The timelines, deadlines, and rights that apply to YOUR child's IEP in Vermont — in plain language, with the actual law attached. Verified citations, no legalese, no paywall on knowledge.
Federal law (IDEA) sets the floor; Vermont sets some of its own clocks. These are the ones parents use most:
60 calendar days from consent
Must respond within a reasonable time; no specific statutory deadline
30 calendar days from eligibility determination
Written complaint to the Agency of Education describing the IDEA violation — Vermont Agency of Education, Student Support Services. File 1 year from the date of the alleged violation. Resolved in 60 calendar days from receipt of complaint.
Resolution session: Within 15 days of due process filing unless waived by both parties. Hearing decision: 45 days after resolution period expires. Vermont uses Educational Support Teams (EST) as pre-referral intervention before special education evaluation.
Tip: every one of these clocks starts with something in writing. Emails count. Phone calls don't.
Vermont IEP rule. Requires IEP within 30 calendar days of eligibility. VT-specific: (1) services through age 22, (2) Vermont has among the highest LRE inclusion rates nationally — IEP team must explicitly justify removal from general ed, and (3) annual review with parent involvement.
What this means for you: VT services through AGE 22. VT explicit LRE-removal justification — VT has strongest inclusion practices in the country. Vermont Family Network is the state PTI. VT 60 calendar days for evaluation.
Vermont special-education entitlement statute. Establishes FAPE for children with disabilities ages 3-22 (with the school year provision). Vermont State Board of Education Rule 2360 is the implementing regulation.
What this means for you: VT services through AGE 22. VT 60 calendar days for evaluation. Vermont Family Network is the VT state PTI. VT has unique inclusive practice expectations — among the highest LRE inclusion rates nationally.
Statewide PTI supporting families of children and youth with disabilities from birth through age 26
📞 (800) 800-4005
Student Support Services
📞 (802) 828-1110
The official Vermont complaint process — use it when the school isn't following the IEP or the law.
Vermont protection & advocacy organization — legal advocacy for people with disabilities.
📞 (802) 229-1355
In Vermont: 60 calendar days from consent. (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. Vermont's rule is the one that applies.)
Must respond within a reasonable time; no specific statutory deadline
Written complaint to the Agency of Education describing the IDEA violation — Vermont Agency of Education, Student Support Services. Time limit: 1 year from the date of the alleged violation. Resolution: 60 calendar days from receipt of complaint.
Yes. Vermont Family Network is Vermont's federally funded Parent Training and Information center — free help for families — (800) 800-4005.
Ask Know Your Rights any Vermont 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.