Parents United for Better Schools Inc. v. School District of Philadelphia Board of Education
This text of 17 Pa. D. & C.4th 325 (Parents United for Better Schools Inc. v. School District of Philadelphia Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This litigation challenges a recent decision of the Philadelphia School Board that authorizes teachers and the like to give condoms to public high school students on a request and pilot basis (Policy 123).1 The seven individual plaintiffs are the parent/guardians of children who attend public high schools.2 Speaking broadly, they believe that Policy 123 gives the wrong “signal” to their (and perhaps, other) teenagers, namely, that engaging in premarital sex is acceptable behavior provided the participants don’t contract a disease or become pregnant.3 Insisting that the new [327]*327policy is at odds with state4 and local5 law, the parent-plaintiffs seek injunctive-and/or declaratory relief.
Not surprisingly, the board argues that its condom-related activities are neither illegal nor imprudent.6 More importantly, at least for the moment, the board has presented a motion for summary judgment contending that the parent-plaintiffs do not have standing to challenge the condom-distribution feature of Policy 123. This memorandum addresses that question.7
I
The facts regarding standing are not disputed, and the most important fact, I think, is that Policy 123 contains an explicit provision that allows parents to opt their chil[328]*328dren out of the condom distribution program.8 In order to implement this feature, the principals of the high schools participating in the pilot program mailed letters to approximately 7,000 parents. Although the letters varied slightly from school to school, each contained the following instruction:
“Please fill out the enclosed form if you do not wish your child to be able to participate in [the condom distribution program]. Please mail it back to me within two weeks.”9
In response to this instruction, 533 parents, including most of the plaintiffs, completed (and returned) opt-out forms.10 Meanwhile, the board, sensibly I think, took the stance that those parent-plaintiffs who have not as yet completed an opt-out form do not, in fact, want their children to receive condoms. Withal, none of the parent-plaintiffs’ children are entitled to obtain condoms at school.
Because so much ink has been spilled by courts11 and commentators12 discussing Pennsylvania’s ubiquitous [329]*329standing doctrine, I won’t dwell on it here. Instead, I’ll begin this discussion on common ground: Everyone connected with this case agrees that in order to establish standing, the plaintiffs must show that an “interest” belonging to them — as opposed to persons generally — has been or is likely to be infringed upon by the condom distribution feature of Policy 123, i.e., the governmental activity about which they complain. The only interest of this sort that the plaintiffs have ever mentioned is their right to raise their children as they see fit, (parental rights).13 True, I am (hopelessly) sympathetic to any assertion of parental rights.14 Nevertheless, those belonging to the plaintiffs have been vouchsafed by the fact that the board regards them as having opted their children [330]*330out of the condom distribution program. As a result, the plaintiffs’ interest in rearing their children — as opposed to their interest in the rearing of children generally — hasn’t suffered any infringement that I know of from the condom distribution feature of Policy 123. Consequently, they lack standing in the traditional sense to maintain this action.15
II
The plaintiffs are likewise not entitled to claim standing under the doctrine of exceptional circumstances. First announced in the cases of Faden v. Philadelphia Housing Authority, 424 Pa. 273, 227 A.2d 619 (1967), and Application of Biestar, 487 Pa. 438, 409 A.2d 848 (1979), this doctrine empowers common pleas courts to grant standing “when the degree of causal connection is small but judicial review is necessary to protect against governmental action which otherwise would go unchallenged.”16 Given that the board will not give condoms to the children of objecting parents (or to the children of consenting parents who never ask for them),17 the plain[331]*331tiffs have suffered no harm from the governmental activity of which they complain. Stated differently, the plaintiffs are unable to show any infringement (as opposed to a “small” infringement) of their parental rights by the implementation of the condom distribution feature of Policy 123.18
For these reasons, the prothonotary is directed to enter the following
ORDER
And now, November 10,1992, the plaintiffs’ complaint is dismissed for the reasons set forth in the accompanying memorandum.
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17 Pa. D. & C.4th 325, 1992 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 110, 25 Phila. 27, 1992 Phila. Cty. Rptr. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parents-united-for-better-schools-inc-v-school-district-of-philadelphia-pactcomplphilad-1992.