Huntington School District v. Vermont State Board of Education

2020 VT 53
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJuly 10, 2020
Docket2019-337
StatusPublished

This text of 2020 VT 53 (Huntington School District v. Vermont State Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Huntington School District v. Vermont State Board of Education, 2020 VT 53 (Vt. 2020).

Opinion

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal revision before publication in the Vermont Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions by email at: JUD.Reporter@vermont.gov or by mail at: Vermont Supreme Court, 109 State Street, Montpelier, Vermont 05609-0801, of any errors in order that corrections may be made before this opinion goes to press.

2020 VT 53

No. 2019-337

Huntington School District Supreme Court

On Appeal from v. Superior Court, Franklin Unit, Civil Division

Vermont State Board of Education et al. February Term, 2020

Robert A. Mello, J.

Stephen F. Coteus and Nicholas A.E. Low of Tarrant, Gillies & Richardson, Montpelier, for Plaintiff-Appellant.

Thomas J. Donovan, Jr., Attorney General, and David Boyd and Eleanor L.P. Spottswood, Assistant Attorneys General, Montpelier, for Defendants-Appellees State Board of Education and Vermont Agency of Education.

Pietro J. Lynn and Sean M. Toohey of Lynn, Lynn, Blackman & Manitsky, P.C., Burlington, for Defendant-Appellee Mount Mansfield Modified Unified Union School District.

PRESENT: Reiber, C.J., Robinson, Eaton, Carroll and Cohen, JJ.

¶ 1. REIBER, C.J. This case is one of several lawsuits challenging the implementation

of Act 46, as amended by Act 49, regarding the involuntary merger of school districts. Plaintiff

Huntington School District appeals the civil division’s order dismissing plaintiff’s complaint on

motion of the two state defendants and granting defendant Mount Mansfield Modified Unified

Union School District’s motion for judgment on the pleadings.1 We affirm.

1 The other defendants in this case are the Vermont Agency of Education and the Vermont State Board of Education. ¶ 2. Plaintiff raises four issues in this appeal. We resolved three of those issues—

contrary to plaintiff’s position here—in our contemporaneously issued opinion concerning another

challenge to the implementation of Acts 46 and 49—Athens School District et al. v. State Board

of Education et al., 2020 VT 52, __ Vt. __, __ A.3d __. In that opinion, we set forth a detailed

history of the relevant law and procedural history concerning challenges to the Board of

Education’s final report and order merging school districts pursuant to Act 46, as amended by Act

49. See id. ¶¶ 2-12. In this opinion, we set forth only the law and procedural history relevant to

plaintiff’s single claim of error not decided in Athens School District: that the State Board of

Education exceeded its delegated authority under Act 46 “by designating Huntington as a member

of Mount Mansfield and purporting to subdelegate to Mount Mansfield the power to merge

Huntington.”

¶ 3. In response to declining student enrollment and a large number of independent

school districts in the state, the Legislature passed acts in 2010 and 2012 to incentivize voluntary

mergers of school districts. Its objective was to increase opportunity for students and decrease

costs. See 2009, No. 153 (Adj. Sess.); 2011, No. 156 (Adj. Sess.). In 2011, the Chittenden East

Supervisory Union (CESU) included seven autonomous school districts: Bolton, Huntington,

Jericho, Richmond, Underhill/Jericho, and Underhill, each serving grades pre-K-4; and Mount

Mansfield Union School District, a middle school/high school serving grades 5-12 for children in

all seven of these districts.2 Each of the seven districts had its own school board and budget. That

2 Definitions of the various types of school districts are helpful in understanding this opinion. A union school district (USD) is a single legal entity encompassing two or more towns that provide for the education of all students of the member towns in the specific grades for which the district was created. A unified union school district (UUSD) is a type of union school district that is responsible for the education of resident students of the member towns in all grades. Pursuant to Act 156, as discussed herein, a modified unified union school district (MUUSD) provides for the education of all high school students of member towns of a former high school district as well as all elementary students of member towns voting in favor of merger. A supervisory union (SU) is an administrative, planning, and educational service unit that provides 2 year, voters in two of the six CESU elementary school districts—Huntington and Richmond—

defeated a proposal to create a single Regional Education District (RED) pursuant to Act 153.

Because Act 153 required voter approval in all the districts in the proposed RED, the RED was

not created.

¶ 4. In response, the Legislature passed Act 156. Act 156 changed the law so that a new

MUUSD could be established—and become eligible for various incentives, including tax rate

reductions and other transitional assistance—when a majority of the elementary school districts

within an existing union district voted in favor of it. See 2011, Act 156 (Adj. Sess.), §§ 17(a)-(c).

In 2014, after a CESU voluntary-merger committee recommended merging its seven member

districts, the CESU held another merger vote. All the member districts except Huntington

approved the proposed merger, thereby creating the Mount Mansfield Modified Union School

District (“Mount Mansfield”). As a result, Huntington remained an independent elementary school

district and no single supervisory union was formed. Huntington and Mount Mansfield remained

as distinct entities overseen by the CESU, which, in turn, was managed by a board composed of

members of the Huntington and Mount Mansfield boards.

¶ 5. In 2015, the Vermont Legislature passed Act 46, which established an initial

voluntary merger phase, followed by an involuntary merger phase. The second phase called for

the involuntary merger of districts that had not voluntarily merged into preferred educational

governance structures—defined in part as a single supervisory school district responsible for the

education of all pre-K-12 students within that district—unless those districts demonstrated that

merger was impossible or impracticable or that an alternative structure best satisfied Act 46’s

goals. See 2015, No. 46, §§ 5(b), 8-10. In 2017, the Legislature passed Act 49, which, in relevant

part, provided an additional merger incentive for districts that were exempt from involuntary

services on behalf of member school districts. A supervisory district (SD) is a (SU) consisting of a single school district, which may be a UUSD. 3 merger but nonetheless agreed to merge with another district. 2017, No. 49, § 8 (amending § 10

of Act 46).

¶ 6. In 2016 and 2018, Huntington voters twice rejected proposed voluntary mergers

with Mount Mansfield pursuant to Act 46, thus preventing the creation of a preferred educational

governance structure—a single supervisory school district—instead of the CESU, the Mount

Mansfield Modified Unified Union School District, and the Huntington School District. In its

involuntary phase, Act 46 required the Agency of Education to make recommendations, and the

State Board of Education to issue a final report and order, concerning additional mergers to meet

Act 46’s goals. See 2015, No. 46, §§ 8-10. In June 2018, the Agency issued a proposed statewide

plan for school district governance. In relevant part, the plan recommended the merger of the

Huntington and Mount Mansfield school districts into a single UUSD by requesting Mount

Mansfield to accept Huntington as a member. Because Huntington had a governance structure

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Related

State v. Therrien, Jr.
2011 VT 120 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2011)
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Athens School District v. Vermont State Board of Education
2020 VT 52 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2020)

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