Ridgecrest is unique among high desert communities. With the Naval Air Weapons Station (NAWS) China Lake at its heart, it is home to a highly educated population of scientists, engineers, and military personnel. Yet, despite this high-tech environment, parents in Sierra Sands Unified School District (SSUSD) often find the schools surprisingly low-tech when it comes to Special Education.
One of the biggest battlegrounds in Ridgecrest IEPs is access to Assistive Technology (AT). Parents know the tools exist—speech apps, text-to-speech software, digital note takers—but getting them into their child's hands can be a fight.
"The Device Stays at School"
This is a common policy that infuriates parents. Your child learns to use a communication device (AAC) at school, but then comes home silent because "district property cannot leave the campus."
Your Rights Under AB 605
California law (AB 605) specifically addresses this. It states that an educational agency must allow a student to use school-purchased assistive technology devices at home or in other settings if determined necessary by the IEP team.
- Communication doesn't stop at 3 PM. If a child needs a device to speak, they need it everywhere.
- Homework requires access. If a child needs text-to-speech to read a textbook, they cannot do homework without it.
China Lake Schools: Who is Responsible?
For families living on base, there is often confusion about jurisdiction. Schools like Richmond Elementary and Murray Middle are located on federal land but are operated by SSUSD.
You Are Not "Federal Property"
Your child has the full protection of California state education laws, not just federal laws. This includes stricter timelines for assessments and broader definitions of eligibility than some federal standards.
The School Liaison Officer
NAWS China Lake has a School Liaison Officer (SLO) who can advocate for you. However, they are a facilitator, not an attorney. When the district digs in its heels, you often need independent data to force their hand.
Post-Earthquake Facility Challenges
Years after the major earthquakes, some facilities are still in flux. "Temporary" portables often become permanent special education classrooms.
Accessibility Matters
If your child is placed in a temporary classroom that lacks proper acoustic dampening (for sensory issues) or is isolated from the main campus (failing Least Restrictive Environment), this is an IEP violation.
Expertise Meets High Expectations
AT Assessments
We conduct comprehensive Assistive Technology evaluations to determine exactly what tools your child needs to access the curriculum.
We Know China Lake
We understand the base access requirements and the specific dynamics of Sierra Sands USD schools.
Data-Driven Results
Like the scientists at NAWS, we rely on data. Our reports provide irrefutable evidence of your child's needs.
Don't Settle for Low-Tech Solutions
Your child deserves the best tools available to help them learn. If Sierra Sands is denying Assistive Technology, let us help you prove the need.