Thank You For Booking A Call With Us
What happens Next:
1. Your Discovery Call
Our legal advocate, Kodie, will set aside some time to listen to you and make sure that we can help with your matter. This free discovery call is not for legal advice, but if you would like to move forward, we can schedule a more detailed conversation with an attorney.
2. Your Strategy Session
If we are a potential fit and you would like us to take a more in-depth look at your matter, we will invite you to schedule an attorney strategy session with us. Strategy sessions are held by video conference (no need to fight traffic).
During your strategy session, Kevin or Liz will listen to your situation, walk you through our process and discuss how best to achieve your family’s goals. We only handle special needs matters, we serve families like your own every day.
FAQ.
Do you attend IEP/504 meetings or only sue the school?
Yes, we represent families in IEP/ARD and 504 meetings. We also sue Texas school districts.
How we serve families ranges from quiet, behind-the-scenes support to full representation and—when needed—litigation against a district. We don’t pre-decide the path; we start by understanding your situation, history, and goals. The ultimate goal for most families is not “meeting representation,” “filing a complaint,” or “due process”—these are just a means to an end.
We know families want the problem fixed and their child safe, supported, and thriving. That’s our focus. We’ve done this for a long time and know how to work the system to your child’s advantage. We work with you to choose the approach that protects your child and gets the fastest results based on your individual circumstance.
What happens on the Discovery Call?
The discovery call is a 15 minute call with our intake specialist to determine if your issue is something we can help with and if your general objective is achievable under the law.
We reserve these calls for families that are ready to move forward if we are a fit. If we are, we will book the Special Education Attorney Strategy Session and take payment during the call.
What will it cost?
Doing nothing—or following the wrong guidance—is expensive. The real cost is continued inaction, stress, regression, a lost school year, and carrying this alone.
If we’re a fit, we’ll first understand your situation, then propose a clear scope, timeline, and fee structure—so you can decide with full information. We can also present tiered representation options so you can choose the level of support and investment that fits.
In many special-education matters, districts may reimburse part or all of your legal fees when you prevail or through settlement.
What if we need free help?
We understand we’re not the right fit for every family. We have prepared an extensive resource guide for families that are not ready for paid representation (or just want to start with free tools). You can access the Free Help for Texas Special Education Families Guide here.
And for free or low-cost assistance, you can contact Disability Rights Texas (the state Protection & Advocacy organization) at 512-454-4816. They receive grant and outside funding and may be able to offer no-cost help.
Can you help anywhere in Texas?
Do you handle restraint/seclusion or neglect/abuse?
We’ve tried for months—nothing changes. Why is this different?
We get it. Most families who find us have lived the same gaslighting, denials, and run-around. If you’re here reading this, odds are good we can help.
We’ve done this for years—serving hundreds of Texas families successfully—and know what works.
What Our Clients Are Saying
— M.K., South Texas Client
— J.C., East Texas Client
— A.M., Greater Houston Area Client
— C.H., San Antonio Area Client
— S.H., Client
— D.M., Client
— S.P., Client
— D.S., Client
— M.P., Client
— J.T., Client
— C.L., Client
— K.H., Client
— L., Client
— M.S., Client
— L.A., Client
— D.N., Client
Your Child’s IEP and the US Department of Education
The Pathway to Special Education: Referral Process Explained
What Qualifies a Child for Special Education? A Texas Parent’s Guide
IEP vs. 504 Plan: Understanding the Difference for Your Child
New Rules for Special Needs Trusts (2024–2026 Update): What Changed + What to Do