OPALA, Chief Justice.
The issues presented for review are: [1] Does the so-called “teacher tenure law”
embodied in the Oklahoma School Code [Code]
give a tenured
teacher priority for renewal over a nontenured teacher in the course of a reduction-in-force implementation in those instances in which the former is certified to teach the very subject for which a nontenured teacher is retained? and, if this be answered in the affirmative, [2] Did the school board’s implementation of its reduction-in-force [RIF] program, which resulted in the appellant tenured teacher’s nonrenewal, offend the statutory tenure regime? We answer both questions in the affirmative.
THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION
The facts are undisputed.
During the 1986-1987 school term Margie Babb [Babb], appellant, completed her ninth year as a tenured classroom teacher in the Independent School District No. 1-5 of Rogers County [District]. In April 1987, after some parents complained about Babb’s teaching practices, the District reassigned her to the position of elementary librarian. Her teaching contract required that she accept this assignment.
On March 30 of the following school year, after the District’s average daily attendance had decreased by 40.23 students, the superintendent recommended to the District Board of Education [Board] that (a) RIF policy be put into effect for the 1988-1989 school term, (b) the elementary librarian position be eliminated and (c) the special education program be decreased by one staff member.
On April 4,1988 the Board voted to implement the policy and not to renew the contracts of fifteen nontenured teachers. On April 7 the School Board met to consider the proposed teacher contract nonrenewals. Babb, then present with her legal counsel, was afforded the opportunity to state her ease to the Board, which then voted not to renew her contract pursuant to its RIF policy.
The nonrenewal decision was made without any reference to the complaints submitted in April 1987. At the same meeting the Board voted to reemploy fifteen nontenured teachers.
Babb was timely notified of her nonre-newal as well as of the time and date of her post-termination hearing before the Board,
which she chose not to attend. Babb then commenced this action for reinstatement of her tenure status. Both Babb and the District sought summary judgment. The district court overruled Babb’s motion and gave summary judgment to the Board on the ground that its RIF policy had been implemented in good faith.
I
IN THE COURSE OF RIF IMPLEMENTATION PROCESS OKLAHOMA’S “TEACHER TENURE LAW”
GIVES TENURED TEACHERS PRIORITY FOR RENEWAL OVER NONTENURED FACULTY
The District asserts that the only limitation on a school board’s discretion to eliminate a tenured teacher’s position in the course of a reduction-in-force implementation is that the decision be made in good faith, in the best interests of the school district and pursuant to a reasonable plan or policy.
This approach, the District argues, is comparable to the duty judicially imposed on school boards by the good-faith and arbitrary-and-capricious standards of review.
Babb urges her tenure status gives her priority for renewal over a nontenured teacher assigned to a subject she is certified to teach.
The tenure rights Babb invokes are based on §§ 6-101 et seq.
of the Code.
Teacher tenure law is intended to give job security to competent and qualified teachers and to protect them from dismissal or nonrenewal for political, personal, arbitrary or discriminatory reasons.
Tenure status,
which is statutorily conferred upon teachers who have been in employment of the school district the required number of
years,
demonstrates legislative intent to grant teachers substantive rights in their continued position, which are not possessed by those in a temporary or probationary status. Under this regime, teacher contracts are automatically renewed on a continuing basis unless a school board or a teacher acts to prevent the employment’s renewal.
Once attained, tenure status cannot be lost except on the grounds sanctioned by
tew.
While the Code does not specifically address a school board’s authority not to reemploy
teachers when implementing its RIF plan, that power clearly is implicit in the statutory scheme
which allows local school boards to formulate a complete education program for the students in the district and to determine the number of personnel necessary to implement the plan within the existing funding limits.
When declining enrollment requires a reduction in force, a school board must balance a district’s needs against available resources and take appropriate action to curtain personnel. While a school board may exercise wide latitude and autonomy in choosing a method for reducing the teaching force,
its RIF policy must nonetheless conform to the commands of tenure law. Tenured faculty have a claim to a preferential status over nontenured faculty in implementation of a reduction-in-force plan. To hold otherwise would emasculate the statutory tenure policy and let school boards do indirectly what they cannot do directly.
Tenure rights must be protected and school boards afforded the necessary discretion to so shape quality education programs as to make them meet the available financial resources.
In sum, a school board is always free to adjust its teachers’ roll to meet economic necessity, but it cannot invoke unsanctioned grounds to subvert the statutorily mandated security-from-termination protection for tenured teachers.
II
THE SCHOOL BOARD’S RIF PLAN OFFENDS THE TEACHER TENURE LAW BY GIVING PRIORITY FOR RENEWAL TO NONTENURED TEACHERS OVER QUALIFIED TENURED TEACHERS
Babb does not challenge the Board’s determination of the necessity for a reduc
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OPALA, Chief Justice.
The issues presented for review are: [1] Does the so-called “teacher tenure law”
embodied in the Oklahoma School Code [Code]
give a tenured
teacher priority for renewal over a nontenured teacher in the course of a reduction-in-force implementation in those instances in which the former is certified to teach the very subject for which a nontenured teacher is retained? and, if this be answered in the affirmative, [2] Did the school board’s implementation of its reduction-in-force [RIF] program, which resulted in the appellant tenured teacher’s nonrenewal, offend the statutory tenure regime? We answer both questions in the affirmative.
THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION
The facts are undisputed.
During the 1986-1987 school term Margie Babb [Babb], appellant, completed her ninth year as a tenured classroom teacher in the Independent School District No. 1-5 of Rogers County [District]. In April 1987, after some parents complained about Babb’s teaching practices, the District reassigned her to the position of elementary librarian. Her teaching contract required that she accept this assignment.
On March 30 of the following school year, after the District’s average daily attendance had decreased by 40.23 students, the superintendent recommended to the District Board of Education [Board] that (a) RIF policy be put into effect for the 1988-1989 school term, (b) the elementary librarian position be eliminated and (c) the special education program be decreased by one staff member.
On April 4,1988 the Board voted to implement the policy and not to renew the contracts of fifteen nontenured teachers. On April 7 the School Board met to consider the proposed teacher contract nonrenewals. Babb, then present with her legal counsel, was afforded the opportunity to state her ease to the Board, which then voted not to renew her contract pursuant to its RIF policy.
The nonrenewal decision was made without any reference to the complaints submitted in April 1987. At the same meeting the Board voted to reemploy fifteen nontenured teachers.
Babb was timely notified of her nonre-newal as well as of the time and date of her post-termination hearing before the Board,
which she chose not to attend. Babb then commenced this action for reinstatement of her tenure status. Both Babb and the District sought summary judgment. The district court overruled Babb’s motion and gave summary judgment to the Board on the ground that its RIF policy had been implemented in good faith.
I
IN THE COURSE OF RIF IMPLEMENTATION PROCESS OKLAHOMA’S “TEACHER TENURE LAW”
GIVES TENURED TEACHERS PRIORITY FOR RENEWAL OVER NONTENURED FACULTY
The District asserts that the only limitation on a school board’s discretion to eliminate a tenured teacher’s position in the course of a reduction-in-force implementation is that the decision be made in good faith, in the best interests of the school district and pursuant to a reasonable plan or policy.
This approach, the District argues, is comparable to the duty judicially imposed on school boards by the good-faith and arbitrary-and-capricious standards of review.
Babb urges her tenure status gives her priority for renewal over a nontenured teacher assigned to a subject she is certified to teach.
The tenure rights Babb invokes are based on §§ 6-101 et seq.
of the Code.
Teacher tenure law is intended to give job security to competent and qualified teachers and to protect them from dismissal or nonrenewal for political, personal, arbitrary or discriminatory reasons.
Tenure status,
which is statutorily conferred upon teachers who have been in employment of the school district the required number of
years,
demonstrates legislative intent to grant teachers substantive rights in their continued position, which are not possessed by those in a temporary or probationary status. Under this regime, teacher contracts are automatically renewed on a continuing basis unless a school board or a teacher acts to prevent the employment’s renewal.
Once attained, tenure status cannot be lost except on the grounds sanctioned by
tew.
While the Code does not specifically address a school board’s authority not to reemploy
teachers when implementing its RIF plan, that power clearly is implicit in the statutory scheme
which allows local school boards to formulate a complete education program for the students in the district and to determine the number of personnel necessary to implement the plan within the existing funding limits.
When declining enrollment requires a reduction in force, a school board must balance a district’s needs against available resources and take appropriate action to curtain personnel. While a school board may exercise wide latitude and autonomy in choosing a method for reducing the teaching force,
its RIF policy must nonetheless conform to the commands of tenure law. Tenured faculty have a claim to a preferential status over nontenured faculty in implementation of a reduction-in-force plan. To hold otherwise would emasculate the statutory tenure policy and let school boards do indirectly what they cannot do directly.
Tenure rights must be protected and school boards afforded the necessary discretion to so shape quality education programs as to make them meet the available financial resources.
In sum, a school board is always free to adjust its teachers’ roll to meet economic necessity, but it cannot invoke unsanctioned grounds to subvert the statutorily mandated security-from-termination protection for tenured teachers.
II
THE SCHOOL BOARD’S RIF PLAN OFFENDS THE TEACHER TENURE LAW BY GIVING PRIORITY FOR RENEWAL TO NONTENURED TEACHERS OVER QUALIFIED TENURED TEACHERS
Babb does not challenge the Board’s determination of the necessity for a reduc
tion in force. Rather, she asserts that the method used to implement the Board’s RIF plan deprived her of tenure protection. The Board’s RIF plan
divides teachers with tenured status into three classifications—(a) elementary and (b) secondary teachers
with classroom assignments
and (c) those holding
nonteaching
positions,
By this scheme tenured faculty are prevented from changing classifications in order to be considered for a classroom assignment in a subject they are qualified to teach.
Nontenured teachers, on the other hand, are not subject to similar restrictions. After their nonrenewal as a result of the RIF plan,
they may nonetheless be immediately considered for renewal if “needed to fill existing and required positions.”
Even though at the time of her assignment to the elementary librarian position Babb had attained tenure status as an elementary school teacher, she became locked by the RIF procedures into the
non-teaching classification. .
This prevented her from priority consideration for renewal over a nontenured teacher in an elementary classroom position. When, as here, a school board’s RIF plan gives tenure-like priority to nontenured faculty, the board in effect elevates its nontenured personnel to the status of tenured faculty. This, we hold, it cannot do for any purpose. A reduction-in-force plan must be so implemented so as to protect tenure status from erosion on grounds unsanctioned by law. The courts cannot sanction school boards’ actions, whether taken in good or bad faith,
which manipulate job assignments in a manner that defeats the rights of tenured teachers and circumvents the purpose and spirit of the tenure law.
The trial court’s summary judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to give Babb summary judgment.
LAVENDER, SIMMS, HARGRAVE, ALMA WILSON, KAUGER and SUMMERS, JJ., concur.
HODGES, V.C.J., dissents.