Oregon Special Ed Population Continues To Grow
Oregon’s population of special ed students continues to grow, according to numbers released by state officials Wednesday. Rob Manning has more.
The state Department of Education report counts nearly 83,000 children under age 21 with a federally-recognized disability. That’s up slightly from last year.
Autism continues to be the fastest growing disability. There are more than 7,900 Oregon kids diagnosed with autism. That’s up nearly 25 percent over the last four years.
Salem-Keizer is the state’s second-biggest school district, but it has the largest population of students on the autism spectrum. Portland is the state’s largest district overall – and it has the most disabled students overall. But Portland doesn’t have as many with autism as Salem does. Having a large population of students needing special education services has financial implications.
School districts get paid twice as much for each student needing special education as they do for students who don’t need it.They’re also eligible for targeted federal funds. The latest numbers are part of a federally-required annual report.
Rob Manning, OPB News
© 2010 OPB
Share this article
Discuss
blog comments powered by DisqusRelated articles
- Eight Oregon Tribes Awarded Grants For Affordable Housing
- City Club Report: Redistricting Process Could Be Flawed
- Oregon Counties Try To Fend Off Financial Insolvency


