Brown v. Elston

445 A.2d 279, 4 Educ. L. Rep. 211, 1982 R.I. LEXIS 860
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 14, 1982
Docket80-589-M.P., 81-177-M.P.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 445 A.2d 279 (Brown v. Elston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Elston, 445 A.2d 279, 4 Educ. L. Rep. 211, 1982 R.I. LEXIS 860 (R.I. 1982).

Opinion

OPINION

BEVILACQUA, Chief Justice.

These are petitions for common-law writs of certiorari, whereby the Woonsocket School Committee (the committee) seeks review of two decisions of the Board of Regents (the board) affirming decisions of the Commissioner of Education (the commissioner). In those decisions, the commissioner directed the committee to provide bus transportation to certain students in the Woonsocket public school system. These cases have been consolidated for the purpose of this review.

Brown v. Elston concerns a controversy that arose in April 1980 when the committee terminated busing of all school children in Woonsocket except special-education students and students traveling across districts to school. Twenty-six parents on behalf of their children appealed this decision to the commissioner pursuant to G.L.1956 (1969 Reenactment) § 16-39-2, which provides:

“Any person aggrieved by any decision or doings of any school committee or in any other matter arising under any law relating to schools or education may appeal to the commissioner of education who, after notice to the parties interested of the time and place of hearing, shall examine and decide the same without cost to the parties involved.”

The commissioner held extensive hearings on April 17 and May 2, 1980, at which ten parents testified regarding the difficulties and hazards their children faced when deprived of bus transportation to and from school. In his decision of June 9, 1980, the commissioner concluded, based upon the evidence and testimony he had considered, that “the distances which the appellants’ children are required to walk if transportation is not provided for them and the hazards of the routes which their children must travel are such as to make walking to and from school impractical.” He therefore directed that the school committee provide transportation to the children whose parents had testified at the hearing pursuant to its obligation under § 16-21-1, which states that such transportation shall be provided by the school committee of any town to pupils “who reside so far from the * * * school which the pupil attends as to make the pupil’s regular attendance at school impractical.”

The commissioner noted, however, that “[b]ecause this matter inherently requires individualized adjudications as to impracticality * * *, this decision only applies to the children of those ten persons” who testified at the hearing. The commissioner recognized that the remaining parents were free to seek relief by requesting an evidentiary hearing, at which they could submit evidence concerning “the specific facts surrounding the transportation needs of their children.” The committee appealed to the board, which found that the facts before the trial commissioner were sufficient to support his decision and affirmed his decree.

Brown v. Concerned Parents involves the committee’s subsequent elimination of busing for all junior and senior high school students other than those in special-education programs for the 1980-81 school year. One hundred and thirty-nine parents representing one hundred and ninety-three junior and senior high school students petitioned the commissioner for a hearing to review the committee’s action pursuant to § 16-39-2. On December 29, 1980, the commissioner notified these parents by letter that his office was “prepared to rule *282 summarily in favor of all appellants whose children live beyond the following distances from school: a) Elementary (grades K-6) —1 mile b) Junior High (grades 7-9) — IV2 miles c) Senior High (grades 10-12) — 2 miles. ([Only] [t]hose appellants whose children do not meet the foregoing criteria will be required to attend a hearing.)” The distances cited by the commissioner had previously been adopted by the committee as those beyond which busing would be provided.

At a hearing on January 30,1981, counsel for the committee objected to the procedure that the commissioner had adopted. He claimed that the December 29 letter indicated that the commissioner would arbitrarily enforce distances previously set by the committee without determining whether those distances were máximums that children could practically travel to and from school without busing. The committee presented evidence showing that it had adopted the distances cited by the commissioner based on the number of buses available rather than the practicality of regularly traveling those distances to school without busing. The committee also attempted to show that most students were able to attend school regularly without undue difficulty after busing was terminated. The commissioner indicated, however, that “we did state on December 29 that we intended to rule summarily on distance alone for all pupils who live beyond the distance stated in that letter, so that * * * however material this may be to * * * the School Committee’s case * * *, this would not change our ruling as to what we stated on December 29.”

The parents presented no evidence at the hearing. In his decision of February 9, 1981, however, the commissioner noted that the committee previously provided transportation to students living beyond the specified distances and that those distances were consistent with distances adopted by other school committees in the state. He therefore found that the students lived so far from school as to make walking to and from school impractical and ordered that the committee provide busing. The board affirmed this decree.

The following issues are before this court for review: (1) whether the commissioner properly construed § 16-21-1 in deciding that the committee was obligated to provide bus transportation; (2) whether the evidence presented at the hearings on April 17 and May 2, 1980, supports the commissioner’s findings in Brown v. Elston; (3) whether the committee has standing to challenge § 16-21-1 on the ground that it is unconstitutionally vague; and (4) whether the committee was denied its right to a hearing under § 16-39-2 by the commissioner’s prejudgment of the appeal in Brown v. Concerned Parents.

I

The committee contends that the commissioner erred in Brown v. Elston by construing § 16-21-1 to allow consideration of the hazards presented by the particular routes that the children would have to walk in determining that the children were entitled to bus transportation. Consideration of factors other than distance is improper, the committee asserts, because § 16-21-1 requires transportation to be provided only for children who live “so far” from their schools as to make regular attendance at school impractical.

The commissioner’s decision of June 9,1980 plainly indicates that he found “that the distances the children would have to walk if transportation is not provided for them are unreasonably long * * Thus, even if the narrow reading of § 16-21-1 urged by the committee were adopted, the finding of the commissioner concerning the distances involved is sufficient to support his order. The commissioner’s additional finding that “the hazards of the routes which they must travel are extremely dangerous” is, on this view, superfluous.

Section 16-21-1, however, should not be read so narrowly as to preclude consideration of factors other than distance in determining whether or not a child is entitled to bus transportation.

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Bluebook (online)
445 A.2d 279, 4 Educ. L. Rep. 211, 1982 R.I. LEXIS 860, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-elston-ri-1982.