CPS Special Education Due Process Rights and IEP Disputes in Chicago
If your child attends Chicago Public Schools (CPS) and has a disability, federal law provides enforceable rights to special education services and supports. When CPS fails to evaluate, implement an IEP, provide required services, or follow required procedures, families have formal options to resolve disputes and pursue meaningful remedies.
This page explains the core rights and then routes you to the most common CPS-specific dispute paths, including due process hearings, IEP implementation disputes, and evaluation delays.
Core Rights Under Federal Law (IDEA)
Under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), eligible students have the right to a Free Appropriate Public Education (FAPE) designed to meet their unique needs. In practice, this often includes:
- An Individualized Education Program (IEP) with measurable goals and services
- Special education instruction and related services (such as speech, OT, counseling)
- Supports and accommodations needed for meaningful access to learning
- Appropriate placement and services in the least restrictive environment (LRE)
- Transition planning where required
A dispute often arises when an IEP is not implemented as written, when the plan is not appropriate for the child’s needs, or when the evaluation process is delayed or denied.
Common CPS Special Education Problems
- IEP services not delivered (missed minutes, inconsistent supports, staffing gaps)
- Delayed evaluations or refusal to evaluate
- Inadequate IEP goals, services, or accommodations for the student’s needs
- Placement disputes (setting changes without adequate process or data)
- Discipline issues involving special education protections
Choose the Right CPS Dispute-Resolution Path
The best path depends on the issue, urgency, and the outcome you need. Start with the option that matches your situation:
- CPS Due Process Complaint and Hearing
Formal process to seek enforceable relief for serious FAPE or IEP disputes. - CPS IEP Not Being Followed (Missed Minutes and Services)
What to document, how to escalate, and how compensatory education is pursued. - CPS Evaluation Delays or Refusals
Steps to take when CPS does not evaluate promptly or denies the need to evaluate.
Potential Remedies
When a violation is proven, remedies may include:
- Compensatory education (make-up services for missed supports)
- Changes to the student’s IEP or placement
- Additional supports, accommodations, and service minutes
- In appropriate cases, reimbursement for qualifying private services or tuition
If you want guidance on a CPS IEP dispute, due process strategy, or documentation and next steps, you can
contact Randolph & Holloway.
FAQs: CPS Special Education Due Process (Chicago)
What is “due process” in CPS special education cases?
When should a parent consider a due process hearing against CPS?
If CPS is not following the IEP, what should we document?
What if CPS is delaying or refusing to evaluate my child?
Do we have to go straight to a hearing?
If you have questions, please send us an email and we will schedule your free, confidential, consultation.
External Resources (CPS / Illinois)
These official resources can help you understand the processes that apply to CPS special education disputes in Chicago.
Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE) — Due Process Hearings
Overview of the due process complaint and hearing framework.
ISBE — Effective Dispute Resolution (Mediation and Other Options)
Information about mediation and other dispute-resolution services.
U.S. Department of Education — IDEA (Individuals with Disabilities Education Act)
Federal special education law background and key concepts.
U.S. Department of Education — Office for Civil Rights (OCR)
Civil rights enforcement related to disability discrimination in schools.