Washington, D.C. – The United States Supreme Court on Thursday, June 14, 2025, delivered a unanimous ruling that significantly alters the legal landscape for public school students seeking redress for disability discrimination. The decision lowers a long-standing, elevated legal standard, allowing students with disabilities to pursue discrimination lawsuits against public schools using the same burden of proof applicable in similar cases against other public entities.
The court’s decision effectively eliminates a higher legal hurdle that had required plaintiffs in some education cases to prove that school officials acted with “bad faith or gross misjudgment” when failing to accommodate a known disability. This stricter standard, which had been applied by certain lower courts for approximately four decades in cases involving schools, was traceable to the Eighth Circuit’s 1982 decision in Monahan v. State of Nebraska.
Setting the Stage for Change
Historically, while federal law prohibited disability discrimination across various sectors, the standard for proving intentional discrimination varied. For most public entities, plaintiffs needed to demonstrate “deliberate indifference” to a known need for accommodation – essentially, that officials knew of the need and disregarded it. However, in the realm of public education, some courts adopted the more stringent Monahan test, demanding proof of a malicious intent or gross negligence.
This created a disparate system where students with disabilities faced a higher bar to clear in court than individuals encountering discrimination in other public settings, such as navigating a municipal transit system, accessing services at a hospital, or interacting with city government offices. Critics argued this made it unduly difficult for students and their families to hold schools accountable under federal law when accommodations were denied or inadequate, even when the school was aware of the student’s needs.
The specific case before the Supreme Court involved a situation where lower courts had applied the “bad faith or gross misjudgment” standard, requiring the family related to a student identified as Ava Tharpe to meet this elevated burden to pursue their discrimination claims.
The Court’s Unanimous Decision
In a unanimous decision, the nine justices rejected the heightened standard for education cases. Chief Justice John Roberts authored the court’s opinion, stating plainly that the “bad faith or gross misjudgment” test was “textually unsupported” by the federal statutes governing disability rights in education.
The ruling clarifies that public schools, like municipalities, transit systems, and hospitals, face potential liability under Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and §504 of the Rehabilitation Act when they exhibit deliberate indifference to a known need for accommodation for a student with a disability. Deliberate indifference is understood in this legal context as knowledge that a federally protected right is being violated and a deliberate failure to act to stop the violation.
By aligning the standard of proof for schools with that for other public entities, the Supreme Court’s decision aims to ensure a more consistent application of federal anti-discrimination laws across all areas of public life.
Implications and Reactions
The ruling is expected to have a significant impact on future disability discrimination lawsuits brought by students against public school districts across the nation. Advocates for students with disabilities hailed the decision as a major victory.
Zoe Brennan-Krohn, director of the ACLU’s Disability Rights Program, commented on the ruling, stating that it is a “critical step towards ensuring students with disabilities receive the support to which they are legally entitled.” Her statement underscores the view among rights groups that the previous standard had acted as a substantial impediment to justice for students.
While the decision simplifies the legal path for plaintiffs by removing the higher standard, it does not automatically guarantee success in every case. Students and families will still need to demonstrate that the school was deliberately indifferent to a known need for accommodation, a requirement that itself involves presenting sufficient evidence.
Nevertheless, the removal of the “bad faith or gross misjudgment” requirement is seen as removing an unfair barrier that previously shielded some schools from accountability even when they were aware of and chose to ignore a student’s disability-related needs.
Looking Forward
The Supreme Court’s unanimous ruling in this case reinforces the principle that public schools are subject to the same fundamental anti-discrimination standards as other public service providers under federal law. It marks a notable development in the ongoing effort to ensure equal educational opportunities and legal protections for students with disabilities.
Legal analysts suggest the decision may lead to an increase in disability discrimination claims against schools as the path to litigation becomes less encumbered by the higher standard of proof. School districts will need to be increasingly diligent in ensuring they are responsive to the known accommodation needs of their students with disabilities to mitigate potential liability under the clarified legal standard.
The ruling on June 14, 2025, ensures that the promise of equal access and non-discrimination enshrined in federal law is more readily accessible to students with disabilities within the public education system, bringing schools into full alignment with the legal responsibilities borne by other public sector institutions.