Paula Melnyk v. Board of Education of the Delsea Regional High School District (082354) (Statewide)

CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 30, 2020
DocketA-77-18
StatusPublished

This text of Paula Melnyk v. Board of Education of the Delsea Regional High School District (082354) (Statewide) (Paula Melnyk v. Board of Education of the Delsea Regional High School District (082354) (Statewide)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paula Melnyk v. Board of Education of the Delsea Regional High School District (082354) (Statewide), (N.J. 2020).

Opinion

SYLLABUS

This syllabus is not part of the Court’s opinion. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Court. In the interest of brevity, portions of an opinion may not have been summarized.

Paula Melnyk v. Board of Education of the Delsea Regional High School District (A-77-18) (082354)

Argued November 4, 2019 -- Decided January 30, 2020

LaVECCHIA, J., writing for the Court.

The Court considers a challenge by Petitioner Paula Melnyk of the determination by the Commissioner of Education, affirmed by the Appellate Division, that her tenure rights were violated when she was not continued in her after-hours teaching position in a tenure-eligible alternative education program and was replaced by a non-tenured teacher.

Melnyk was a tenured special education teacher with considerable seniority within the school district when this dispute arose. She was a full-time special education teacher employed by the Board of Education of the Delsea Regional High School District (the Board) since September 1991. In that capacity, she was required to hold an Instructional Certificate that included endorsements as a “Teacher of the Handicapped and Elementary School Teacher” and as having “highly qualified status in English instruction.” In September 2002, the Board first assigned Melnyk to work in the position of “Special Education Alternative Program Teacher” to teach special education classes in the evening in addition to her regular daytime instructional position.

The alternative education program, titled “BookBinders,” was provided by the Board, in accordance with regulatory standards, for children who were not succeeding in the general education program or were mandated for removal from general education. Per the Board’s Policy, the alternative education program required its staff members to be “appropriately certified”; thus, to hold her BookBinders teaching position, Melnyk was required to have an Instructional Certificate with a Teacher of the Handicapped endorsement, which is the same certificate and endorsement required of her for her day position as a special education teacher.

Melnyk served as a special education English teacher in the BookBinders program from 2002 through the end of the 2014-15 school year, with the exception of the 2009-10 school year. There is no question that she served long enough in that position to satisfy the service requirement for tenure. During that time, Melnyk also served as a full-time special education teacher in the regular program during the contractual school day hours.

1 In August 2014, the Superintendent of Schools for the Board informed Melnyk that the Board had determined to assign another, non-tenured teacher to teach English in the BookBinders program in the following 2015-16 school year.

Melnyk promptly filed a petition of appeal with the Commissioner of Education to challenge that decision as a violation of her tenure rights. An administrative law judge (ALJ) framed the issue as “whether the petitioner acquired tenure rights with respect to her BookBinders assignment as a special education teacher where the BookBinders assignment was an extracurricular duty performed in the evenings that did not require additional certification beyond that required by the petitioner for her primary position as a special education teacher during regular school hours.” The ALJ determined that Melnyk’s assignment with BookBinders was extracurricular and concluded that Melnyk was not entitled to tenure in that position because the extracurricular position did not require additional certification beyond what Melnyk already possessed. In a Final Agency Decision, the Commissioner of Education adopted the recommended findings and conclusions of the ALJ’s Initial Decision.

The Appellate Division affirmed in an unpublished decision, relying heavily on the ALJ’s reasoning and citing to a line of administrative determinations holding that teachers may not acquire tenure in an extracurricular position unless additional certification is necessary to hold the position.

The Court granted Melnyk’s petition for certification. 238 N.J. 35 (2019).

HELD: Tenure is a statutory right controlled by law. The tribunals that concluded petitioner suffered no deprivation of her tenure rights engaged in legal error by labeling the position as “extracurricular” and then short-circuiting the requisite analysis based on that classification. This instructional and tenure-eligible position did not become extracurricular and tenure ineligible simply because petitioner already held tenure in another position. Petitioner met the statutory criteria for tenure and is entitled to a remedy for the violation of her right not to be removed or reduced in salary while protected by tenure for her work in the BookBinders program.

1. The statutes known as the Tenure Act set forth the requirements that allow a teacher to achieve tenure status and the protections provided to a tenured teaching staff member. In Spiewak v. Summit Board of Education, this Court definitively explained the nature of tenure rights accorded to teachers by that statutory scheme. 90 N.J. 63, 77 (1982). In its core holding, Spiewak pronounces that “all teaching staff members who work in positions for which a certificate is required, who hold valid certificates, and who have worked the requisite number of years, are eligible for tenure unless” certain exceptions not relevant here apply. Id. at 81. The Court noted that allowing school boards to determine when tenure should be offered would fly in the face of the Legislature’s mandate that all teachers who qualify for tenure receive tenure. Id. at 80. (pp. 13-15) 2 2. Employing a straightforward application of Spiewak, this matter should involve a simple application of the Tenure Act’s requirements. That clear analysis was sidetracked by labeling Melnyk’s position in the BookBinders program as “extracurricular” and equating it to optional activities to enhance students’ social skills, physical fitness, and community-minded spirit. There can be no tyranny of labels permitted in this analysis. The BookBinders program must be seen for what it is: an alternative education program that is part of the delivery of constitutionally required educational services. The Court reviews the regulatory framework governing alternative education programs, which are not optional but rather part of the provision of an overall, essential education program for challenged students who require full educational services outside of the normal school day hours and setting. Students have a constitutional right to an education in New Jersey, and alternative education programs make it possible to satisfy that obligation with respect to students required to be removed from the traditional classroom population and instructional setting. The Court reviews the Board policy establishing the BookBinders program and concludes that the program was not properly categorized as an “extracurricular” position in the traditional usage of that word. (pp. 16-25)

3. Pigeon-holing Melnyk’s BookBinders position as “extracurricular” was compounded by imputing a requirement particular to traditional extracurricular activities to the BookBinders program, namely that tenure rights cannot be acquired in an extracurricular program unless that program requires the teacher to hold an additional instructional certification than that required for the teacher’s full-time position. Here, the Board concedes that Melnyk’s position in the BookBinders program would be tenure eligible if it were filled by a person not already serving as an instructor in the regular day program.

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Related

Spiewak v. Rutherford Bd. of Ed.
447 A.2d 140 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1982)
US Bank, N.A. v. Hough
42 A.3d 870 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2012)
State v. Scrotsky
182 A.2d 868 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1962)
State ex rel. G.S.
749 A.2d 902 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2000)
In re Fredericks
171 A.3d 201 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2017)

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Paula Melnyk v. Board of Education of the Delsea Regional High School District (082354) (Statewide), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paula-melnyk-v-board-of-education-of-the-delsea-regional-high-school-nj-2020.