 Tough Times in Paradise
Tough Times in ParadiseLet's face the facts. Times are tight and we all need to cut back and "tighten our belts." Schools, too, must add water to the soup and find many ways to save. In Hawaii, a place of great tropical beauty and climate, times are also tough. Hawaii is in the middle of a $1 billion budget short fall. Hawaii is the only state in the United States that has only one school district. To make up the $1 billion dollar deficit and tighten the belt, the school district contracted with the faculty to take unpaid days off. If a teacher worked in Hawaii for 10 months a year they had to take 17 Fridays off and if a teacher worked 12 months, they had to take 21 Fridays off. Here is the real problem. There is another contract involving the state of Hawaii. The contract is the IEP. Students with special needs and learning differences are required to get certain amounts of services per year. The teacher furloughs would effect these services.
Many Hawaiian  parents of children with special needs are concerned and some have  contacted lawyers.  The lawyer many have contacted is Eric Sietz.  Mr.  Sietz is the same lawyer who argued on the side of parents of children  with special needs in 1993.  In 1993, a judge found the state of Hawaii  in violation of the Individuals with Disabilities in Education Act.  It  was ruled that Hawaii was not providing mental health and other services  to children with disabilities.  Seven years after the initial judge's  ruling, Hawaii was found in contempt of court because there was little  improvement in services to children with special needs.  In May of 2001,  after Hawaii was found in contempt, $1.4 billion was spent to ramp up  mental heath and special services to children in need.  Sietz is a  perfect and logical choice for parents in this current issue in Hawaii  involving teacher furloughs.  
The ironic things  is that I am sure the $1.4 billion spent to revamp, increase and  provided much needed services to special education children must be  contributing in some way the the current 2009 budget crisis of $1  billion.  What seems to me will happen in this new teacher furlough  issues is that if the Hawaii school district does not find a way to  provide specifically laid out accommodations and services for special  needs children, Hawaii will be sued again.  I am sure, since Hawaii is  already budget short a $1 billion, another lawsuit is not going to  help.  Another lawsuit will defeat the purpose of budget reduction  furloughs trying to solve deficit in the first place.  
Monero, L. (2009). Hawaii parents may sue over furloughs. Honolulu Observer, Retrieved from http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20091013/NEWS01/910130349&s=a
Monero, L. (2009). Hawaii parents may sue over furloughs. Honolulu Observer, Retrieved from http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20091013/NEWS01/910130349&s=a
 
