69传媒

Special Education

Districts Hire Outsider to Trim Special Ed. Costs

By Nirvi Shah 鈥 May 24, 2011 12 min read
Speech-pathology assistant Kate Lampron walks one of her prekindergarten pupils back to his class after a therapy session at the Webster School in Everett, Mass. The Everett district hired Ms. Lampron鈥檚 employer, Futures Education, to help it trim special education costs and provide therapy services for students.
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In a prekindergarten class at the Webster School here, occupational-therapist assistant Ashley Tarentino leads five children in a round of 鈥淭he Wheels on the Bus,鈥 triggering the children with autism and other conditions that have affected their gross and fine motor skills to pedal their arms along with the actions in the song.

While this scene could be taking place anywhere in the country, one invisible factor sets this classroom apart. Ms. Tarentino doesn鈥檛 work for the school, or the district. She鈥檚 an employee of , a private company that works with dozens of districts around the country on cutting special education costs.

Futures Education may be hired simply to evaluate how a district鈥檚 special education students are served, or it may go as far as providing therapists or aides and revamping how those services are delivered based on the company鈥檚 evaluation.

But despite many districts鈥 current financial straits, even having a conversation about changing special education services can raise the hackles of any school administrator, teacher, aide, therapist, or parent.

鈥淚t is a very hard discussion,鈥 said Peter Bittel, the chief executive officer of the Springfield, Mass.-based Futures Education. 鈥淵ou have to gain a great deal of acceptance with the district that you鈥檙e working in.鈥

In some districts, the 13-year-old company has been greeted with an angry legion of parents and school employees protesting its arrival, or it has had to sue districts that wouldn鈥檛 pay for the analyses it was hired to produce. In other districts, however, including the Everett schools, where Ashley Tarentino works, the company has made few waves and saved the district significant expense.

A Further Look at Futures

鈥 If media player is not available, click here to listen to the story.

Reporter Nirvi Shah talks with Futures Education officials and employees about the company鈥檚 work with special education classes in Amesbury, Mass.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think anyone would know the difference,鈥 said Thomas Stella, an assistant superintendent of the 6,275-student district about five miles north of Boston, referring to the services the company provides for the district. In two years, Futures has saved Everett about $620,000 in a total special education budget of about $16 million, with most of the reduction due to changes in staffing the company instituted.

Costs on the Rise

Around the country, most districts have found special education costs rising steadily for years, said John Musso, the executive director of the , in Reston, Va.

鈥淪pecial ed always seems to be the tail that wags the dog,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e need to service those students, but the mandates just increase. The requirements increase. So, of course, the costs increase along with inflation.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think anybody disagrees with the basic tenet that these kids should be served,鈥 Mr. Musso added, 鈥渂ut every school system has been in this position. They鈥檝e had to subsidize the programs鈥 because the federal requirement to provide a free, appropriate public education for children with disabilities is only partially funded.

He said that he wasn鈥檛 familiar with Futures Education, but noted that any company鈥檚 philosophy and practices would work only for some districts.

鈥淚t鈥檚 such an individual thing鈥攚ho鈥檚 going to save and who鈥檚 not going to save,鈥 he said.

But Futures believes many, if not most, districts are wasting money in the special education arena, money that, if saved and rerouted, could benefit the entire district, it argues.

The company says it has saved the 5,800-student Holyoke, Mass., district $1.6 million in three years. Savings of about $600,000 were reported by the 3,800-student Anson County, N.C., district. In Wayne County, Mich., district officials said savings have totaled more than $5 million in two years of contracting with Futures.

The problem, according to Mr. Bittel, is that special education isn鈥檛 standardized from school to school, much less across districts and states.

Prekindergarten pupils at the public Webster School in Everett, Mass., water and cut grass to practice their motor and speech skills. Those lessons are led by privately employed therapist assistants.

Teams that craft individualized education programs, or IEPs, 鈥渁re making individual decisions about students without any benchmarks,鈥 he said, referring to the plans required under federal law for students with disabilities. 鈥淭he question then for special ed is, what is best practice? Everybody can鈥檛 be practicing best practices.鈥

Mr. Bittel bases his conclusion on the company鈥檚 experiences with more than 100 school districts serving 30,000 individuals with disabilities in two dozen states. Some are small-city districts, such as Everett, but the company also has contracts to work with some students in the 60,000-student District of Columbia schools and 7,000 students in 17 districts in Michigan鈥檚 Wayne County.

Futures Education can analyze the way special education services are delivered in a district and provide some of those services, including therapists and paraprofessionals. The company usually offers to interview current district employees who hold those jobs, but the retirement and health benefits they鈥檇 receive from Futures are likely to be less generous, Mr. Bittel said.

The company stops short of taking over a district鈥檚 entire special education program, because it doesn鈥檛 employ teachers. Futures, which is privately held, declined to provide information about its profits.

Futures Education, whose headquarters are housed in what was once a convent, is trying to break the cycle of belief that providing more services for every child is automatically what is best, Mr. Bittel said. Its approach is to establish clear entry and exit criteria for when students are to be provided with a service.

鈥淪peech therapy for life鈥攜ou actually hear that a lot,鈥 he said, referring to the perception that some students seem to never exit therapy, whether they need it or not. Another example he refers to often is providing therapy to teach children with disabilities how to tie their shoes.

鈥淲e鈥檒l put a child in occupational therapy, sometimes for years,鈥 he said. 鈥淚s that educationally relevant?鈥 Instead, he said, the child could wear shoes that don鈥檛 need to be tied.

He has the same attitude toward working for years to improve the handwriting of a child with disabilities.鈥淎re we hurting the child? We鈥檇 argue we aren鈥檛,鈥 he said of putting aside that effort.

Voicing Skepticism

But that approach bothers Luann Purcell, the executive director of the national , or CASE, based in Warner Robins, Ga. She was an assistant superintendent overseeing special education for 18 years before leading CASE.

鈥淛ust because the law doesn鈥檛 absolutely require you to use occupational therapy doesn鈥檛 mean sometimes you don鈥檛 do it,鈥 Ms. Purcell said. In some cases, providing a service may help a school district avoid a due process hearing or lawsuit鈥攁nd defending those legal actions could be more costly than providing the therapy, she said.

More importantly, she said, there鈥檚 always the possibility children will eventually gain skills when they remain in therapy. She recalled the case of a student with traumatic brain injury who ended up graduating with a regular diploma in her district, Houston County, Ga., because the district kept the student鈥檚 services in place for years.

鈥淵ou can鈥檛 take business principles as such and just lay them over education,鈥 Ms. Purcell said.

In April, , a Pepperell, Mass., group that defines itself as a special education activism group, urged caution in weighing 鈥渞ecommendations made by Futures Education so as to avoid illegally denying children services.鈥

Futures鈥 approaches are similar, however, to those of a well-known nonprofit organization, , in Watertown, Mass. ERS, in existence since 2004, works exclusively with large districts on ways to better manage time, people, and money.

In special education, said Stephen Frank, a director of the organization, the group looks at how many students are being identified, how they can be taught in less restrictive settings, and whether special education teachers can work with regular education teachers to reach more students at a time rather than pulling them out of class.

But ERS leaves it to districts to implement the plans it draws up, Mr. Frank said, while Futures takes on some of that work itself.

Company Origins

Some of the Futures strategies may sound extreme, but the company insists they are based on what鈥檚 in children鈥檚鈥攁s well as school districts鈥欌攂est interests.

Mr. Bittel, 63, the CEO, began his career in education as a speech therapist. Eventually, he joined forces with Erin Edwards, also a speech therapist, now the company president, and also now Mr. Bittel鈥檚 wife.

鈥淲e started out very much as a staffing company鈥攑hysical therapy, occupational therapy, speech,鈥 Ms. Edwards said. 鈥淚t became clear to us, throwing more staff into a system was not helping.鈥

That realization started with one of Futures鈥 first contracts, around 1999. The Holliston, Mass., district considered hiring the company to provide speech therapists. But when Futures looked over the district鈥檚 workload and its therapists鈥 schedules, it turned out the district didn鈥檛 need more employees. It needed to redistribute the work and the way therapists worked with children鈥攍ess one-on-one and more in groups, Ms. Edwards said.

鈥淭he conversation has never been about denying services to kids or diluting their impact,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 looking at a delivery system and determining if there is a wiser way.鈥

Ms. Lampron and occupational-therapy assistant Ashley Tarentino sing 鈥淭he Wheels on the Bus鈥 to spur Webster prekindergartners to practice their motor skills. The district has saved $620,000 in two years in special education costs by hiring Futures Education鈥攊n part because therapist assistants such as Ms. Lampron and Ms. Tarentino are paid less than full-fledged occupational and speech-pathology therapists.

While part of the reason for the company鈥檚 push for more-inclusive education for students with disabilities is financial, it鈥檚 also motivated by what鈥檚 widely seen as educationally sound. A nationwide movement has pushed to teach students with disabilities more inclusively.

Another advantage: When the classroom teacher sees a therapist like Ms. Tarentino in action, he or she can mimic her, said Michael Neiman, a Futures vice president. And for the child, he said, the therapy is connected with a classroom lesson or activity, giving it meaning and context.

In addition, by working with a therapist in class, the child isn鈥檛 spending time out of class, away from general education classmates, Mr. Neiman said. Futures provides a minimum of five days of training for its employees each year to teach about inclusion and other topics, and school district employees get similar training, though amounts may vary.

The company also presses districts to use the strategy known as response to intervention: identifying students鈥 learning problems early, then using specific lessons, or interventions, to address those problems. Its use has reduced the number of students in many districts labeled as needing special education, and it is beneficial in other ways, said Carol Hepworth, the director of special education in Massachusetts鈥 Holyoke school district, which has been working with Futures for several years. 鈥淚f you don鈥檛 have to test these 25 kids for special education, you can be over here doing instruction,鈥 Ms. Hepworth said.

Futures Education signs contracts with districts in which the company pledges to take over services for a fixed amount that is less than whatever that district was paying for the same work.

鈥淚f we don鈥檛 meet that, we鈥檙e at risk for that,鈥 Mr. Bittel said. In other words, there鈥檚 no going back to the district to ask for more money. The contracts also give districts the right to end the agreements within 30 to 60 days, with or without cause.

Turnover Cited

In the Lower Pioneer Valley Educational Collaborative in western Massachusetts, Executive Director Anne McKenzie brought in Futures during the 2008-09 school year. The company was hired after costs for providing services to the approximately 150 students with disabilities in the seven-district collaborative had increased yet again.鈥淚 am not somebody who is an unequivocating advocate of privatizing public education,鈥 said Ms. McKenzie, who was a special education teacher earlier in her career. 鈥淲e are primarily responsible for very high-quality educational services and high levels of student achievement and attainment. We鈥檙e also stewards of public money.鈥

Switching to Futures has helped trim $600,000 from the collaborative鈥檚 $20 million total annual budget.

The change meant nine therapist jobs were eliminated, and because most of the people in those jobs chose not to interview with Futures, new therapists came in.

Ms. McKenzie said that change remains one of the most difficult for teachers and parents to get used to, although parent complaints about services are uncommon. In the past, therapists hired by the collaborative were likely to have known a student for years.

Futures-hired labor has turned over more frequently, said Denise Murphy, a teacher in the area for 21 years who works with students with intense needs. Some of her students at Ludlow High in Ludlow, Mass., rarely speak, and others aren鈥檛 able to use the restroom on their own. She said the use of therapist assistants rather than full-fledged therapists is sometimes noticeable.

鈥淣ot everybody has a background in this,鈥 she said, noting the special equipment in her room and the three students sitting silently in front of a television while several staff members watched them from across the room.

When allowed by local special education rules, Futures tries to use certified therapist assistants, such as Ms. Tarentino, rather than full-fledged therapists, which saves money. Mr. Bittel said that therapist assistants always work under the supervision of therapists, who are responsible for writing reports and evaluations. But for day-to-day therapy, except for some complex cases, it doesn鈥檛 make sense to use therapists, he agrees.

鈥淎 lot of therapy is routine,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou should use less-trained people to deal with routine tasks.鈥

With therapists shifting from school to school to work with as many students as possible, there isn鈥檛 time to plan lessons together or easily change a schedule to accommodate a school activity, such as a field trip, said Dot Rhodes, a 30-year special education teacher who also works at Ludlow.

For example, when a speech-language-pathology assistant worked with students on ordering a set of directions for planting seeds and teaching related vocabulary, Ms. Rhodes could have added some science principles to the lesson, she said. But she and the therapist didn鈥檛 have the opportunity to plan lessons together, as would have been the case in the past.

Mr. Bittel, whose own grown son has disabilities, said he understands that to some, his company will always be viewed skeptically.

鈥淲e鈥檙e pariahs鈥攐utsiders who are going to come in and take jobs,鈥 he said before the start of a May 3 school committee meeting in the Amesbury, Mass., district, which is considering hiring Futures or another firm to take over the work of paraprofessionals who work with students with disabilities. The move would save the 2,400-student district at least $110,000 a year.

鈥淲e鈥檙e not bad people. And we鈥檝e never been asked to leave a district,鈥 Mr Bittel said. 鈥淪pecial ed is just not working. How do we rethink this? How do we do it differently?鈥

A version of this article appeared in the May 25, 2011 edition of Education Week as Mass. For-Profit Helps 69传媒 Trim Special Education Costs

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