Harden v. Christina School District

924 A.2d 247, 2007 Del. Ch. LEXIS 81
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMay 31, 2007
DocketC.A. 2832-VCS
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 924 A.2d 247 (Harden v. Christina School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harden v. Christina School District, 924 A.2d 247, 2007 Del. Ch. LEXIS 81 (Del. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

STRINE, Vice Chancellor.

I. Introduction

The Neighborhood Schools Act, 14 Del. C. §§ 220-23 (the “NSA” or “Act”) was adopted by the General Assembly in April 2000 to “establish and implement a plan for neighborhood schools in Northern New Castle County that is fair and equitable to all affected children in New Castle County.” 1 By its plain terms, the NSA required the defendant Christina School District (the “District” or “Christina”) to “develop a Neighborhood School Plan ... that assignfed] every student within the district to the grade-appropriate school closest to the student’s residence, without regard to any consideration other than geographic distance and the natural boundaries of neighborhoods.” 2 Under the NSA, Christina was only permitted to deviate from a strict focus on geographic proximity if it could identify “substantial hardship[s]” that justified different approaches to assignment. 3 The Act also required that the Neighborhood School Plan that it compelled Christina to develop apply specified grade configurations for each of the District’s schools. Christina was not allowed to avoid this requirement, *249 but it was permitted to present an alternative plan using different grade spans “in addition to” a plan conforming to the statutory mandate if it believed such an alternative would better accomplish the NSA’s goals. 4 That is, the District had a mandatory obligation under the Act to develop a Neighborhood School Plan that complied with the NSA’s express terms and to submit that plan (along with an alternative plan if the District so chose) to the State Board of Education (the “State Board”) for consideration and approval.

In developing an Act-compliant Neighborhood School Plan, Christina faced a serious geographic problem. The “Suburban” portion of its District, surrounding the town of Newark, was located 15 miles from its “City” portion, in Wilmington. The General Assembly, however, offered no accommodation in the NSA for this non-contiguous district design, nor did it use the Act to reconfigure the Christina District to include its City students in any of the school districts contiguous with the City. Instead, Christina was left to craft a Neighborhood School Plan for a District for which that concept makes little or no geographic sense.

In November 2001, Christina presented its first Neighborhood School Plan to the State Board of Education. That plan largely kept the District’s existing feeder patterns and grade configurations in place, only realigning attendance patterns to account for building capacities in the District’s schools. Finding that Christina’s initial plan failed to comply with the NSA as a matter of law, the State Board directed Christina to develop another plan.

In May 2002, Christina made its second submission to the State Board. This time the District used the grade configurations required by the Act, but it relied on a massive capital spending program to support that initiative. As a preferred alternative, the District resubmitted its first plan, which proposed to maintain the District structure without change. The State Board rejected both of these plans, finding that the District had an obligation to present a Neighborhood School Plan that met the statutory grade configurations using its existing school capacity. In so ruling, the State Board acknowledged the unique predicament Christina faced and expressed its hope that the General Assembly would act to address Christina’s problematic geography, but indicated that Christina needed to take action to comply with the Act.

In late 2003, Christina suggested that it would engage in a planning process to comply with the requirements of the Act. During the summer of 2004, the General Assembly amended the NSA to explicitly permit the District a third bite at the apple. But, by early 2005, it appeared that Christina was content to muddle along, here and there making changes to feeder patterns and closing a school, but not undertaking any effort to come up with a formal Neighborhood School Plan, as required by the Act.

In 2006, a new superintendent arrived at Christina, only to find that the District had mismanaged its finances in a serious way, necessitating layoffs, reductions in programming, and substantial borrowing from the State to continue operations. As part of the effort to address its problems, Christina approved a “Strategic Plan” in March of this year that contemplates the closing of two of Christina’s City elementary schools, including one for the coming school year, and the redeployment of two other City schools toward purposes other than regular public education. Once im *250 plemented, the Strategic Plan will enable all Suburban students in Christina to spend all 13 of their school years in Suburban schools. But for Christina students in the City of Wilmington, another reality looms.

Upon full execution of the Strategic Plan as it is currently envisioned, City students in Christina will attend one of two extremely large elementary schools in the City for their first six years of public education. Then, they will be dispersed to Suburban middle and high schools, spending their sixth through twelfth grade years some 15 miles away from their homes. As such, the Strategic Plan, when complete, will require City students to spend the majority of their public education — the final 7 of their 13 years in the system — in the Suburbs without any option to attend a middle or high school closer to home.

Moreover, no change to this dynamic can rationally be expected in the coming decade if the Strategic Plan proceeds as written. All told, the Strategic Plan will close four existing smaller elementary schools in the City to normal public school use, will offer no option for middle or high school programming in the City, and will commit the two City schools that had originally been built as middle schools to indefinite use as elementary schools. The Strategic Plan will also decouple referendum funding for development of a Suburban middle school from capital campaigns supporting renovations in the City, making the latter less likely to gain voter support from the District’s overwhelmingly Suburban tax base.

This case comes before me now at the instance of parents of Christina students, and of the City of Wilmington, who together seek an injunction against the procession of the Strategic Plan. The plaintiffs allege, without contradiction from the District, that Christina has yet to submit a Neighborhood School Plan that complies with the Act’s explicit mandates. In light of that fact, the plaintiffs ask me to enjoin the Strategic Plan, particularly the closing of the four City schools until Christina gains the State Board of Education’s approval of a Neighborhood School Plan for the District that complies with the NSA.

The plaintiffs contend that whatever the educational merits of the NSA may be, the District is not permitted to ignore the Act and to proceed as if it did not exist.

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Bluebook (online)
924 A.2d 247, 2007 Del. Ch. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harden-v-christina-school-district-delch-2007.