Quick Answer
A school cannot deny IEP services because of staffing shortages. Under IDEA, the school is legally obligated to provide every service written into the IEP regardless of staffing, budget, or scheduling constraints. If services are not being delivered, the school owes compensatory services and you can file a state complaint.
A school cannot deny or reduce IEP services because of staffing shortages, budget constraints, or scheduling problems. Under IDEA, the school is legally obligated to provide every service written into the IEP — and "we don't have the staff" is not a valid reason to withhold what your child is entitled to.
"The school told us they can't provide a one-on-one aide because they don't have the budget. My son needs it — it's in the evaluation. What am I supposed to do?"
— Parent of a child with an IEP, via online support group
"We'd love to, but we don't have the staff."
Or: "Our budget doesn't cover that." Or: "We don't do that here." Or the one that sounds reasonable until you think about it: "We can revisit this next year when we have more resources."
These are not legal defenses. They are excuses. And you do not have to accept them.
This article explains what the law actually requires, why every one of these excuses fails, and exactly what to say and do when a school tells you they cannot provide what your child needs.
The Law Is Clear: Need Drives Services, Not Budget
The foundation of special education law is a single concept: FAPE — Free Appropriate Public Education.
Under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), every child with a disability is entitled to a free appropriate public education that is designed to meet their unique needs. The word "free" means at no cost to you. The word "appropriate" means it actually addresses what your child needs to make progress.
FAPE is defined in federal regulation at 34 CFR 300.17. Here is what it does NOT say: "Free Appropriate Public Education, subject to available staffing." It does not say "as long as the budget allows." It does not say "when the district gets around to it."
If the IEP team determines your child needs a service, the school district must provide it. Period. Budget constraints, staffing shortages, and administrative inconvenience are not valid reasons to deny or reduce services. Courts have ruled on this repeatedly. The child's needs come first. The district figures out the logistics second.
This is not a gray area. It is one of the clearest principles in special education law.
Common Budget and Staffing Excuses (And Why They Do Not Hold Up)
You have probably heard at least one of these. Here are the most common excuses schools use to avoid providing IEP services — and why none of them are legally valid.
"We don't have an OT on staff"
Then hire one. Or contract with one. The absence of a specific specialist on the school's payroll does not eliminate your child's right to the service. The district is responsible for ensuring access to every service in the IEP — whether they provide it in-house or bring someone in from outside.
"Our speech therapist is at capacity"
That is a staffing problem, not a reason to deny your child services. If the current speech therapist cannot take on more students, the district must hire additional staff, contract with a private provider, or find another solution. Your child's speech needs do not disappear because the school's caseload is full.
"We don't offer one-on-one aides"
IDEA does not limit services to what a school "offers." It requires services based on what the child needs. If the evaluation data shows your child requires a one-on-one aide to access their education, the school must provide one — regardless of whether it is part of their standard program.
"That's not something we do at this school"
What a school "does" is irrelevant. What matters is what your child needs. IDEA requires services to be individualized — that is the "I" in IEP. If the school does not currently provide a particular service, they must start providing it, contract for it, or place your child in a setting that can.
"We can revisit this next year when we have more resources"
Your child cannot wait. IDEA does not include a "next year" exception. If the need is documented now, the service is required now. Delaying a necessary service is a denial of FAPE — and every month without it is a month your child falls further behind.
What the School Must Do When They Cannot Provide a Service Directly
When a district cannot deliver a required IEP service with its own staff, it has several options — all at the district's expense:
- Hire an outside provider. The district can contract with a private therapist, specialist, or agency to deliver the service. This is common for occupational therapy, speech-language pathology, physical therapy, and behavioral support.
- Contract with another agency. The district can enter into an agreement with a nearby district, educational cooperative, or private provider organization to deliver services.
- Transfer the student. If no amount of contracting can deliver the service at the current school, the district must place the student at a school — public or private — that CAN provide what the child needs. Transportation to and from that school is the district's responsibility.
In every case, the district remains financially responsible. They cannot pass the cost to you. They cannot tell you to find your own provider. They cannot reduce the service to match what they can afford.
State-specific requirements
New Hampshire: Under RSA 186-C:7, the financial responsibility for a child's special education program stays with the resident district. If the district cannot provide a required service, they must arrange for it through another provider or placement — and pay for it. The district cannot shift this burden to the family.
Massachusetts: Under MGL c.71B §3, the school district must ensure that every child with a disability receives the services in their IEP. If the district cannot provide a service directly, it must arrange for an alternative qualified provider. The district bears the full cost, including transportation if the child must attend a different program.
"We Can Do Consultative Instead of Direct" — A Common Downgrade
This is one of the most frequent ways schools quietly reduce services without parents realizing what happened.
Here is the difference:
- Direct service: A specialist works directly with your child. The speech therapist conducts speech therapy sessions with your child. The occupational therapist does hands-on work with your child. Your child receives the intervention.
- Consultative service: A specialist advises the teacher or staff on strategies to support your child. The specialist may never work with your child directly. The classroom teacher implements the recommendations.
Consultative services have a role. For some children, at some stages, consultation is appropriate. But here is the problem: if the evaluation data recommends direct services, consultative is not a substitute.
A child who needs direct occupational therapy for fine motor skills is not getting what they need when the OT stops by the classroom once a month to give the teacher tips. A child who needs direct speech therapy is not being served when the SLP writes a list of strategies and hands it to the aide.
If the school proposes consultative services when the evaluation recommends direct, ask:
"What evaluation data supports consultative services rather than the direct services the evaluation recommended? I'd like to see the evidence that consultative services will meet my child's needs."
If they cannot produce that evidence, the downgrade is not justified — and you should not agree to it.
What to Do Right Now
If the school has told you they cannot provide a service your child needs, here is your step-by-step plan:
- Do not sign the IEP if you disagree. You are never required to sign at the meeting. If the IEP does not include the services your child needs, do not sign it. The previous IEP stays in effect. Take the document home and review it. You can learn more about this in our guide to your IEP rights.
- Ask for Prior Written Notice (PWN) explaining the refusal. Say these exact words: "I would like Prior Written Notice for the refusal to include this service." PWN forces the school to put their reasoning in writing — including what data they used and what alternatives they considered. Schools that cannot justify a decision on paper often reverse it.
- Request the evaluation data that supports the service need. Pull together the evaluations, assessments, and reports that document why your child needs this service. If the school's own evaluation says your child needs it, point to it. If you have a private evaluation, submit it to the team in writing.
- Put your disagreement in writing. Send an email to the case manager and special education director. State clearly: "I disagree with the decision to exclude [specific service] from my child's IEP. The evaluation data from [date] shows that [child's name] requires this service to receive FAPE." Keep it factual. Keep it in writing.
- Request an IEP meeting. You can request a meeting at any time — in writing. Say: "I am requesting an IEP team meeting to discuss the inclusion of [specific service] in my child's IEP, based on current evaluation data." The school must schedule the meeting within a reasonable timeframe.
What to Say at the Meeting
You do not need to be a lawyer. You need to be clear, calm, and specific. Here are phrases you can use verbatim:
When the school cites staffing as the reason
"I understand staffing is difficult, but IDEA requires that services be based on my child's needs, not available resources. How does the team plan to deliver this service?"
When you want the refusal documented
"I'd like Prior Written Notice explaining why this service is being denied and what evaluation data supports that decision."
When you want to discuss alternatives
"If the district can't provide this directly, what outside providers are you considering? What is the timeline for getting this service in place?"
When the school proposes consultative instead of direct
"The evaluation recommends direct services. What data supports changing that to consultative? I'd like to see the evidence before agreeing to a reduction in service level."
When the school says they will revisit it later
"My child's need for this service is documented now. IDEA does not allow services to be delayed because of resource constraints. I'd like the service written into the IEP with a start date."
When you want to reference the law
"Under 34 CFR 300.17, FAPE must be provided at no cost and in conformity with the IEP. The team has agreed my child needs this service. I'd like to discuss how it will be delivered — not whether it will be."
When to Escalate
If you have requested the service, asked for PWN, attended the meeting, and the school still refuses — it is time to escalate. You have options, and they are designed to be used.
State complaint
You can file a formal complaint with your state's department of education alleging that the school district violated IDEA. The state must investigate and issue a decision within 60 days. If the complaint is substantiated, the state can order corrective action — including requiring the district to provide the denied service and compensatory services for time lost.
Mediation
A neutral mediator helps you and the school reach an agreement. Mediation is free, voluntary (both sides must agree), and often faster than a formal hearing. Any agreement reached is legally binding.
Due process hearing
A formal legal proceeding where an impartial hearing officer reviews evidence and makes a binding decision. You can present documents, call witnesses, and make arguments. If you win, the school may be required to pay your attorney fees.
State-specific contacts
New Hampshire: You can request a neutral conference through the NH Department of Education as an informal first step before filing for due process (RSA 186-C:5-a). The state tracks complaints and outcomes publicly. Contact the Bureau of Student Support at the NH DOE.
Massachusetts: You can request mediation through the Bureau of Special Education Appeals (BSEA) at 781-397-4750. You can also file a complaint with the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education's Program Quality Assurance (PQA) office within one year of the violation.
If You Already Signed an IEP Without the Service
It is not too late.
Many parents sign the IEP in the moment — feeling pressured, outnumbered, or unsure of their rights. If you signed an IEP that does not include a service your child needs, here is what you can do:
- Request a new IEP meeting at any time. You do not have to wait for the annual review. Send a written request: "I am requesting an IEP team meeting to discuss adding [specific service] to my child's IEP based on evaluation data." To understand the full scope of what belongs in an IEP, see our guide on how to read an IEP.
- Present new or existing evaluation data. Bring the evaluation results that support the need. If the school's own evaluation recommended the service, point to it. If you have obtained a private evaluation, submit it for the team to consider.
- Request compensatory services. If your child went without a needed service for any period of time, you may be entitled to compensatory services — additional services to make up for what was lost. This is not a penalty against the school; it is a remedy for your child. You can request compensatory services through the IEP team, or through a state complaint or due process hearing if the school refuses.
A signature is not a life sentence. The IEP is a living document. You can revisit any part of it whenever you have concerns — and the school must respond.
Your Next Steps
- Identify the service that was denied or reduced. Be specific: what service, how much, how often, and what did the evaluation recommend?
- Pull the evaluation data. Find the report that documents your child's need. Highlight the specific recommendations.
- Send a written request for Prior Written Notice. If the school has refused or reduced a service, they must explain why in writing. Ask for it today.
- Request an IEP meeting in writing. State the specific issue you want to discuss and the evaluation data that supports your position.
- Bring someone to the meeting. An advocate, a family member, a friend — anyone who can take notes, support you, and change the dynamic at the table.
- Do not accept vague promises. If the school agrees to provide the service, make sure it is written into the IEP with specific frequency, duration, start date, and provider type. If it is not in the IEP, it does not exist.
- Check your IEP. Join the waitlist to get a plain-language breakdown that identifies service gaps, flags vague language, and gives you specific questions to bring to your next meeting.
Sources
- Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) — U.S. Department of Education
- 34 CFR 300.17 — Free Appropriate Public Education (FAPE) — Code of Federal Regulations
- 34 CFR Part 300 — IDEA Regulations — Code of Federal Regulations
- RSA 186-C — Special Education — New Hampshire General Court
- MGL c.71B — Children with Special Needs — Massachusetts Legislature
- Education Rights — Disability Rights Center of New Hampshire
- Special Education — Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education
Georgia — State-Specific Guidance
Georgia
When a Georgia school district claims it cannot provide an IEP service due to staffing, two state-specific resources can help close the gap.
Georgia operates 18 GLRS (Georgia Learning Resources System) regional centers (160-4-7-.16) that provide training, support, and consultation to school personnel and families. If your school says they lack expertise in a particular service area — behavioral support, assistive technology, specialized instruction — GLRS can provide technical assistance. Ask the team: "Has the district contacted our GLRS center for support?" If the answer is no, they have not exhausted their options.
For students with intense behavioral needs, Georgia's 24 GNETS programs (160-4-7-.15) serve students ages 5-21 who need therapeutic support beyond what the home school can provide. If the school claims it cannot deliver behavioral services, GNETS is a placement option within the continuum that the team must consider before denying services entirely.
If the district refuses to provide an agreed-upon service, Georgia uses a one-tier due process system through the Office of State Administrative Hearings (OSAH) (160-4-7-.12). The ALJ is completely independent from the school district and GaDOE. You can also file a state complaint with GaDOE, which must be investigated and resolved within 60 days. State complaints are often faster and more effective than due process for straightforward service denials.
- The IEP must document each service with start date, frequency, location, and duration — vague language is not enforceable
- Georgia's GO-IEP system requires specifying whether each service is provided in general education or special education settings
- The district bears full financial responsibility for all IEP services regardless of staffing constraints
Your best move: If the school says they cannot provide a service, ask in writing: "Has the district contacted our GLRS center for consultation? What outside providers or agencies have been considered?" Then request Prior Written Notice explaining the refusal. If the service is not in place within a reasonable timeframe, file a state complaint with GaDOE.
Verified Mar 2026