Autism services
Years ago, the district had an outstanding autism program. That was when children with autism at the elementary age, ready to transition into the junior high, spent their summer-school program getting accustomed to the new facility. What happened to that once-successful program?
Parents are left doing the best they can, looking to the professionals for guidance.
Autism is a lifelong disability of communication and behavior. When children can’t communicate their needs and/or fears, they act it out in their behaviors. These children did not ASK to have autism. As a society, we should work together and do what is best for our children. Not threaten to call the police on a child with a disability just because the district doesn’t want to spend the time and money on a successful autism program where enough people are trained to handle the struggles autism presents  like they had in the past.
In 1992 the rate of autism was 1 in 10,000. In 2002, that ratio is 1 in 250 children. Autism is not going away. I suggest the district go back to what works, not what is cheapest.
Judy Talbot
Lawrence

