09-000710 Willeen R. Withers vs. Alachua County School Board
 Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Tuesday, October 13, 2009.


View Dockets  
Summary: The denial of wheelchair-bound teacher's request to remain in the same classroom was not a withdrawal of a reasonable handicap accommodation or disparate treatment under facts of this case.

1STATE OF FLORIDA

4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS

8WILLEEN R. WITHERS, )

12)

13Petitioner, )

15)

16vs. ) Case No. 09-0710

21)

22ALACHUA COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD, )

27)

28Respondent. )

30)

31RECOMMENDED ORDER

33Upon due notice, a disputed-fact hearing was held on

42June 17, 2009, in Gainesville, Florida, before Ella Jane P.

52Davis, a duly-assigned Administrative Law Judge of the Division

61of Administrative Hearings.

64APPEARANCES

65For Petitioner: Emily Moore, Esquire

70Florida Education Association

73300 East Park Avenue

77Tallahassee, Florida 32301

80For Respondent: Thomas L. Wittmer, Esquire

86Alachua County School Board

90620 East University Avenue

94Gainesville, Florida 32601

97STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE

101Whether Respondent Employer committed an unlawful

107employment practice against Petitioner on the basis of her

116handicap.

117PRELIMINARY STATEMENT

119On June 20, 2008, Petitioner filed a Charge of

128Discrimination/Complaint with the Florida Commission on Human

135Relations (FCHR). On June 5, 2009, FCHR issued a Notice of

146Determination: No Cause. Petitioner timely-filed a Petition

153for Relief, and the cause was referred to the Division of

164Administrative Hearings (DOAH) on or about February 10, 2009.

173DOAH's file reflects all pleadings, orders and notices

181intervening before final hearing on June 17, 2009.

189At hearing, official recognition was taken of portions of

198the Code of Federal Regulations, provided to the undersigned in

208“hard copy.” Petitioner testified on her own behalf and

217presented the testimony of Khalilah Pinkney, Shirley Ann Brown,

226Evelyn Lipham, and Dr. Elizabeth LeClear, and had Petitioner's

235Exhibits numbered 1-28, admitted in evidence, including the

243depositions of Dr. Lise Fox, Karen Fisher, and Dr. Charles E.

254Levy. Respondent presented the oral testimony of Dr. Elizabeth

263LeClear, Dr. Danielle Franco, Dr. Kenneth J. Osfield,

271Sandra Medeiros, David R. Mathis, Edward Gable, Joan Longstreth,

280and Cathy Black. Respondent had Exhibits numbered R1-R8 (all

289composites) and R9, Petitioner's deposition, admitted in

296evidence.

297Upon joint motion, the undersigned toured relevant parts of

306Terwilliger Elementary School and its campus in the company of

316both counsel.

318FCHR failed in its obligation to provide a means of

328preserving the record, but the parties had paid for a court

339reporter, and a Transcript was filed on June 30, 2009.

349Each party timely-filed a Proposed Recommended Order on or

358before August 10, 2009, and each proposal has been considered in

369the preparation of this Recommended Order.

375Unless otherwise indicated, all references herein to

382Florida Statutes are to the 2007 codification.

389FINDINGS OF FACT

3921. The parties have stipulated that: Respondent is a

401public school district and is the employer of Petitioner at

411Terwilliger Elementary School in Gainesville, Florida.

4172. Petitioner has taught at Terwilliger for the past 12

427years. Petitioner’s evaluations have consistently met or

434exceeded Respondent’s performance standards. For 11 years,

441until the 2008-2009 school year, her classroom was in Building

451Two, a multi-classroom structure on the northwest corner of the

461school. The instant controversy revolves around Petitioner's

468transfer to a detached, "portable" classroom for the 2008-2009

477school year.

4793. The parties have stipulated that: Petitioner, a

487teacher of Pre-K Exceptional Student Education (ESE) special

495needs students, has 36 years experience. Her classes comprise

504from seven to 14 students, ages three, four, and five. She has

516mobility impairment and uses a wheelchair.

5224. Petitioner has post-polio syndrome, which limits her

530ability to walk. She uses a Pride Quantum 6,000 Power Chair,

542which the parties have stipulated is a rechargeable battery-

551powered wheelchair.

5535. The District is pro-active in hiring and retaining

562qualified teachers who happen to be handicapped, and makes

571efforts to accommodate those handicaps. The credible evidence

579is that while there may be more severely handicapped teachers

589employed by the District, there are no other permanently

598wheelchair-bound teachers at Terwilliger and no teacher in the

607District fits her limitations, qualifications, and assignments

614point-for-point.

6156. At the present time, Terwilliger has 89 employees, a

625faculty of 45 teachers and 560 students in Head Start and Pre-K

637through fifth grade, from age three through 13.

6457. Terwilliger has two Pre-K teachers, one of whom is

655Petitioner.

6568. The parties have stipulated that: Petitioner currently

664has an adult paraprofessional (aide) in the classroom with her.

6749. Petitioner sometimes has had two aides, depending on

683the needs of the children in her class. At the present time in

696the 2008-2009 school year, she has only eight students in the

707portable. If the enrollment in Petitioner's class reaches eight

716to 10 students, a second aide might be necessary. Aides work

727with Petitioner and assist Petitioner by helping the children

736during the school day.

74010. Sandra Medeiros, the principal at Terwilliger from

7482000 through 2006, had planned to move both Petitioner and the

759other Pre-K teacher to self-contained portable classrooms

76699-208L and 99-214L, in order for them to be nearer to the Head

779Start classrooms. The goal was to have the Head Start children

790interact more with the Pre-K children, so as to help the Pre-K

802students converse more (improve language skills) and so as to

812foster regular classroom behaviors. This process is called

820“inclusion” and is a respected educational goal on both the

830State and Federal levels. The move was planned for the 2006-

8412007 school year.

84411. At some point, Ms. Medeiros discussed the move with

854Petitioner. In Spring 2006, Principal Medeiros had a ramp added

864to portable classroom 99-214L and had the bathroom enlarged with

874handrails, so as to render the new location accessible for

884Petitioner. Additional wiring was installed for a refrigerator

892and microwave.

89412. However, Ms. Medeiros was transferred from Terwilliger

902in June 2006. At that time, Petitioner had not yet moved to the

915portable.

91613. The new principal, Dr. Elizabeth LeClear, did not make

926any changes for her first school year at Terwilliger.

93514. At Petitioner's annual evaluation conference in May or

944June 2008, Dr. LeClear explained to Petitioner that Petitioner

953would be moving to self-contained portable classroom 99-214L,

961located on the central east side of campus.

96915. On June 20, 2008, Petitioner filed her Charge of

979Discrimination with FCHR, alleging a denial of reasonable

987accommodations and disparate treatment in the terms and

995conditions of employment.

99816. On July 10, 2008, Petitioner completed a self-referral

1007form and submitted it to Respondent, suggesting as a reasonable

1017accommodation that Petitioner be permitted to remain in her

1026current classroom assignment in Building Two.

103217. Dr. LeClear relocated Petitioner and 25 other teachers

1041in order to have the school organized by grade level, with every

1053class in close proximity to the other classes and teachers of

1064that grade level. She intended for the teacher "teams" to be

1075together, in order to save time with student transitions to

1085reading groups and to assist with teacher supervision. She also

1095wanted the school to follow the District's Inclusion Model.

110418. Respondent District permits and expects principals to

1112change the use of spaces to meet current needs of their school,

1124including fluctuating enrollments and evolving programs.

113019. Terwilliger has six kindergarten classes. Those

1137classes are now located in Building Two. The centrium, which is

1148part of Building Two, is being converted to a computer and

1159reading lab.

116120. The portable assigned to Petitioner and her current

1170eight students meets all mandatory standards for Pre-K

1178classrooms including, but not limited to, its providing 35

1187square feet per child.

119121. Other Florida school districts operate Pre-K classes

1199in portables.

120122. There are portables in use all over the school

1211district. Like Terwilliger, almost every school uses one or

1220more portables.

122223. The pending move to the portable was stressful for

1232Petitioner. Some of her stress and concern arose because she

1242did not get written notification of the move until she had

1253already left for vacation in June 2008.

126024. The parties have stipulated that: Petitioner was on

1269approved medical leave from August 11, 2008, through January 4,

12792009. She returned from such leave in January 2009.

128825. Not all the items Petitioner had acquired over the

1298years and which had occupied parts of Building Two would fit in

1310Petitioner's portable. Therefore, the move required that

1317Petitioner select what she was taking with her and discard or

1328store the remainder.

133126. During the summer and fall of 2008, Dr. LeClear

1341offered the help of the custodial staff to assist Petitioner in

1352packing for the move to the portable and in physically moving

1363the boxes.

136527. Eventually, some of Petitioner’s items were taken to

1374the portable; some were stored at Petitioner’s home; others were

1384stored on Terwilliger’s campus; and still others were stored at

1394another school.

139628. Petitioner has not specifically requested more storage

1404space than is provided in her new portable classroom, but if her

1416class size increases to ten children, the administration would

1425be willing to work with her on some compromise regarding

1435storage.

143629. Principal LeClear and Petitioner have had

1443disagreements about what materials Petitioner may move from

1451their ultimate storage spots into her portable classroom. At

1460least once, the Principal has offered to go to the other school

1472with Petitioner to reach a mutual agreement on those items, but

1483Petitioner has not accepted her offer. At least once, the

1493Principal did not respond to Petitioner’s written request

1501concerning other items, and there is no clear explanation for

1511the Principal's lack of response. However, these and similar

1520situations are stressors amounting to simple miscommunications

1527and misunderstandings but which do not reflect a deliberate

1536failure of the Principal or the District to reasonably

1545accommodate a handicap.

154830. Petitioner wants to return to her old classroom in

1558Building Two and to use an area in Building Two called the

"1570centrium" as she has done for 12 years.

157831. The crux of Petitioner’s position is that she feels

1588the portable “houses” her, but does not accommodate her in

1598providing the quality program for her special needs students

1607that she has taken pride in providing throughout her previous

1617years at Terwilliger. This concern was echoed by parents and

1627others.

162832. Dr. Lise Fox, a professor in the College of Behavioral

1639and Community Sciences at the University of South Florida, is a

1650long-time friend of Petitioner. For years, Dr. Fox has used

1660Petitioner and Petitioner’s Building Two classroom as exemplars

1668for her students training to teach special needs children.

1677Dr. Fox deposed that while Petitioner has run a model program

1688for years, Petitioner’s new environment (the portable) could be

1697deficient by national standards for Individuals with

1704Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) and ESE students.

1711Specifically, Dr. Fox was concerned that without the centrium,

1720Petitioner has no indoor play area for development of her

1730students’ gross motor skills.

173433. Dr. Fox could not say that any Americans with

1744Disabilities Act (ADA) requirements were not being fulfilled in

1753the portable, but she opined that the difference between what

1763Petitioner was able to do as a teacher in Building Two and what

1776she is able to do as a teacher in the portable amounts to the

1790difference between a high quality Pre-K ESE program based on

1800national professional standards and a program that is merely

1809adequate by Federal and State requirements/standards. However,

1816neither Dr. Fox nor anyone else espousing the foregoing view,

1826were able to credibly state that Petitioner would not be able to

1838fulfill her job requirements or pass her professional

1846evaluations under her changed circumstances.

185134. Building Two was in existence when Petitioner first

1860came to Terwilliger. It was designed for early childhood

1869education, which includes Pre-K and kindergarten. It is

1877accessible under ADA standards. For several reasons, Petitioner

1885considers Building Two more accommodating to her handicap and

1894better for her ESE students than her portable.

190235. Building Two contains several classrooms plus the

1910of 805 square feet. Petitioner's classroom in the portable has

1920an area of 824 square feet.

192636. The centrium was next to Petitioner’s classroom in

1935Building Two. Petitioner did not use the centrium for

1944instruction, but she sometimes used it for occupational and

1953physical therapy and as space where volunteers could work one-

1963on-one with individual children. The other Pre-K teacher also

1972used that area on occasion for similar projects.

198037. Sometime in the past, Petitioner had received a grant

1990to acquire stimulating educational and play materials for her

1999classes. Technically, the items acquired at that time belong to

2009Respondent District, but Petitioner properly retained them in

2017her Building Two classroom, in its storeroom, and in the

2027centrium, and utilized them under the terms of the grant. She

2038also received District commendations for her acquisition of

2046these items. However, after the grant ended, she continued to

2056acquire more and more items on her own, to the extent that she

2069had to clear paths in her classroom for her wheelchair to move

2081through.

208238. Her last year in Building Two, Petitioner used the

2092centrium mostly for storing a myriad of Pre-K toys and plastic

2103play equipment, many of which were not part of the curriculum,

2114but all of which had been acquired by Petitioner through grants,

2125garage sales, and donations. Some of the toys were dangerous,

2135due to deterioration or breakage. The sheer quantity of the

2145material in that space concerned two successive principals, and

2154the fire inspector.

215739. A small office was next to Petitioner’s former

2166classroom in Building Two, as was a storage room, but neither

2177was being used for instructional purposes at the time Petitioner

2187was relocated to the portable. A kitchen space was next to

2198Petitioner’s former classroom, but its stove had been

2206disconnected for safety reasons years before Petitioner’s 2008

2214transfer. It was not demonstrated that a working kitchen is

2224necessary for any of the curricula Petitioner teaches. There is

2234no reason Petitioner cannot “socialize” children through food

2242preparation/play without actually cooking in either Building Two

2250or her portable, but the portable has been wired for a microwave

2262and refrigerator.

226440. The student restroom in Petitioner’s previous

2271classroom had a shower area and a washer and dryer. The shower,

2283washer, and dryer were certainly convenient for dealing with

2292small children, but they are not required features of a Pre-K

2303program. At Terwilliger, the nurse’s station has a tub and

2313shower facility that can be used if one is needed.

232341. Petitioner’s Building Two classroom had a changing

2331table; the portable does not. It is unclear whether Petitioner

2341herself used the changing table in her old classroom. Pre-K

2351students may be too large/heavy for that type of assistance. It

2362is possible, but not proven, that Petitioner's paraprofessional

2370could provide that type of assistance. Petitioner’s current

2378class has smaller sized children than those in her team

2388teacher’s Pre-K class, but Petitioner did not prove that she can

2399lift a child of either size onto a changing table from her

2411wheelchair.

241242. It is good practice to ask parents to provide a change

2424of clothes for their Pre-K child to change into and for the

2436school to send home the soiled clothes. It is not “best

2447practice” to change a Pre-K child standing up, but it is a

2459permissible practice.

246143. The Building Two classroom had a restroom with “itty

2471bitty” child-sized facilities and mid-range facilities. That

2478restroom also had bars for little and mid-size toilets. The

2488portable does not have the foregoing accommodations. The State

2497of Florida does not require that a Pre-K classroom have a

2508restroom, but the National Association for the Education of

2517Young Children has a standard for a restroom being available

2527within 40 feet of a Pre-K classroom, and either child-sized

2537fixtures or a stepstool for the children to use adult-sized

2547features. The portable meets these requirements.

255344. Dr. Fox felt the potty-training facilities in the

2562portable’s rest room were inferior to those in Building Two, but

2573she acknowledged the portable’s restroom would serve if there

2582were steps to the wash bowl, which there were, and if a child’s

2595potty adapter were added.

259945. The distance from Petitioner’s Building Two classroom

2607to an adult restroom is about 70 feet.

261546. The restroom within the portable to which Petitioner

2624is now assigned is fully functional for Petitioner. It meets

2634ADA standards, but the arrangement of one handrail is not

2644optimal for Petitioner. Because Petitioner lifts with both arms

2653instead of with her legs, a railing on each side of the toilet,

2666instead of railings beside and behind the toilet, would be more

2677convenient for her than the present railing arrangement.

2685Rearrangement of the rear railing to one side of the toilet

2696might be a formidable job, given the placement of the toilet,

2707but that has yet to be determined, because Petitioner did not

2718ask to have the rear railing moved from the back to the side

2731prior to filing her Charge of Discrimination.

273847. Petitioner’s assertion or suggestion that, contrary to

2746school policy and safety planning, when she worked in Building

2756Two, she usually parked in an area to which she was not assigned

2769is irrelevant to her allegations herein of disparate treatment

2778and failure to accommodate.

278248. The distance from Petitioner’s former designated

2789handicapped parking space to Petitioner’s former classroom in

2797Building Two is 260 feet.

280249. The distance from Petitioner's current designated

2809handicapped parking space to the portable she now occupies is

2819470 feet, but it connects directly, via sidewalks. Most, if not

2830all, of these sidewalks are under cover.

283750. Sidewalks in the vicinity of Petitioner’s portable are

2846arguably less smooth than those utilized around Building Two,

2855but there is not a significant difference. Once, one of

2865Petitioner's wheelchair wheels got caught on, or near, one of

2875the sidewalks near the portable, and once Petitioner drove her

2885wheelchair into a grate, but each time she was quickly

2895extricated by other teachers and/or administrative staff.

290251. At the present time, Petitioner’s portable has two

2911doors and two ramps, one of which is covered to protect her from

2924inclement weather. The type of door handles on the portable

2934were changed from knobs to levers. These handles meet ADA

2944requirements. Petitioner thinks the doors would be more

2952convenient for her if they opened in, rather than out. If they

2964opened in, it is possible that teaching space would be lost, and

2976it is unclear whether exterior doors opening inward could still

2986meet both ADA and Fire Code standards.

299352. Respondent’s ADA expert, Dr. Kenneth J. Osfield, did a

3003site evaluation and testified that there are two exits out of

3014Petitioner’s portable for fire safety. This feature, the

3022walkways to the ramps, the ramps with handrails, the

3031entrances/exits, and the internal classroom space meet ADA

3039requirements, and, as previously stated, the restroom is already

3048handicapped-accessible for Petitioner per the ADA.

305453. Dr. Osfield agreed with one of Petitioner’s concerns

3063which was also shared by Dr. Fox. Therefore, he suggested that

3074Respondent place fencing around the base of each portable so

3084that children could not crawl under them. He further suggested

3094that Petitioner remove her decorative items from one ramp and

3104the entrances/exits so that she could maneuver more easily.

311354. In assessing the interior teaching space, the ADA

3122expert found that Petitioner’s space in the portable was nicely

3132decorated and also was a nice learning environment, due to

3142Petitioner’s decorations and its general set-up. However, while

3150her arrangement is attractive and acceptable to the School and

3160District administrations, it presents access problems which are

3168not presented by the open floor plan utilized in Petitioner’s

3178team teacher’s smaller portable.

318255. Petitioner’s placement or angling of a table in her

3192classroom immediately outside the portable’s restroom, and her

3200storage of other items in the restroom (large garbage cans,

3210chairs, boxes, etc.), make it difficult for her to maneuver her

3221wheelchair there. Dr. Osfield was able to suggest ways to solve

3232these problems, but they would require Petitioner’s cooperation.

324056. Charles E. Levy, M.D., the parent of a child who had

3252been one of Petitioner’s students seven years ago, deposed that,

3262as a parent, he would be less comfortable and secure with

3273regards to his child’s learning and safety if his child were

3284educated in the current portable classroom than he had been when

3295his child was educated in Building Two. However, Dr. Levy

3305observed only Petitioner’s portable, not the other Pre-K

3313portable, and even he attributed Petitioner’s mobility problems

3321in her portable classroom to significant physical barriers

3329caused by her arrangement of the furniture.

333657. Petitioner has chosen to retain more personal material

3345and equipment than her team teacher has. The other Pre-K

3355teacher has borrowed some of Petitioner’s toys and learning

3364devices and found them useful over the years, but she has not

3376consistently used the quantity of items that Petitioner has.

338558. Petitioner’s teaching/learning material and equipment

3391appears to the administration to be more material and equipment

3401than is reasonably necessary to teach her class. It exceeds

3411published guidelines, which some educators, including

3417Petitioner, think is good, and which other educators think is

3427not so good.

343059. Recycling learning toys and equipment throughout the

3438year and storing those not in use so as to keep children

3450interested in them when they are brought out again has merit.

3461Also, learning through new and innovative play has merit.

3470However, there is no credible evidence that Petitioner’s

3478handicap requires that she either store or display such a large

3489quantity of toys and equipment as she has chosen to retain.

3500Fewer items or storage of some of her items would increase her

3512mobility and render her more comfortable in the portable.

352160. Petitioner’s team teacher in the other, smaller

3529portable has a less stimulating classroom but it operates

3538functionally, and she and her students have been successful. 1

354861. No standard tests suggest that the students taught in

3558the clear and functional portable are any less successful than

3568those taught by Petitioner in the decorative and cluttered

3577portable or vice-versa .

358162. Petitioner’s 2008-2009 school year students in the

3589portable have evidenced the same amount of overall educational

3598growth as did her 2007-2008 class in Building Two.

360763. Terwilliger has several playgrounds. From Building

3614Two, Petitioner regularly used the playground to the north of

3624that building: North Play Area No. One. The paved area outside

3635Building Two had been extended at Petitioner’s request several

3644years before, so that it would be accessible to two children

3655then enrolled who were wheelchair-bound. Petitioner also used

3663this area.

366564. Petitioner received a grant to put certain play items,

3675like riding toys, in the North Play Area, and apparently also

3686was commended for that initiative.

369165. In the year immediately preceding the instant

3699complaint, while in Building Two, Petitioner’s class used North

3708Play Area No. One, up to five times per week, and used the Head

3722Start Play Area No. Two, between two and three times per week as

3735part of the inclusion program.

374066. That year, Petitioner’s class used each playground

3748under the sole supervision of Petitioner’s paraprofessional or

3756with the paraprofessional present in the sandy area with them

3766and with Petitioner supervising from a nearby sidewalk or the

3776paved area. Petitioner raised no complaints about this system

3785before the move to the portable.

379167. Both playgrounds are appropriate for Petitioner’s

3798students. However, the Head Start playground now assigned to

3807her portable allows Petitioner’s students the

3813interaction/inclusion that the School’s and District’s

3819administration desire.

382168. The distance from Petitioner’s Building Two classroom

3829to Head Start Play Area No. Two is 460 feet. From Petitioner’s

3841portable classroom to the Head Start Play Area No. Two is 280

3853feet.

385469. Petitioner has access to a third playground, the

3863“intermediate” or “school” playground, that has a sidewalk

3871approach, where she can get closer to the children than she can

3883at the Head Start Playground, but the more credible evidence

3893supports her belief that she is now “assigned” to the Head Start

3905Playground due to the administration’s desire to foster

3913interaction between the two types of classes.

392070. Petitioner contended that her Head Start playground

3928assignment is inaccessible for her wheelchair. In this regard,

3937the greater weight of the evidence is that, using her

3947wheelchair, Petitioner cannot get directly into the sandy area

3956of either her old playground or the Head Start Playground.

396671. Dr. Levy has become Petitioner’s friend and adviser

3975with regard to wheelchair functionality. He is the Chief of

3985Rehabilitative Medicine at North Florida/South Georgia Veterans

3992Health System. In his opinion, Petitioner’s Pride Quantum 6000

4001wheelchair should work adequately for Petitioner over most

4009grassy areas in sunny weather, but it will become bogged down in

4021sandy or boggy areas.

402572. On the date of hearing, Dr. LeClear also was

4035temporarily using a power wheelchair due to a recent injury. In

4046her wheelchair, she has reached the Head Start Playground on the

4057grassy area and the hard sand, but she conceded that her

4068wheelchair will not go through the soft sand. She feels the

4079sidewalk edge is sufficiently near for Petitioner to instruct

4088the students with a paraprofessional closer to them. The

4097perimeter of the school grounds is fenced, so child escape is

4108not a viable issue.

411273. Petitioner’s old playground had sidewalks surrounding

4119it and a paved area that allowed Petitioner’s wheelchair to get

4130closer to its outside play equipment, possibly at a better

4140auditory angle, and the Head Start playground has a ring of

4151grass between the sandy play area and the sidewalk where

4161Petitioner must stop her wheelchair. However, in either

4169location, Petitioner would have to rely on her paraprofessional

4178to be with the children on the sandy surface that actually

4189constitutes the playground area, because Petitioner's wheelchair

4196does not move well through grass and/or sand.

420474. Dr. Fox and Petitioner deplored Petitioner’s inability

4212to get within three feet of her students on the Head Start

4224Playground. Although Petitioner particularly laments a loss of

4232educational opportunity because she is not able to “pour sand”

4242with her students under the new playground constrictions, it

4251appears that there are sand and/or rice tables for pouring sand

4262and/or rice located between two sidewalks near the base of one

4273of the ramps leading to her portable and that Petitioner’s

4283wheelchair can access children and pouring activities there.

429175. Any further modifications to either playground would

4299change their character from “playground” to something else, and

4308more concrete might create a danger for the children climbing on

4319equipment near or above it.

432476. Terwilliger’s Head Start playground is superior to

4332some of the Pre-K playgrounds at other schools because it has a

4344cover from the sun and more activities. It is suitable for the

4356children involved; meets Pre-K standards; has newer equipment

4364than the other playground favored by Petitioner; has fewer

4373“pinch points”; and can be used by the special needs children

4384now enrolled. The very fact that it has a larger sandy area

4396than Petitioner’s previous playground seems to be a safety

4405factor for the children involved.

441077. The District had issued a February 6, 2007, written

4420reprimand to Petitioner with regard to her having instructed a

4430paraprofessional to allow a child with a traumatic brain injury

4440to play on a jungle gym in one of the playgrounds. This

4452reprimand was required by professional practices standards

4459simply because a complaint had been made. The issue did not

4470revolve around which playground Petitioner was using; it

4478revolved around unfamiliarity of those on the scene with the

4488particular child’s Individualized Education Plan (IEP). It was

4496an isolated incident and not representative of Petitioner’s

4504general teaching abilities, personal responsibilities, or

4510professional track record. However, the incident suggests that

4518anything but sandy soil or rubber shreds for a playground can

4529increase the danger inherent in any playground.

453678. Fire drills, tornado or inclement weather alerts, and

4545any other untoward incident might require evacuation of the

4554portable classroom. Such evacuations are possible for

4561Petitioner in her wheelchair. Under fire evacuation

4568circumstances, Petitioner may have to stay on a hard surface

4578nearer to the school than her students do, because of her

4589wheelchair. There is no credible evidence that this situation

4598puts Petitioner's students, who are accompanied and overseen by

4607a paraprofessional, or puts Petitioner, in greater danger than

4616any of them were in whenever they had to evacuate from Building

4628Two.

462979. Prior to litigation, Petitioner had never specifically

4637requested that the sidewalks be extended closer to her new

4647playground, that additional fencing be provided to keep children

4656from “escaping” the school ground, that the District grade or

4666otherwise alter the playground approaches for her, or that her

4676evacuation routes be altered. Therefore, Respondent cannot be

4684held liable for a failure to accommodate on these issues.

4694CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

469780. The Division of Administrative Hearings has

4704jurisdiction of the subject matter and the parties to this

4714cause, pursuant to Sections 120.569 and 120.57(1), Florida

4722Statutes (2008).

472481. Section 760.10, Florida Statutes, provides, in

4731pertinent part:

4733(1) It is an unlawful employment practice

4740for an employer:

4743(a) To discharge or to fail or refuse to

4752hire any individual with respect to

4758compensation, terms, conditions, or

4762privileges of employment because of such

4768individuals race, color, religion, sex,

4773national origin, age, handicap , or marital

4779status. (Emphasis supplied.)

478282. Respondent qualifies as an "employer" as defined in

4791Section 760.02(7), Florida Statutes. Case law establishes that

4799where an employer knows of a handicap, it must make reasonable

4810accommodations so as to hire and retain a handicapped person.

482083. Petitioner qualifies as a “handicapped person”. She

4828asserts that the employer herein has discriminated against her

4837through disparate treatment and by a withdrawal of reasonable

4846accommodations for her disability.

485084. The shifting burdens of proof in discrimination cases

4859have been extensively examined in Department of Corrections v.

4868Chandler , 582 So. 2d 1183 (Fla. 1st DCA 1991):

4877Pursuant to the [Texas Department of

4883Community Affairs v.] Burdine, [450 U.S.

4889248, 101 S. Ct. 1089, 67 L. Ed. 2d 207

4899(1981)] formula, the employee has the

4905initial burden of establishing a prima facie

4912case of intentional discrimination, which

4917once established raises a presumption that

4923the employer discriminated against the

4928employee. If the presumption arises, the

4934burden shifts to the employer to present

4941sufficient evidence to raise a genuine issue

4948of fact as to whether the employer

4955discriminated against the employee. The

4960employer may do this by stating a

4967legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for the

4972employment decision, a reason which is

4978clear, reasonably specific, and worthy of

4984credence. Because the employer has the

4990burden of production, not of persuasion,

4996which remains with the employee, it is not

5004required to persuade the trier of fact that

5012its decision was actually motivated by the

5019reason given. If the employer satisfied its

5026burden, the employee must then persuade the

5033fact finder that the proffered reason for

5040the employment decision was a pretext for

5047intentional discrimination. The employee

5051may satisfy this burden of showing directly

5058that a discriminatory reason more likely

5064than not motivated the decision, or

5070indirectly by showing that the proffered

5076reason for the employment decision is not

5083worthy of belief. If such proof is

5090adequately presented, the employee satisfies

5095his or her ultimate burden of demonstrating

5102by a preponderance of the evidence that he

5110or she has been a victim of intentional

5118discrimination.

511985. Petitioner asserts that by moving her to the portable

5129classroom environment and assigning her to the Head Start

5138playground, Respondent has taken actions adverse to her

5146employment and has thereby withdrawn reasonable accommodations,

5153and that Respondent’s proffered reasons for the relocation of

5162her classroom and reassignment of her children’s playground are

5171pre-textual.

517286. Herein, no evidence was presented that Petitioner was

5181treated differently from her co-workers because of her handicap.

5190Indeed, in the summer of 2008, a majority of Terwilliger’s

5200teachers were moved to different classrooms. The school's other

5209Pre-K teacher, who is not disabled, was also assigned to a

5220portable classroom that is actually smaller than Petitioner’s

5228portable but which is substantially its equivalent.

523587. Respondent re-assigned 25 of the school's 41 faculty

5244members for the 2008-2009 school year for functional,

5252educational reasons. The new assignments are designed to permit

5261members of each grade level team to be in close proximity so as

5274to facilitate student transactions and interactions. Petitioner

5281and others were relocated so that the classrooms in Building Two

5292could be used to house six kindergarten classes and so that the

5304centrium could be converted into a reading lab and computer

5314center.

531588. Petitioner was moved from a classroom that is ADA-

5325compliant to another classroom that is ADA-compliant. Her new

5334classroom has 824 square feet to the old classroom's 805 square

5345feet. Her new classroom also has an ADA-compliant restroom

5354within it. Before the move, she went to another playground up

5365to five times per week and to the Head Start playground two to

5378three times per week, and now she goes exclusively to the Head

5390Start playground between five and eight times per week. Pouring

5400sand may have to be done in another location and a concrete slab

5413is no longer available to help her get as close to the children

5426on the Head Start playground as she could get to those on the

5439other playground, but Petitioner has the same paraprofessional

5447who performs the functions Petitioner has never been able to

5457perform in the sandy and boggy areas of any playground.

546789. Petitioner’s classroom is actually closer to the Head

5476Start playground than before, and use of the Head Start

5486playground supports the legitimate educational goal of

"5493inclusion."

549490. The only difference that could legitimately be called

5503less accommodating to Petitioner is that Petitioner's currently

5511assigned handicapped parking space is 210 feet further from her

5521portable than her old parking space was from her old classroom.

5532However, this change is offset by a direct, covered sidewalk.

5542Also, the evidence does not support a conclusion that any other

5553handicapped space would be closer to the new portable than the

5564one currently assigned to Petitioner. On balance, such a minor

5574inconvenience to Petitioner versus a more integrated physical

5582plant for both the entire student body and the educational staff

5593cannot constitute a failure to “reasonably accommodate”

5600Petitioner.

560191. Petitioner’s reassignment to a portable classroom is a

5610change of location only. She still has the same

5619paraprofessional aide in the classroom, teaches the same

5627curriculum, and has the same or a lesser number of Pre-K

5638students. The move does not involve any change in Petitioner’s

5648compensation, hours of work, or other terms of employment. There

5658are slight differences in her facilities, but that is all.

566892. The only accommodation Petitioner is willing to

5676consider is a return to her old classroom, but that would not

5688constitute a reasonable accommodation, because such an

5695accommodation would disrupt the entire functionality of

5702Terwilliger’s education system.

570593. The issue herein is not whether the portable classroom

5715provides a "Cadillac" education to pre-K ESE children.

"5723Excellence in education" is a goal with which laymen, as well

5734as educators, can identify, but it does not encompass

5743perfection. School systems have to deal with cramped, if not

5753wholly inadequate, budgets and seek "the biggest bang for their

5763buck," while at the same time complying with IDEA, ESE, and ADA,

5775among a myriad of other State and Federal laws.

578494. Nothing in the term "reasonable accommodation"

5791requires Respondent to provide precisely the work environment

5799Petitioner wants or to duplicate a work environment Petitioner

5808unilaterally feels is ideal. The term must be construed to mean

5819an accommodation that presently, or in the future, enables

5828Petitioner to perform the essential functions of her job. Wood

5838v. Green , 323 F.3d 1309 (11th Cir. 2003). A disabled employee

5849cannot force an employer to make a particular accommodation if

5859another reasonable accommodation is available and offered to the

5868employee. Llanes v. Sears Roebuck and Company , 46 F. Supp. 2d

58791300 (S.D. Fla. 1997). If the employer offers a reasonable

5889accommodation, its obligation is fulfilled. The change of

5897assignments/location herein does not prevent or newly inhibit

5905Petitioner from performing the essential functions of her job.

591495. Petitioner has failed to prove the third element of

5924her prima facie case -- that she suffered an adverse employment

5935action, or, alternatively, Respondent has provided valid, not

5943pre-textual, reasons for its employment decisions.

594996. Assuming arguendo , but not ruling, that Petitioner has

5958proven a prima facie case, she has not proven that Respondent’s

5969reasons for moving her to the portable were pretextual.

597897. As evidence that Respondent’s stated reasons for her

5987relocation are pretextual, Petitioner asserts that prior to the

5996move, others, particularly Principal LeClear, were frustrated

6003with the toys and “stuff” Petitioner had accumulated and left in

6014her Building Two classroom and the centrium; that the

6023measurements submitted in evidence comparing the two classrooms

6031are flawed because the centrium and other areas adjoining her

6041Building Two classroom were not included in those measurements;

6050and that Respondent offered, and had admitted in evidence, only

6060a single isolated letter of reprimand within Petitioner’s 12-

6069year career at Terwilliger.

607398. Petitioner is correct that the single letter of

6082reprimand is isolated. However, that reprimand was not offered

6091as one of Respondent’s reasons for relocating/reassigning

6098Petitioner to a portable. Respondent agrees that Petitioner is

6107an outstanding teacher.

611099. Respondent acknowledged that Petitioner sometimes used

6117the centrium but Respondent’s measurements of the classrooms

6125were performed by an appropriately ADA-qualified expert, and

6133Petitioner does not dispute the measurements of the respective

6142classrooms. These measurements were appropriately offered by

6149Respondent to demonstrate that the portable classroom meets ADA

6158requirements and to show how the portable’s space equates with

6168the space in Petitioner’s prior classroom.

6174100. As to the “stuff” issue, two principals’ and a fire

6185inspector's concerns over Petitioner's clutter were never

6192offered by Respondent as reasons for the school-wide classroom

6201reorganization, and it is unreasonable to speculate that such a

6211massive reorganization, together with the financing and creation

6219of a new computer and reading lab, would be undertaken just to

6231oust Petitioner, her equipment, and her materials from the

6240centrium. Assuming, arguendo , but not ruling, that such a

6249motive existed, the possession by Petitioner of such articles

6258was not proven to be essential to Petitioner's accomplishing her

6268job duties, and the Principal even found storage space for

6278Petitioner's articles.

6280101. Petitioner has not borne her ultimate burden of

6289proof.

6290RECOMMENDATION

6291Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of

6301Law, it is

6304RECOMMENDED that the Florida Commission on Human Relations

6312enter a Final Order dismissing the Petition for Relief and its

6323underlying Charge of Discrimination.

6327DONE AND ENTERED this 13th day of October, 2009, in

6337Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida.

6341ELLA JANE P. DAVIS

6345Administrative Law Judge

6348Division of Administrative Hearings

6352The DeSoto Building

63551230 Apalachee Parkway

6358Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060

6361(850) 488-9675

6363Fax Filing (850) 921-6847

6367www.doah.state.fl.us

6368Filed with the Clerk of the

6374Division of Administrative Hearings

6378this 13th day of October, 2009.

6384ENDNOTE

63851/ The other Pre-K teacher testified that she, personally, could

6395not maneuver or teach in a wheelchair in her portable because

6406she had never used a wheelchair and because the bathroom in her

6418portable was too small and not ADA-compliant. She did not know

6429if she could use a wheelchair in Petitioner’s portable.

6438COPIES FURNISHED :

6441Thomas L. Wittmer, Esquire

6445Alachua County School Board

6449620 East University Avenue

6453Gainesville, Florida 32601

6456Dr. Joan Longstreth

6459Alachua County School Board

6463620 East University Avenue

6467Gainesville, Florida 32601

6470Emily Moore, Esquire

6473Florida Education Association

6476300 East Park Avenue

6480Tallahassee, Florida 32301

6483Denise Crawford, Agency Clerk

6487Florida Commission on Human Relations

64922009 Apalachee Parkway, Suite 100

6497Tallahassee, Florida 32301

6500Larry Kranert, General Counsel

6504Florida Commission on Human Relations

65092009 Apalachee Parkway, Suite 100

6514Tallahassee, Florida 32301

6517NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS

6523All parties have the right to submit written exceptions within

653315 days from the date of this Recommended Order. Any exceptions

6544to this Recommended Order should be filed with the agency that

6555will issue the Final Order in this case.

Select the PDF icon to view the document.
PDF
Date
Proceedings
PDF:
Date: 12/15/2009
Proceedings: Agency Final Order
PDF:
Date: 12/15/2009
Proceedings: Final Order Dismissing Petition for Relief from an Unlawful Employment Practice filed.
PDF:
Date: 10/13/2009
Proceedings: Recommended Order
PDF:
Date: 10/13/2009
Proceedings: Recommended Order (hearing held June 17, 2009). CASE CLOSED.
PDF:
Date: 10/13/2009
Proceedings: Recommended Order cover letter identifying the hearing record referred to the Agency.
PDF:
Date: 08/10/2009
Proceedings: Respondent's Proposed Recommended Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 08/10/2009
Proceedings: Petitioner's Proposed Recommended Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 07/17/2009
Proceedings: Order Granting Extension of Time (proposed recommended orders to be filed by August 10, 2009).
PDF:
Date: 07/14/2009
Proceedings: (Petitioner's) Motion for Extension of Time filed.
Date: 06/30/2009
Proceedings: Transcript (Volumes 1 and 2) filed.
Date: 06/17/2009
Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Hearing Held.
PDF:
Date: 06/15/2009
Proceedings: Respondent's Supplemental Pre-hearing Statement filed.
PDF:
Date: 06/11/2009
Proceedings: Petitioner's Pre-hearing Statement filed.
Date: 06/10/2009
Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Motion Hearing Held.
PDF:
Date: 06/08/2009
Proceedings: Unopposed Motion for Change of Final Hearing Location filed.
PDF:
Date: 06/08/2009
Proceedings: Respondent's Pre-Hearing Statement filed.
PDF:
Date: 04/14/2009
Proceedings: Undeliverable envelope returned from the Post Office.
PDF:
Date: 04/02/2009
Proceedings: Order Granting Continuance and Re-scheduling Hearing (hearing set for June 17, 2009; 9:30 a.m.; Gainesville, FL).
PDF:
Date: 03/31/2009
Proceedings: Respondent`s Unopposed Motion for Continuance filed.
PDF:
Date: 03/16/2009
Proceedings: Notice of Taking Deposition filed.
PDF:
Date: 03/04/2009
Proceedings: Order of Pre-hearing Instructions.
PDF:
Date: 03/04/2009
Proceedings: Notice of Hearing (hearing set for April 15, 2009; 10:00 a.m.; Gainesville, FL).
PDF:
Date: 02/23/2009
Proceedings: Supplemental Response to Initial Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 02/23/2009
Proceedings: Notice of Appearance (of T. Wittmer) filed.
PDF:
Date: 02/20/2009
Proceedings: Joint Response to Initial Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 02/12/2009
Proceedings: Initial Order.
PDF:
Date: 02/11/2009
Proceedings: Charge of Discrimination filed.
PDF:
Date: 02/11/2009
Proceedings: Notice of Determination: No Cause filed.
PDF:
Date: 02/11/2009
Proceedings: Determination: No Cause filed.
PDF:
Date: 02/11/2009
Proceedings: Petition for Relief filed.
PDF:
Date: 02/11/2009
Proceedings: Transmittal of Petition filed by the Agency.

Case Information

Judge:
ELLA JANE P. DAVIS
Date Filed:
02/11/2009
Date Assignment:
02/12/2009
Last Docket Entry:
12/15/2009
Location:
Gainesville, Florida
District:
Northern
Agency:
ADOPTED IN TOTO
 

Counsels

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