The timelines, deadlines, and rights that apply to YOUR child's IEP in Ohio — in plain language, with the actual law attached. Verified citations, no legalese, no paywall on knowledge.
Federal law (IDEA) sets the floor; Ohio sets some of its own clocks. These are the ones parents use most:
60 calendar days from receipt of parental consent for initial evaluation (OAC 3301-51-06).
30 calendar days. The school must respond to a parent evaluation request within 30 calendar days — either by obtaining consent to evaluate or providing prior written notice that it will not evaluate.
30 calendar days after eligibility determination, the IEP must be developed and placement decided.
Mail, fax, or electronic submission. Must send copy to school superintendent simultaneously. — Ohio Department of Education, Office for Exceptional Children (OEC). File violation must have occurred within 1 year of filing date. Resolved in 60 calendar days from receipt of complaint.
Resolution session: Within 15 days of due process complaint filing. Hearing decision: 45 days after resolution period ends. Ohio uses Impartial Hearing Officers (IHOs) appointed by OEC for due process hearings..
Tip: every one of these clocks starts with something in writing. Emails count. Phone calls don't.
Ohio's IEP requirement statute. Requires each district to develop an IEP for every child with a disability, in compliance with both federal IDEA and the Ohio Operating Standards. § 3323.011 specifically references the procedural safeguards parents must receive AND mandates that the IEP team consider Ohio's additional content requirements (Ohio Admin. Code 3301-51-07(H)).
What this means for you: Ohio Operating Standards (3301-51-07(H)) add content beyond federal IDEA: the IEP must include a statement of how the child's disability affects involvement and progress in the GENERAL education curriculum — not just specially designed instruction goals. Ohio requires the IEP to identify whether the child needs assistive technology and if so, specify the AT in the IEP — failure to consider AT is grounds for a state complaint. Annual IEP review is required, and Ohio has a unique 'interim' IEP option for students transferring between districts mid-year — operative until the new district holds an IEP meeting within 30 days. Ohio IEP team must include a regular-ed teacher even if the child spends NO time in regular ed — for LRE consideration.
Ohio's primary special-education definitions and authorization statute. Defines "child with a disability" for Ohio, covers ages 3 through 21, and authorizes the Operating Standards for Educational Programs for Children with Disabilities (Ohio Admin. Code 3301-51-01 through 3301-51-21). Ohio uniquely uses the term "Evaluation Team Report" (ETR) instead of the federal "evaluation report" — and the ETR has Ohio-specific content requirements.
What this means for you: Ohio's ETR (Evaluation Team Report) is the operative evaluation document — distinct from federal terminology. Required content goes beyond IDEA minimum: must include observations across multiple settings. Ohio's evaluation timeline: 60 CALENDAR DAYS from receipt of parent consent to ETR completion AND eligibility determination (Ohio Admin. Code 3301-51-06(B)). Ohio Educational Service Centers (ESCs) often coordinate special-ed across multiple districts. If your district says they 'don't do that here,' ask whether services are provided through the ESC. Ohio's Jon Peterson Special Needs Scholarship (Ohio Rev. Code § 3310.51) allows IEP students to receive a state-funded scholarship for private services or schools. Acceptance has implications for IDEA rights — informed choice required.
Statewide PTI providing free information, training, and individualized support to families of children with disabilities birth through age 26. Parent mentors available statewide.
📞 (740) 382-5452
Office for Exceptional Children (OEC)
📞 (614) 466-2650
The official Ohio complaint process — use it when the school isn't following the IEP or the law.
Ohio protection & advocacy organization — legal advocacy for people with disabilities.
📞 (614) 466-7264
In Ohio: 60 calendar days from receipt of parental consent for initial evaluation (OAC 3301-51-06).. (Context: federal law sets a default of 60 calendar days from parental consent — 34 CFR § 300.301(c) — and allows each state to set its own timeframe. Ohio's rule is the one that applies.)
30 calendar days. The school must respond to a parent evaluation request within 30 calendar days — either by obtaining consent to evaluate or providing prior written notice that it will not evaluate.
Mail, fax, or electronic submission. Must send copy to school superintendent simultaneously. — Ohio Department of Education, Office for Exceptional Children (OEC). Time limit: Violation must have occurred within 1 year of filing date. Resolution: 60 calendar days from receipt of complaint.
Yes. Ohio Coalition for the Education of Children with Disabilities (OCECD) is Ohio's federally funded Parent Training and Information center — free help for families — (740) 382-5452.
Ask Know Your Rights any Ohio IEP question in plain language, free. And before the school year starts, run the free Fall IEP Audit — it grades last spring's IEP so you know exactly what to push on.
Ask Know Your Rights → Run the Free Fall AuditShort, practical, from a mom who's been in that chair — a script to use, a right to know, a deadline to watch. No spam, never sold, unsubscribe anytime.