintroduced the bill, which had passed 262 to 153 and had bipartisan support. (This link points to the bill passed in 2010; I haven't found the text of the new one, which will be H.R. 1381.)
"In the year since this legislation passed the House but failed to become law, more children were abused in school. The investigations and news reports about harmful restraint and seclusion show children being tied up with duct tape, sat on by untrained staff, locked in rooms for hours at a time—this behavior looks like torture. This legislation makes it very clear that there is no room for torture and abuse in America's schools," Rep. Miller said in a statement.
Read more of Nirvi Shah's On Sepcial Education article HERE.