Board of Education v. Somerset Advocates for Education

984 A.2d 405, 189 Md. App. 385, 2009 Md. App. LEXIS 188
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 1, 2009
Docket2587, September Term 2008
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 984 A.2d 405 (Board of Education v. Somerset Advocates for Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Education v. Somerset Advocates for Education, 984 A.2d 405, 189 Md. App. 385, 2009 Md. App. LEXIS 188 (Md. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

DAVIS, J.

Appellant, the Board of Education of Somerset County (the Local Board), appeals from the judgment of the circuit court, reversing the decision of the Maryland State Board of Education (the MSBE) and remanding the case to the Local Board with directions to vacate its previous decision denying the application for a charter school submitted by appellee, Somerset Advocates for Education (SAFE). Appellant presents three questions 1 to this Court, which we have consolidated and rephrased as follows:

I. Was the MSBE’s review of the Local Board’s decision arbitrary and capricious because it failed to reverse the Local Board’s decision for its failure to provide appellee with the numerical rating tool used to evaluate appellee’s charter school application?
II. Did the MSBE abuse its discretion in failing to reverse the Local Board based upon appellee’s allegations of bias?

*389 For the reasons that follow, we answer both questions in the negative. Accordingly, we reverse the decision of the circuit court.

PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Appellee, SAFE, a corporation established for the purpose of creating and operating a charter school in Somerset County, Maryland, submitted an application to create a charter school to the Local Board on December 12, 2006, during a regular session public meeting of the Local Board. Appellee completed the application pursuant to the Public Charter School Guidance Materials published by Somerset County Public Schools (SCPS). The Charter School Review Committee (the Committee) initially reviewed appellee’s application and determined that the application was “technically incomplete.” The Committee created a ten-page document detailing the deficiencies in the application and requesting clarification in fifty areas, and provided it to appellee on January 12, 2007.

On March 12, 2007, appellee resubmitted its application. The amended application, according to the Committee, provided an “adequate response” to eight items, an “inadequate response” for twenty-nine items and thirteen items were deemed to require “group discussion.” Between March 22, 2007 and April 3, 2007, the Committee met with appellee’s representatives on four occasions to discuss the areas of concern, including the Instructional Program, Administrative Structure, Special Education, Personnel, Finances, Business Management, Transportation, Technology and Facilities.

The Committee, including the Superintendent, after reviewing the amended application and meeting with appellee’s representatives, scored the amended application based upon an “analytical scoring rubric” that was developed by the Anne Arundel County Public Schools. The Local Board did not provide the numerical scoring tool to appellee until after the conclusion of the scoring process. Out of a maximum possible score of 530, appellee’s application received a score of 189. A *390 score of 318 would have been sufficient to grant appellee’s application. 2

After holding the four meetings, the Committee prepared a detailed document, listing the strengths and weaknesses of the various aspects of the application. The Local Board held a special meeting on April 12, 2007 to review the Committee’s findings after scoring. None of appellee’s representatives attended the April 12, 2007 meeting, despite the fact that the April 12, 2007 Local Board meeting was announced during January and March of the regular session meetings of the Local Board and appellee’s representatives were again reminded of the meeting during the April 3, 2007 meeting with the Committee. 3 At the conclusion of the meeting on April 12, 2007, the Local Board voted 4-0 to deny the charter.

That same day, the Local Board sent a letter to appellee and enclosed the Public Agenda for the meeting, the Informational Handout from the meeting and the “Board and SAFE Packet,” which contained the results of the review of the application. The packet included a breakdown of the criteria used to evaluate the application, along with a copy of the numerical scoring rubric and appellee’s score. Although the document went into great detail about the various categories and sub-categories that were considered, we will provide an overview of the topics considered by the Local Board and the strengths and weaknesses that were identified.

Section One of the evaluation rubric considered the Executive Summary, Profile of the Founding Group, Background Information, Governance Structure, School Management and Administrative Structure, Student Populations, School Calendar and the Recruiting and Marketing Plan. The Local Board identified as strengths in this area appellee’s enthusiasm, good will, commitment, ability to raise funds through grants, that *391 appellee had made many vendor contacts and had devoted significant funds for marketing and recruitment. The Local Board, however, also found the following to be weaknesses in this section: the summary, mission and goals failed to describe a school that is unique from Somerset County Public Schools, the individual for whom a resume was furnished to the Board had withdrawn his name from consideration from the daily operations of the Board of the proposed charter school, the governing board lacked experience in school leadership and operation, the organizational chart, which was changed throughout the interview process, did not align with the narrative, the budget or the discussion and that the identified goals were not stated in measurable terms.

Section Two of the evaluation rubric considered the Education Plan, the Academic Program, Standards and Curriculum, Student Assessment, Student Support Services, Code of Student Conduct and Parental Involvement and Community Participation. The Local Board again identified a number of strengths in the application, such as: the fact that the application established a 1:20 classroom ratio with a commitment not to go above 1:22, the proposed use of the “Calvert Curriculum” because it was a known and respected tool, the aspiration to provide foreign language and piano lessons to all students, the plan to use project-based learning to engage reluctant learners, the use of the “sophisticated technology,” Curriculum Mapper, to track each teacher’s instruction, the proposed use of Individual Learning Plans for each student with annual review and the expectation that parents be active participants.

The Local Board, however, pointed to a number of concerns in this area, including “notable calendar problems,” a weak Special Education section, a lack of intervention plans to bring students up to grade level, insufficient coordination of implementation of the multiple proposed education plans, a lack of focus on the Maryland State Assessment and the attainment of adequate yearly progress, the inability of the administrative structure to comply with policies and procedures associated with federal and state records management and reporting requirements and a lack of clear procedure detailed in the *392 application to support the stated goal of maintaining a racial and ethnic balance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
984 A.2d 405, 189 Md. App. 385, 2009 Md. App. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-education-v-somerset-advocates-for-education-mdctspecapp-2009.