Meiners v. Bering Strait School District

687 P.2d 287, 1984 Alas. LEXIS 340
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 27, 1984
DocketS-125, S-140
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 687 P.2d 287 (Meiners v. Bering Strait School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meiners v. Bering Strait School District, 687 P.2d 287, 1984 Alas. LEXIS 340 (Ala. 1984).

Opinion

OPINION

RABINO WITZ, Justice.

In April and May of 1983 several dissatisfied residents of the Bering Strait R.E. A.A. School District drafted and circulated a recall petition. This appeal and cross-appeal are taken from the superior court’s judgment enjoining the holding of a recall election for certain School Board members. We reverse in part.

I. STATUTORY BACKGROUND

The Bering Strait School District is a Regional Educational Attendance Area (REAA) in Western Alaska established pursuant to AS 14.08.031 et seq. and governed by a regional school board of eleven elected members. Recall of regional school board members is provided for in AS 14.08.081, which incorporates the statutes relating to *291 the recall of city and borough officials, AS 29.28.130-250.

The portions of AS 29.28.130-250 which provide the background for the present controversy are as follows. AS 29.28.130 specifies that an elected official may be recalled after serving six months in office. Section 140 reads in full, “Grounds for recall are misconduct in office, incompetence, or failure to perform prescribed duties.” Section 150 provides that for municipal recalls the petition is to be filed with the municipal clerk, but AS 14.08.081 vests the clerk’s duties in the state Division of Elections when a REAA school board member is the subject of the recall, and further provides that “the lieutenant governor shall perform the functions of the assembly or council_” Incorporating AS 29.28.-070(b), section 150 then provides that in areas with fewer than 7500 persons, such as the Bering Strait REAA, the petition must be signed by a number of registered voters representing at least 25 percent of the total number of votes cast “at the last general election in the ... area concerned, or special election called for the purpose of electing city or borough officers.” The petition must be filed within 60 days after the date of the earliest signature, and must contain “a statement of the grounds of the recall stated with particularity as to specific instances.”

“The municipal clerk [or, here, the Division of Elections] shall review the petition for content and signatures” within 10 days after it is filed. AS 29.28.160. If the number of signatures is insufficient, the sponsors may supplement it with additional signatures within 10 days after the date that it is rejected. AS 29.28.170(a). If the petition is insufficient for any other reason, it is rejected and filfed as a public record. Id. If no regular election is scheduled within 75 days, the Lieutenant Governor is directed to hold a special election within that period. AS 29.28.200(b); AS 14.08.081.

Under AS 29.28.210, the recall ballot must contain “the grounds as stated in the recall petition” and a rebuttal of up to 200 words from the target official, if submitted at least 20 days before the election. If the officer successfully resists a recall election, another recall petition may not be filed against the officer for six months. AS 29.28.240. If the officer is recalled, another election is held to select a successor. AS 29.28.250.

II. FACTS

In April and May 1983, a group of voters in the REAA presented to the Division of Elections a petition for the recall of all eleven members. The petition, as circulated, read in full as follows:

We the undersigned, as registered voters in the Bering Strait School District, petition the commision [sic] of elections to hold a recall election for the eleven members of the Bering Strait School Board. The present members are: Chuck Deg-nan, Francis Degnan, R.R. Blodgett, Don Jackson, Howard Lincoln, Clifford Wey-iounna, Joseph Noongwook, John Chee-muk, Roger Nassuk, Jonah Tokeinna, Herbert Appassingok. We cite the failure of the present board to perform the prescribed duties of their office.
1. We cite the failure to control the administrative practices of superintendent Ron Hohman. The superintendent has made large appropriation of district funds on his own judgement for non-district, non-student, and non-educational programs. An example is a $230,000 appropriation to the adventure based education program of another school district. A trip by Bethel students to London, a play by the Bethel theater group and other monies spent around the state benefited no students from the Bering Strait School District. The State of Alaska Department of Education has ruled that this money was spent in a totally inappropriate manner. Our board has failed to hold the superintendent responsible for these monies. We also cite alledged [sic] coercive and illegal means used by the superintendent to prompt his staff to perform activities of a non *292 educational manner including circulation of a statement of support among teachers, and use of district staff to promote his own election bid for a national position.
2. We cite the failure, of the school board to provide full and open communication between themselves and the voters of the district. The board has failed under state statutes to provide its constituents adequate notice of school board meetings and functions. The board has failed under the common rules of order to set time and date of the next meeting while in regular session. The board has also failed to provide adequate public disclosure of minutes. The board has only met in regular session four times from June 1982 through the 1st of April 1983 a period of eleven months, yet the board publicly claims that policy calls for monthly meetings. The board has also failed to provide the public access to the board agenda. At the last regular meeting held on April 7, 1983 a petition containing over three hundred names as well as resolutions passed by a majority of the A.E.C./P.A.C. members in our district calling for the removal of Ron Hohman from his position was denied the right to be added to the agenda by Chairman Chuck Degnan.
3. The board has failed to deal with allegations of conflict of interest and unethical behavior among its members and board. According' to common law public officials must not give the appearance of personal gain from holding a position on a board. Yet Chairman Chuck Degnan publicly claims to be “paid” twenty thousand plus dollars per year for his position. R.R. Blodgett’s business concerns conduct massive amounts of business with the school district. Also R.R. Blodgett made an abusive and derogatory phone call to a concerned parent in February of 1982 and the board was asked to conduct a complete investigation into the matter and this order of business has never been officially addressed by the board.
This petition begins its circulation on April 11, 1983 and all signatures will be secured within the sixty days prescribed by law.

The Division of Elections verified 249 signatures, and concluded that only 198 were necessary to meet the requirements of AS 29.28.150 and AS 29.28.070(b), interpreting the required number to be 25 per cent of the number of votes cast at the last regular election for school board members, held in October 1982. Therefore, on May 11, the Division certified the petition.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hageland Aviation Services, Inc. v. Harms
210 P.3d 444 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2009)
Matanuska Electric Ass'n v. Rewire the Board
36 P.3d 685 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2001)
Garvin v. Jerome
767 So. 2d 1190 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2000)
Bess v. Ulmer
985 P.2d 979 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1999)
Von Stauffenberg v. COMTE. FOR HON. SC. BD.
903 P.2d 1055 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1995)
McCormick v. Smith
793 P.2d 1042 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1990)
State ex rel. City Council of Gladstone v. Yeaman
768 S.W.2d 103 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1988)
McAlpine v. University of Alaska
762 P.2d 81 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1988)
Falke v. State
717 P.2d 369 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1986)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
687 P.2d 287, 1984 Alas. LEXIS 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meiners-v-bering-strait-school-district-alaska-1984.