PDE to Begin Collecting Applications for Sp. Ed. Contingency Funds for Extraordinary Expenses on Nov. 17th (October 29, 2025)

The Pennsylvania Department of Education (PDE) will begin accepting applications for the Special Education Contingency Funds for Extraordinary Expenses on , 2025. The fund’s purpose is to provide additional state funding for the implementation of the Individualized Education Program (IEP) for a student with significant disabilities. Interested local educational agencies (LEAs) will have until , 2026, to apply.

The application and review process for the 2025-2026 school year is specified in the Contingency Funds Guidelines. Applications for the Special Education Contingency Funds must be submitted electronically through the contingency funds request system website.

Questions regarding Special Education Contingency Funds for Extraordinary Expenses should be directed to Janette Fulton, Special Education Adviser, Division of Analysis and Financial Reporting, at 717.425.5442 or janfulton@pa.gov.

CSC Provides Act 1 of 2022 Graduation Plan Toolkit (October 29, 2025)

When students change schools due to homelessness, foster care, or court-ordered placement, they often face lost credits and barriers to graduation. Act 1 of 2022 ensures that students who experience educational instability are not penalized for circumstances beyond their control.

The Act 1 Graduation Plan Toolkit from the Center for Safe Schools (CSC) helps schools and districts put Pennsylvania’s Act 1 of 2022 into practice — ensuring every student has a clear path to graduation. The toolkit empowers schools to provide equitable, consistent supports and maintain strong communication across districts.

The CSC Toolkit includes:
-Step-by-step guidance to identify eligible students and implement Act 1 protections.
-Templates for assigning a school Point of Contact and developing individualized graduation plans.
-Tools to support credit transfer, course waivers, and participation in extracurricular activities.
-Strategies to reduce barriers such as fees, fines or enrollment delays.

Click here to View Graduation Plan Toolkit Resources.

PDE Provides Special Ed. Plan Info for Phase 2 School Districts (October 29, 2025)

The Pennsylvania Department of Education (PDE) is responsible for ensuring that all special education programs in public schools are appropriate and effective. To do this, school districts must submit a Special Education Plan every three years to PDE as required under 22 Pa. Code § 14.104. The school district’s Special Education Plan outlines planning generated from district special education data, compliance monitoring, professional development activities, and training necessary to provide appropriate programs to students with disabilities.

The special education plan will continue to be developed in the Future Ready Comprehensive Planning Portal (FRCPP). The first step to gaining access to the FRCPP is to ensure that you are a registered user on the PDE Portal. If you are not a registered user, please register using the Register a Username and Log In instructions.

Your school district’s Local Security Administrator can add/remove users in MyPDESuite. If you need help adding users to the new portal, please use the step-by-step guide for Accessing the Future Ready Comprehensive Planning Portal. If you do not know who your Local Security Administrators are, you can find this information by clicking on Find my Security Administrator on the main webpage in MyPDESuite.

School districts in Phase 2 must submit their plans by May 1, 2026, in the FRCPP.

For guidance on Completing and Submitting School District Special Education Plans, please refer to the linked training course: School District Special Education Plan Training.

Additionally, for guidance on completing Special Education Plan Revision Notices (SEPRNs), please refer to linked training course: SEPRN Training.

Those with questions should contact Sandy Zeleznik in PDE’s Bureau of Special Education at RA-EDSpecEdPlanFRCPP@pa.gov.

To view the entire memo, including the list of Phase 2 school districts, click here.

NAPSA Signs on to Letter to Senators Requesting Oversight Hearing on USDE RIFs and the Harm Being Done to IDEA (October 29, 2025)

On October 23, 2025, NAPSA signed on to a letter sent to U.S. Senators Cassidy and Sanders claiming that through Reduction in Force (RIF) actions and incentives to exit the federal workforce, U.S. Secretary of Education McMahon has broken “longstanding precedent around the Department’s statutorily required duties to provide fiscal oversight, monitoring, compliance, provision of technical assistance, and more to states, and as noted, such changes have not been approved by Congress. Given this and recent reports of the Department beginning efforts to shift responsibilities to other agencies immediate oversight by Congress is essential.”

The letter goes on to “respectfully urge you to address our concerns with an oversight hearing as soon as possible.”

To view the full contents of the click here.

AOTA Provides Eight reasons the IDEA should remain at the U.S. Department of Education (October 28, 2025)

Abe Saffer, Federal Affairs 10/24/2025

Recent policy discussions from the administration and other policymakers have proposed transferring the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) from the Department of Education (ED) to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Here are eight reasons the American Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA) believes the IDEA should remain within the Department of Education.

1. IDEA is an education law, not a health program
The IDEA was created to make sure students with disabilities get a free, appropriate public education (FAPE), not medical care. The IDEA’s purpose would be confused if it was moved to HHS, changing it from an education program to a health one.

2. IDEA works best alongside general education
Congress has worked since the IDEA’s creation to more closely align special and general education laws to foster closer integration. Preserving the IDEA in the Department of Education (ED) maintains this alignment, enhancing coordination, which benefits all children.

3. ED staff has the expertise
The Department of Education staff have decades of specialized expertise, understanding schools, classrooms, and education law. Transferring the IDEA to HHS, an agency with no experience or expertise in administering education programs would not only create a steep learning curve but could dilute the IDEA’s educational focus and compromise its effectiveness in ensuring a free and appropriate education for students with disabilities.

4. Moving the IDEA to HHS would send the wrong message to schools about the necessity of related services
The Congressional purpose of the IDEA is spelled out in the legislation: to assess, and ensure the effectiveness of, efforts to educate children with disabilities. Even though the vast majority of related services are provided by professionals frequently defined as health practitioners, all related services are designed to meet the educational needs of students with disabilities.

5. It would put at risk all the progress made by the IDEA in the last 50 years
Prior to the nation’s first special education law, only one in five students with disabilities attended public schools, and many states had laws excluding children with certain disabilities from school. Today, the civil rights of students with disabilities are safeguarded in part because ED houses both the Office of Special Education Programs and the Office of Civil Rights. This ensures coordinated oversight and enforcement of the law. Moving the IDEA out of ED would fracture this structure and weaken the protections Congress intended.

6. Creates new challenges for state and local education agencies
State and local education agencies, not departments of health, manage the IDEA funding and services. Transferring the IDEA to HHS would force states to rebuild systems and processes, at best delaying support for students, and at worse seeing more students fail to get the support they need to thrive.

7. It would send the wrong message about inclusion
Students with disabilities are general education students first. Moving the IDEA to HHS would create the impression that special education should occur separate from general education, which is in direct contrast to the Congressional mandate that students should be educated in the least restrictive environment.

8. It would weaken accountability
A key responsibility of the Department of Education is to hold states accountable for meeting all federal education mandates. Moving the IDEA to HHS would remove the clear line of accountability, making it harder to track if schools, local education agencies, or states are serving students with disabilities, consistent with the IDEA.