Bell, B., Aplts. v. Wilkinsburg SD

CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 21, 2026
Docket23 WAP 2024
StatusPublished
AuthorDougherty, Kevin M.

This text of Bell, B., Aplts. v. Wilkinsburg SD (Bell, B., Aplts. v. Wilkinsburg SD) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bell, B., Aplts. v. Wilkinsburg SD, (Pa. 2026).

Opinions

[J-30-2025] IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA WESTERN DISTRICT

TODD, C.J., DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, BROBSON, McCAFFERY, JJ.

BETTY BELL, AN ADULT INDIVIDUAL, : No. 23 WAP 2024 AND PROPEL SCHOOLS, D/B/A PROPEL : CHARTER SCHOOL - HOMESTEAD, : Appeal from the Order of the PROPEL CHARTER SCHOOL - SUNRISE, : Commonwealth Court entered D/B/A PROPEL BRADDOCK HILLS, : January 31, 2024, at No. 1259 CD PROPEL CHARTER SCHOOL - PITCAIRN, : 2019, Affirming the Order of the AND PROPEL CHARTER SCHOOL - : Allegheny County Court of Common HAZELWOOD, : Pleas at No. GD 18-12950 entered Appellant : August 23, 2021. : v. : ARGUED: April 10, 2025 : WILKINSBURG SCHOOL DISTRICT, :

Appellee

OPINION

JUSTICE DOUGHERTY DECIDED: JANUARY 21, 2026 In this appeal we are tasked with determining whether Section 1726-A(a) of the

Charter School Law (“CSL”), 24 P.S. §17-1726-A(a),1 permits a school district to furnish

different modes of free transportation to students enrolled in public charter schools than

to students attending traditional public schools. Consistent with the unambiguous text of

the statute, we hold it does. We therefore affirm.

The parties before us are familiar ones. See Bell v. Wilkinsburg Sch. Dist., 283

A.3d 245 (Pa. 2022) (“Bell II”). Appellee, the Wilkinsburg School District (the “District”),

is a public school district located in Wilkinsburg Borough, Allegheny County. Appellants

are Propel Charter Schools, a non-profit corporation that operates public charter schools

in several municipalities within ten miles of the District’s boundaries — Pitcairn,

1 We reproduce this statute in full infra. Homestead, Braddock Hills, and Hazelwood — and Betty Bell, a resident of the District

living with her two grandchildren, one of whom attends a Propel charter school.2 We

previously recounted the relevant history underlying the parties’ litigation in this case as

follows:

Prior to the 2017-2018 school year, the District contracted with an independent bus company to provide transportation for all students residing in the District who attended its schools as well as for those students who attended one of Propel’s charter schools located within ten miles of the District’s boundaries. Thus, students who attended these charter schools were transported to and from those schools on buses the District provided, pursuant to its bus contract. However, before the 2018-2019 school year, as part of ongoing efforts to safeguard its fiscal stability, the District engaged the services of a consultant from the Pennsylvania Association of School Business Officials to review its overall transportation program. Based on the consultant’s review, the District determined that, if it discontinued providing school bus transportation for charter school students, and, instead, furnished those students with free passes to use public bus transportation provided by the Allegheny County Port Authority (“PAT”), its overall annual transportation costs would be reduced. This was because the District would be fully reimbursed by the Department for the cost of purchasing of bus passes from PAT; whereas, if it continued to provide bus transportation itself for the Propel students, the state subsidy for such costs was significantly more limited; as a result, the District would incur $136,836 in unreimbursed transportation expenses each fiscal year.

Consequently, the District decided that it would no longer provide Propel students with school bus transportation[.] . . . As a result of the District’s decision, Propel retained the services of a private bus company to provide transportation for all of its students in kindergarten through grade five; however, Propel did not provide such transportation for its sixth through twelfth grade students, who instead used the PAT bus passes provided by the District, or other means of transportation.

. . . On October 12, 2018, Bell and Propel jointly filed a lawsuit against the District, seeking both declarative and injunctive relief. The lawsuit sought a declaratory judgment that the District’s furnishing of PAT bus passes to Propel’s students did not constitute the provision of “free transportation” as Section 17-1726-A(a) of the [CLS] required, and, also, sought an injunction to prospectively prohibit the District from issuing such passes to Propel’s

2 As we did in Bell II, “for ease of discussion, we will refer to Bell and Propel Charter

Schools, collectively, as Propel.” 283 A.3d at 248 n.3.

[J-30-2025] - 2 students. Following a non-jury trial, the trial court ruled in the District’s favor and dismissed Propel’s complaint.

The trial court found that the District did not violate either the CSL or the Public School Code. The court reasoned that, although Section 17-1726- A(a) of the CSL requires students to be provided “free transportation,” Section 13-1362 of the Public School Code expressly permits such transportation to be furnished by “common carriers” such as PAT. [3] The trial court concluded that the “under the same conditions” language in Section 17-1726-A(a) was a requirement that the route be non-hazardous, but not that charter school students and school district students be transported in the same type of carrier. Trial Court Opinion, 10/22/19, at 2. Given that the trial court could find no basis in either the CSL or the Public School Code to mandate that identical means of transportation be provided to school district and charter school students, it refused to “impose such a requirement by judicial fiat.” Id.

Propel appealed to the Commonwealth Court, arguing that the trial court committed legal error by failing to conclude that: (1) Section 1726-A(a) of the CSL required the District to provide the charter school students with the same form of transportation that the District provides to students attending its own schools; (2) the District’s use of PAT buses to transport Propel students violated Section 23.2 and Section 23.4 of the Board’s regulations governing pupil transportation; and (3) the District’s use of PAT buses to

3 Section 13-1362 provides:

The free transportation of pupils, as required or authorized by this act, or any other act, may be furnished by using either school conveyances, private conveyances, or electric railways, or other common carriers, when the total distance which any pupil must travel by the public highway to or from school, in addition to such transportation, does not exceed one and one-half (1½) miles, and when stations or other proper shelters are provided for the use of such pupils where needed, and when the highway, road, or traffic conditions are not such that walking constitutes a hazard to the safety of the child, as so certified by the Department of Transportation. The Department of Transportation shall take into account the presence of sidewalks along the highway, but such presence or lack thereof shall not be controlling and the department shall consider all relevant safety factors in making its determination as to whether or not walking constitutes a hazard to pupils. All private motor vehicles employed in transporting pupils for hire shall be adequately covered by public liability insurance in such amount as the board of school directors shall require.

24 P.S. §13-1362.

[J-30-2025] - 3 transport Propel students violated Section 13-1362 of the School Code because this resulted in students having to walk long distances over unsafe routes. . . .

The Commonwealth Court reversed in a unanimous, published en banc opinion. Bell v. Wilkinsburg Sch. Dist., 252 A.3d 708 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2021) [(“Bell I”)]. The court focused its analysis on the question of whether the District complied with Section 23.2 of the Board’s regulations, as it viewed this to be “a threshold issue.” Id. at 711. . . .

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