Analysis
Big Special Ed Dollars Coming. Can FUSD Deliver Better Results?
Published
6 years agoon

As soon as he became superintendent in 2017, Bob Nelson publicly acknowledged serious, heart-breaking problems in Fresno Unified’s often-criticized special education program.
The criticism hasn’t relented even as Nelson has become the social media face of the district’s move to “inclusion” — that is, teaching special ed students, whenever possible, in general ed settings.

Opinion
Bill McEwen
New Special Ed Budget Rolls Out Wednesday
The superintendent will provide a big, bold answer at Wednesday night’s board meeting.
The proposed 2019-20 special education budget includes $10.2 million in ongoing new funding and $1.4 million in one-time funds for portable classrooms. That doubles last year’s $5 million increase in new ongoing funding.
Bottom line: The special ed budget this school year totaled $138.3 million. Next year, it climbs to $149.5 million.
Moreover, this new money comes with a reworking of special ed management. The target is providing direct oversight of programs by managers with expertise in specific areas of special ed, such as working with deaf, visually impaired or orthopedically impaired students. District critics accurately point out the special ed program is top-heavy in administrators with autism backgrounds.
Nelson said the district will hire two additional program managers as part of the restructuring.
“We’re excited about what we’ve put together,” Nelson said. “Some people were asking, ‘Why are you delaying the special ed budget?’ We’ve been working hard on it and collaborating with (the Fresno Teachers Association), and board members. We wanted to be able to thread the needle.
“This proposal is not coming as a surprise to our bargaining unit or the board.”
What Does $10 Million Buy?
So, what will the extra $10 million buy?
Forty-four teachers to lower student ratios and grade spans of students in a classroom.
Forty-five paraprofessional aides and assistants to better support students and teachers.
A total of 10 speech-language pathologists, occupational therapists, teachers for assistive technology, and teachers for the orthopedically impaired.
One special-ed counselor and four instructional coaches.
The teachers, paraprofessionals, and instructional coaches will be phased in over three years.
Can the District Fill the New Positions?
Fresno Unified has struggled to fill special ed vacancies. Right now, it is short 24 speech-language therapists and is providing services for many students using video chat sessions. It also has many unfilled aide positions. The aide situation especially frustrates teachers, who either don’t have the help they need or must make do with untrained aides “hired off the street.”
One suggestion is that the district add hours to the aide schedules, in effect, making more of those positions full time — as was done to solve the district’s bus driver shortage. Nelson backs the idea.
“The last thing you want in a special needs environment is turnover,” Nelson says. ‘You want to support the student and teacher as well as you can.”
The speech-language therapist challenge, Nelson says, is the result of “salaries that are behind the times.”
Says Nelson: “We need to make sure that we are competitive with our hard-to-fill positions and we find new ways to market them.”
In 2014, the California Department of Education cited the district for failing to provide speech therapy for 509 special needs students and said it was breaking the law.
While video-chat lessons are helpful, students will make bigger gains — and retain those gains — with therapists. Bringing more of them on board must be a district priority.
The Most Important Job of All
The district has been without a special education director since Adrian Varanini stepped down at the end of January. Initially, the district wanted to make a quick hire. But it came to its senses and decided to conduct a national search. It also has elevated the position and increased the pay range to $111,258 to $135,234.
The position is challenging and well-qualified candidates typically would attract higher salaries elsewhere. Nelson says he is enlisting the help of the Council of the Great City Schools and former Sanger Unified Superintendent Matt Navo, a noted special ed expert, in the search.
“The stakes are high, no doubt,” Nelson says. “Our director has to come with extensive special ed training.”
Budget Reflects Values, Doesn’t Guarantee Success
You can tell a lot about an organization by examining its budget. The black type on the page speaks volumes about values and priorities. In political terms, the budget is where the rubber hits the road.
But real improvement also requires assembling an expert management team, properly supporting those on the front lines of this very difficult work, and communicating effectively with special ed families.
Acting on Report’s Recommendations
You might remember that the Council of the Great City Schools’ top-to-bottom evaluation of special ed attributed many shortcomings to serious organizational flaws and cumbersome hiring procedures. Vacancies made Fresno Unified’s workload levels so high that effective student support and instruction were difficult, the report stated.
In addition, managers have clearly failed to execute Nelson’s order last year to better engage special ed families. A draft copy of proposed changes to the Community Advisory Committee bylaws shows now-monthly meetings sliced to four a year, and the quorum for voting cut from 60% to 40% of committee members. The district should be growing this committee not sentencing it to irrelevance.
Clearly, with board approval, solid funding will be in place. The challenge is ensuring this new investment produces a special education program that everyone in Fresno Unified — including taxpayers — is proud of.
Bill McEwen is news director and columnist for GV Wire. He joined GV Wire in August 2017 after 37 years at The Fresno Bee. With The Bee, he served as Opinion Editor, City Hall reporter, Metro columnist, sports columnist and sports editor through the years. His work has been frequently honored by the California Newspapers Publishers Association, including authoring first-place editorials in 2015 and 2016. Bill and his wife, Karen, are proud parents of two adult sons, and they have two grandsons. You can contact Bill at 559-492-4031 or at Send an Email

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Anita
April 30, 2019 at 5:32 pm
What about Physical therapy? Not one mention of physical therapists, currently there are zero and many Orthopedic Impaired students would benefit greatly in their education. The District has “Move Rooms” on some campuses but teachers are left to figure it out. Isn’t that a credential/license issue? My daughter has been with FUSD Special Education for 18 years (since she was 3), I know what I’m talking about. Just try FUSD.
Joe Barron
May 1, 2019 at 3:10 pm
Have you considered writing into the IEP 3rd Party PT? If the district lacks the capacity to provide a service, but it is appropriate, it is within your rights to request a 3rd party vendor provide service, and at district expense. It is in their Local Plan. I am pretty sure. My name is on it.
Joe Barron
May 1, 2019 at 3:28 pm
There is this notion called Compensitory Education Services. check the link https://www.wrightslaw.com/blog/failure-to-provide-fape-alj-orders-compensatory-ed-directed-by-parents-ca/
PISSED OFF
April 30, 2019 at 5:43 pm
This wasn’t a surprise. This was the same crap plan managers had two years ago. So much for getting input from staff members and being transparent and making meaningful change.
CAC Member
May 1, 2019 at 8:13 am
The following quote is a farce:
“We’re excited about what we’ve put together. Some people were asking, ‘Why are you delaying the special ed budget?’ We’ve been working hard on it and collaborating with (the Fresno Teachers Association), and board members. We wanted to be able to thread the needle.” — Superintendent Bob Nelson
The district, the board and FTA were collaborating but not Community Advisory Committee (CAC)! At a February CAC meeting Brian Beck (FUSD Asst Superintendent SPED) said that SPED was working on a budget and that SPED would bring it before CAC to get public comments, then in March’s CAC meeting SPED said that they were translating the budget into Spanish in order for members of CAC to be able to read and comment, and then in April’s CAC meeting SPED said that they never said or promised anything but provided proposed “new” CAC by laws. The district has changed faces but not practices. The district takes public money but does not want public involvement in their processes even when the law/ed code require it!
Joe Barron
May 1, 2019 at 3:16 pm
Agreed. The April meeting smacked of an agenda that was to shift parity from community stakeholders to District Administration through the providing of misstatements and falsehoods. During the Parent Community Forum, Ms. Butler would not let district personnel who had knowledge of issues being questioned respond, and they nor would she address the serious nature of the fact that she was breaching a settlement that was negotiated between SPED, the Secondary Office, and a Complainant who filed a Williams Complaint and mediated by the Parent Ombudsman.
Upset
November 26, 2019 at 7:49 pm
As a current SDC teacher in fusd, things have not improved. My case load has raised significantly this year without additional paraprofessionals. I love my job. But this treatment can’t continue. I’m also a parent of a child in sped. It is disheartening to watch from the trenches what is happening. I work my tail off. It’s Thanksgiving break and I’m entering data and working on one of my IEPs. This isn’t fair to my family! Our students are suffering from impacted classrooms. When will enough be enough?