CWC v. Penn-Trafford, Apl of: CWC

CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 16, 2016
Docket11 WAP 2015
StatusPublished

This text of CWC v. Penn-Trafford, Apl of: CWC (CWC v. Penn-Trafford, Apl of: CWC) 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
CWC v. Penn-Trafford, Apl of: CWC, (Pa. 2016).

Opinion

[J-2-2016] IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA WESTERN DISTRICT

SAYLOR, C.J., EAKIN, BAER, TODD, DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, JJ.

CENTRAL WESTMORELAND CAREER : No. 11 WAP 2015 AND TECHNOLOGY CENTER : EDUCATION ASSOCIATION, PSEA/NEA, : Appeal from the Order of the COLLEEN CONKO, SABINE LYNN, : Commonwealth Court, entered DANIEL LUSK, MATTHEW MORRELL, : December 11, 2014 at No. 2336 C.D. AND JAMES MARK SCHOMING : 2013 affirming the Order of the Court of : Common Pleas of Westmoreland : County entered December 4, 2013 at v. : No. 1120 of 2011. : PENN-TRAFFORD SCHOOL DISTRICT : : ARGUED: October 6, 2015 APPEAL OF: CENTRAL : RE-SUBMITTED: January 20, 2016 WESTMORELAND CAREER AND : TECHNOLOGY CENTER EDUCATION : ASSOCIATION, PSEA/NEA, COLLEEN : CONKO, SABINE LYNN, AND DANIEL : LUSK :

OPINION

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE SAYLOR DECIDED: FEBRUARY 16, 2016

In this discretionary appeal, we examine whether the Transfer between Entities

Act – a provision of the Public School Code designed to protect teachers affected by

inter-school transfers of educational programs – applies where the transferred students

are placed into pre-existing classes and no new classes are added.

In terms of background, the Transfer between Entities Act, 24 P.S. §11-1113 (the

“Transfer Act”), imposes hiring obligations on receiving schools when a class or

program is transferred from one school to another and a teacher is suspended at the

sending school. This aspect of the act has existed since its inception, and provides: (a) When a program or class is transferred as a unit from one or more school entities to another school entity or entities, professional employes who were assigned to the class or program immediately prior to the transfer and are classified as teachers . . . and are suspended as a result of the transfer and who are properly certificated shall be offered employment in the program or class by the receiving entity or entities when services of a professional employe are needed to sustain the program or class transferred, as long as there is no suspended professional employe in the receiving entity who is properly certificated to fill the position in the transferred class or program. 24 P.S. §11-1113(a).1

As described more fully below, students attending math classes at one school

were accommodated within existing math classes at another school. Central to this

dispute is whether this circumstance implicated a 1991 addition to the Transfer Act

which states:

(b.1) Professional employes who are classified as teachers and who are not transferred with the classes to which they are assigned or who have received a formal notice of suspension shall form a pool of employes within the school entity. No new professional employe who is classified as a teacher shall be employed by a school entity assuming program responsibility for transferred students while there is:

(1) a properly certificated professional employe who is classified as a teacher suspended in the receiving entity; or

(2) if no person is qualified under clause (1), a properly certificated member of the school entity pool who is willing to accept employment with the school entity assuming program responsibility for transferred students. . . . 24 P.S. §11-1113(b.1).

1 The Transfer Act is contained within the Public School Code of 1949. See Act of Mar. 10, 1949, P.L. 30 (as amended 24 P.S. §§1-101 to 27-2702) (the “Code”). It appears in Article XI(b) of the Code, which relates to employment of professional employees. The Transfer Act was added to the Code in 1982, and has been amended several times, most notably in 1991, as discussed below. It has often been referred to, imprecisely, as the “Transfer of Entities Act.”

[J-2-2016] - 2 The Central Westmoreland Career and Technology Center, a public vocational-

technical school (the “Vocational School”), provides career and technical training to high

school students from numerous sending school districts within Westmoreland County,

including Appellee Penn-Trafford School District (“Penn-Trafford”). For a number of

years, the Vocational School taught math to students from the high schools in such

districts who were enrolled in career and technical programs at the Vocational School

(the “vocational students”). During this time, the sending school districts were providing

the same math instruction to students in their high schools who were not enrolled at the

Vocational School.

In early 2010, eight sending school districts, including Penn-Trafford, advised the

Vocational School that, beginning with the 2010-11 school year, they would be providing

math instruction to the vocational students at the students’ home high schools rather

than sending them to the Vocational School for math.2 Due to these changes, the

Vocational School curtailed its math offerings and suspended five certified math

teachers: Colleen Conko, Sabine Lynn, Daniel Lusk, Matthew Morrell, and James

Schoming. See generally 24 P.S. §11-1124 (relating to causes for suspension). The

Vocational School took the position that no transfer of courses or programs had

occurred, and hence, the Transfer Act was not implicated. However, in response to a

grievance filed by the Central Westmoreland Career and Technology Center Education

Association, PSEA/NEA (the “Association”) – a labor organization representing the

Vocational School’s professional employees – the Vocational School, per Section

1113(b.1), created a pool of suspended employees, consisting of the five furloughed

math teachers, and sent their names and certifications to Penn-Trafford.

2 These students continued to attend career and technical training at the Vocational School. The next year, two additional sending school districts took the same action.

[J-2-2016] - 3 Meanwhile, at Penn-Trafford High School, the existing math classes had enough

capacity to accommodate the vocational students. Thus, no new math classes were

added for the 2010-11 school year. Separately, one of the high school’s math teachers,

Brian O’Neil, resigned in March 2010 for reasons unrelated to the above circumstances.

Penn-Trafford posted a job vacancy announcement to fill his position, and it interviewed

nine candidates, including teachers Lusk and Lynn. Penn-Trafford ultimately hired a

substitute teacher to fill the vacancy, and he stayed on as a long-term substitute for Mr.

O’Neil during the 2010-11 school year.

These events led to correspondence between the Association and Penn-Trafford

in the fall of 2010 reflecting that the parties disagreed over whether a program transfer

had occurred so as to implicate the Transfer Act. The Association also expressed that,

even absent a transfer, Penn-Trafford was obligated under sub-paragraph (b.1)(2) to

hire math teachers, in the first instance, from the Vocational School’s pool of suspended

teachers since the school district did not already have a suspended, certified teacher of

its own to recall pursuant to sub-paragraph (b.1)(1). When correspondence failed to

resolve the disagreement, the Association, as well as teachers Conko, Lynn, Lusk,

Morrell, and Schoming (collectively, “Plaintiffs”), filed a complaint in the county court.3

Plaintiffs requested a declaratory judgment interpreting the Transfer Act to require

Penn-Trafford to hire teachers from the Vocational School’s pool. They also sought lost

wages and benefits due to Penn-Trafford’s failure to do so for the 2010-11 school year.

The parties engaged in discovery and, thereafter, filed cross-motions for

summary judgment.

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