Virginia's Hampton City Schools, U.S. Education Department Settle Case of Retaliation Against Mom Who Advocated for Daughter
Press Release dtd. July 1, 2016



The U.S. Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights (OCR) announced today that it has entered into a resolution agreement with the Hampton, Virginia, City Schools after finding the division in violation of the civil rights laws enforced by OCR that prohibit retaliation for opposing discriminatory practices or for participating in OCR's complaint resolution process.

OCR found the division retaliated against a parent for advocating on behalf of her daughter, who is an elementary school student enrolled in and receiving special education services from a division school. The retaliation occurred when the division effectively terminated the employment of the parent in the division. Two federal civil rights laws protect parents from those discriminatory practices: Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990.

The division entered into a resolution agreement after OCR recently notified it that failure to remedy the violation would result in the initiation of an enforcement action.

"I am grateful that the division has now committed to put its retaliation behind it and move forward supportive of all students' and parents' rights to advocate for their civil rights," said Catherine E. Lhamon, assistant secretary for civil rights. "Safeguarding parents' ability to raise concerns about their children's education without fear of retaliation is a core component of civil rights compliance in schools."

Under the agreement, the division agreed to take actions to remedy the violation, including the following:

Read the Resolution Letter PDF (229.65K) | Read the Resolution Agreement PDF (101.18K)


Last Modified: 01/15/2020