Here’s A Leaked Memo From the NJ DOE’s Assistant Commissioner When She Directed Special Education in Asbury Park.

The memo below is from the New Jersey Department of Education’s Assistant Commissioner of Student Services, Carolyn Marano. It was written while she was Director of Special Education at Asbury Park Public Schools. In both positions she was hired by Lamont Repollet, first in his position as Superintendent of Asbury Park and then as NJ’s Education Commissioner.

It all points to a disturbing pattern of leadership that undermines the academic trajectory of children with disabilities.

This memo (with names redacted) is personal to me because I am the mom of a son with special needs. If we lived in Asbury Park, his educational journey would have been far worse. Why? It’s not the staff; in fact, the Asbury Park Child Study Team members and special education staffers (both former and current) whom I’ve spoken to are devoted to children with disabilities, strive to meet their needs, and desire to follow state and federal law. But their efforts were stymied by Carolyn Marano. This memo is not the whole story, only an emblem of what went on in Asbury Park and now is occurring at the New Jersey Department of Education.

First read the memo:


Now I’ll translate. Marano is informing Child Study Team members (the group of specialists who, with parents of a child with disabilities, comprise the committee that creates Individualized Education Plans [IEP’s]) that “no transportation will be provided” to schools, except “for those who are most disabled” (whatever that means). But according to state statute, Marano can’t restrict transportation services, or any other service or therapy that the child is eligible for. See 6A:27-1.4, which states, 

Transportation shall be provided to public school students who reside remote from their assigned school of attendance, nonpublic school students who reside remote from their school of attendance and meet the eligibility criteria of N.J.A.C. 6A:27-2.2, and special education students who reside remote from their assigned school or who require transportation services in accordance with their individualized education program (IEP).

In addition, no changes to IEP’s can be made without parent consent, including changes in transportation services. In fact, any change in an IEP requires a meeting of the Child Study Team and the presence of the most important members of the Child Study Team, the child’s parents. From New Jersey Department of Education’s booklet called “Parental Rights in Special Education:”

How are decisions made about my child’s special education needs?
Decisions regarding your child’s special education needs are made at meetings. As the parent
of a child who has or may have a disability, you have the right to participate in meetings
regarding:
■ Identification (decision to evaluate);
■ Evaluation (nature and scope of assessment procedures);
■ Classification (determination of whether your child is eligible for special education and related services);
■ Development and review of your child’s individualized education program (IEP);
■ Educational placement of your child; and
■ Reevaluation of your child.
You are considered a member of the multi­disciplinary team of qualified persons who meet
to make these determinations and develop your child’s individualized education program (IEP).

Marano continues in the memo,”There is no ESY available to students, except for the most disabled.” ESY is shorthand for “Extended School Year,” which is provided for students with disabilities who might regress during the summer. This is another service written into IEP’s. Whether or not a child is eligible for special education services during the summer is a decision made by the Child Study Team. Marano is violating statute here in two ways: first, by eliminating ESY — district-wide! —  and, two, telling her staff to change IEP’s without parent consent.

Next Marano writes, “related services are determined by you, not the related services professionals…and provide students with only what they need.” Actually, decisions regarding related services — speech, occupational, and physical therapies, social skills training, etc. — are made in consultation with the related services professionals and the parents of the child. No Director can issue orders like this.

“All students should be going to their neighborhood school.” Hmm. In my local school district, self-contained classrooms for children with, say, autism are in several elementary schools but not all of them. According to state and federal disability law, a child must be placed in a classroom that meets his or her needs. If the neighborhood school can’t provide the necessary services to meet those needs — whether it’s a classroom with teachers certified in Applied Behavior Analysis (the most successful approach for educating children with autism) or a building with an occupational therapist (which not all Asbury Park buildings have) — then the child can’t be placed in “their neighborhood school.” And, anyway, placement, as cited in the Parental Rights excerpt above, is a decision reached with the entire Child Study Team and, most importantly, the parents.

“All buildings have an array of services.” Actually, in Asbury Park they don’t. For example, I’ve been told by several sources that the middle school, at least during Marano’s tenure, had no occupational therapist. She’s just making stuff up now.

“All IEP’s need to be reviewed by me before finalization.” Of course the Director of Special Education has the power to review all IEP’s. In fact, he or she should. But here’s the thing: She can’t make changes without calling a full IEP meeting with the parents and all related professionals. And, really, she can’t make changes at all: The Case Manager (the head of the Child Study Team) has the power to make decision about services without consulting the Director.

*******************************************************

This is probably more than you wanted to know about the development of IEP’s and the power of parents in the process. So here’s the point: What Marano did in Asbury Park — denying services to children with disabilities, interfering with statutory processes, cancelling district-wide required programs like Extended School Year — hurts children and families and violates the law. She didn’t operate with complete autonomy because she had a boss who both evaluated her annually and was accountable for her performance. That person was Lamont Repollet, now your State Education Commissioner. And now she’s his Student Services Director.

What the pair did in Asbury Park they can now implement statewide. And I’ve been told that the two still run Asbury Park long-distance.

That’s scary.

What else did Marano do in Asbury Park, one of NJ’s neediest and lowest-performing districts? There’s too much from too many sources for one blog post (and I’ve already written about some of this here) so let’s start with the youngest children, those enrolled in the Early Childhood Education Program. In our Abbott districts, of which Asbury Park is one, all children are entitled to free pre-school. Asbury Park’s program was a winner — literally — achieving “five stars” from a rating group called GrowNJKids. It was a big program — 450 3 and 4-year-olds — with an annual budget of $9 million from a revenue stream called “Fund 20.”

Then Repollet and Marano arrived.

In short order, Marano started diverting staff and supplies from the Early Childhood program, according to multiple sources. For example, the program had a full-time position called “Community Parent Involvement Specialist,” essential for an district where most parents are Latinx and low-income. That specialist was reassigned and her participation in the program sunk to 15 percent of her time (while still being paid through Fund 20). There were three secretaries and then one was moved to the Central Office. There were two nurses; one was moved to an elementary school (and still paid through Fund 20). There were three master teachers and one was moved to a Child Study Team. One source told me, “all Marano cared about was lowering the number of children identified as eligible for special education. She didn’t advocate for children and families. She did the opposite.”

At one point either Marano or someone appointed by her (one person said that Repollet was either present or involved) entered the storage rooms that held supplies for the Early Childhood program and raided it. “They went on a shopping spree,” a source told me. They took furniture, printers, cooking carts, toaster ovens and brought them to the Central Office. Then they changed the locks.

These were supplies purchased through Fund 20 appropriations.

Over the time that Repollet and Marano were there, another source told me, the quality of the once-five-star Early Childhood Program deteriorated. Enrollment decreased, so much that they cut ten classrooms. “Her main goal,” I was told, “was to not offer services in order to save money.” If a parent complained, that parent’s child would get compensatory services. Otherwise, children went without. (That’s what happened with Marano’s edict to cancel Extended School Year: The two parents who complained were offered extra services for their children once the school year began. The other children got nothing.) “She was banking on the fact that parents were afraid to complain,” a source said. “She preyed upon them.”

What did Superintendent Repollet do?, I asked.

Nothing.

Meanwhile at the State Department of Education, Carolyn Marano is continuing to eschew accountability, misallocate fundstransfer staff willy-nilly, and decimate staff morale.

Just like she did at Asbury Park. Nothing changes if nothing changes. And so we’ll wait.

Laura Waters

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