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2020 has been a difficult year, but Long Islanders have joined together to support one another. As the year comes to an end, we are grateful to all of you for your resilience and dedication.

The holiday season is a time for hope for the future as well as reflection. We look forward to working with you to build a stronger community and a more just society in 2021.


We wish you peace, joy, and good health in 2021.
STUDENTS ENTITLED TO COMPENSATORY SERVICES TO MAKE UP FOR TIME LOST DURING PANDEMIC
Many students lost access to special education services as a result of disruptions caused by the pandemic. Students remain entitled to disability-related accommodations and services, even when they cannot attend in person. Students who missed services due to the pandemic may be entitled to compensatory services to make up for regression or skills lost.

The Education Disability Rights Project (EDRP) represents a bedridden student who is medically fragile. According to the student’s individualized education plan (IEP) and a pre-COVID agreement, the school district must provide home tutoring, physical therapy, occupational therapy, and speech-language therapy five times a week. These services were scheduled to end in November of 2020 based on the pre-COVID agreement.
 
During the 2019-2020 school year, even before the pandemic, service providers were not available to come to the student's home, and the student was hospitalized many times. So, the student missed many of the required service sessions. Then, once the district closed its schools in March 2020, the school district stopped providing services altogether. The student received no services for the remainder of the 2019-2020 school year.
 
At the beginning of the 2020-2021 school year, the school district decided not to provide any in-person learning because of COVID. The student could not access distance learning because of her disability, again leaving her with no services whatsoever.
 
The parent kept a log of each missing service. Tracey Discepolo, a staff attorney with the EDRP, used this log to calculate and negotiate compensatory education to make up for for the service sessions the student missed both pre-COVID and during COVID. 
 
As a result, the school district agreed to provide 300 sessions of educational tutoring, 575 sessions of physical therapy, 375 sessions of occupational therapy, and 500 speech-language therapy sessions. The services will resume in person once it is safe to do so, despite the original November 2020 termination date.
UNDERSTANDING THE RIGHTS OF STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES

Friday, January 8, 6:00 pm

Presented by NSLS Education and Disability Rights Project (EDRP) Staff Attorney,
Tracey Discepolo
In partnership with the Brentwood Public Library

Know your rights. Students with special needs are entitled to services and support to help them learn, even while schools are operating under COVID-19 restrictions. This presentation for parents and guardians will address the special education process in New York. You will learn about important federal and state laws, the special education process's five steps, and the due process complaint procedure.


HOMEOWNERS' RIGHTS DURING THE PANDEMIC

Tuesday, February 2, 6:00 pm

Presented by NSLS Foreclosure Unit
In partnership with the Brentwood Public Library

Many homeowners are struggling to pay their housing expenses because of the pandemic. Learn about homeowners' rights and options from Nassau Suffolk Law Services' Foreclosure Unit. Nassau Suffolk Law Services is a nonprofit organization that provides free legal help to low-income people, including homeowners facing foreclosure. Topics discussed will include options for working with your lender and the foreclosure process, including:
  • Forbearance; 
  • Repayment plans;
  • Loan modifications;
  • The foreclosure process; and
  • Loss mitigation options for those who have suffered financial hardship during the pandemic.

Registration opens January 16, 2021.