The parents of special education students who griped earlier this month about the way Newport-Mesa Unified School District is teaching their kids have legitimate complaints, district officials said, but school leaders are asking for patience as the special education department is revamped.
“I know we’re working on it, I know we’ve tried,” school board member Martha Fluor said. “There needs to be some compassion, there needs to be some give-and-take.”
Special education officials say many of the complaints stem from the special education department’s three-year-long overhaul.
Newport-Mesa aims to increase oversight of special-needs students’ educations, cut the department’s costs and rein in work with private agencies.
This is the final phase of the district’s plan, officials said, and it is the hardest part — having students transition from private specialists and programs to in-house district services.