Pocono Mountain Charter School, Inc. v. Pocono Mountain School District

88 A.3d 275, 2014 WL 717951, 2014 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 123
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 26, 2014
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 88 A.3d 275 (Pocono Mountain Charter School, Inc. v. Pocono Mountain School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pocono Mountain Charter School, Inc. v. Pocono Mountain School District, 88 A.3d 275, 2014 WL 717951, 2014 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 123 (Pa. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Judge SIMPSON.

In this statutory appeal with unique procedural twists, Pocono Mountain Charter School, Inc. d/b/a Pocono Mountain Charter School (Charter School) petitions for review of the State Charter School Appeal Board’s (CAB) 2013 order revoking its charter. The CAB thus upheld the Pocono Mountain School District’s (District) school board’s (Board) adjudication.

Originally, the CAB stated there was insufficient basis for revocation, and it voted to sustain the Charter School’s appeal. Upon the District’s application to reconsider and reopen the record, the CAB rescinded its prior vote and accepted supplemental evidence. Subsequently, the CAB issued the decision and order revoking the charter. The CAB concluded the Charter School violated the Charter School Law (CSL)1 based upon religious entanglement with its landlord, the Shawnee Tabernacle Church (Church), expending public funds for sectarian purposes, exposing students to religious symbols, and failing to meet generally accepted standards of fiscal management.

The Charter School argues the proceedings violated its constitutional due process rights at both levels of administrative review. Upon review, we vacate and remand to the CAB in accordance with the following opinion.

I. Background

A. The Charter School and Church Relationship

In 2003, Dennis Bloom (Bloom) submitted the charter application on behalf of the [279]*279Charter School and became its first Chief Executive Officer (CEO). Since it opened, the Charter School leased space from the Church. The Church operated in the same building and shared facilities with the Charter School. Significantly, Bloom simultaneously served the Charter School as CEO and the Church as Senior Pastor. Bloom thus represented the Church while also representing the Charter School, including in business deals where their interests diverged (e.g., lease negotiations). The Charter School also employed Bloom’s wife and his children at certain times.

In 2006, the District renewed the Charter School’s charter for five years, subject to 65 conditions. At that time, the District knew of the Charter School’s relationship with the Church and of Bloom’s dual role. It challenged neither.

The District initiated revocation proceedings in May 2008. The revocation resolution concerned religious entanglement and financial improprieties of Bloom given his apparent conflicts of interest.

Bloom resigned from his position as CEO in December 2010, two months after the Board issued its adjudication revoking the Charter School’s charter. However, benefits Bloom received from the Charter School did not completely terminate upon his resignation.

The parties do not dispute that the Charter School is working to remedy its financial history with a Court-monitored custodian. Judge Arthur L. Zulick of the Court of Common Pleas of Monroe County is monitoring the financial and educational status of the Charter School.

B. Procedural Overview

The timing of events is important. In May 2008, the District adopted a resolution containing 27 reasons to revoke the charter.2 In June 2009, the Board commenced public hearings on the revocation. Primarily, the hearings focused on the alleged unconstitutional entanglement between the Charter School and the Church. The hearings also involved alleged financial mismanagement and improper expenditures by then-CEO Bloom.

After holding 16 hearings over a year’s time, on October 6, 2010, the Board issued an adjudication to revoke the charter. The Charter School appealed to the CAB.

On September 27, 2011, at a public meeting, the CAB acted on the revocation. By majority vote, the CAB sustained the Charter School’s appeal. The CAB did not issue a written decision explaining its disagreement with the Board.

Significantly, the Charter School received a confidential draft copy of a Performance Audit Report from the State Auditor General in December 2011. Before the CAB issued a written decision in support of its September action, in January 2012, the District sought reconsideration of the CAB’s action and moved to reopen the record for the purpose of admitting the anticipated final audit (referenced by an article in The Morning Call). Supplemental Reproduced Record (S.R.R.) at 52b-53b, 60b. The District revised its request to reopen the record to include the Performance Audit Report issued on February 8, 2012 (Final Audit). The Final Audit covered transactions from July 2006 through August 2010.

[280]*280By order dated February 29, 2012, the CAB rescinded its September 2011 vote, and it reopened the record to accept the Final Audit and any supplemental evidence related to its findings. The CAB remanded evidentiary issues to a hearing officer who made findings as to the supplemental evidence only.

After receiving the hearing officer’s proposed findings, the CAB voted 6-0 in favor of revocation on July 30, 2013. It issued its written decision and order three days later. The Charter School promptly filed a petition for review and motion for stay, which this Court granted. Although its charter expired in 2011, the Charter School continues to operate pursuant to this Court’s stay of the CAB’s revocation decision.

In an effort to shed light on the many due process challenges and clarify the complex procedural history, we review the proceedings at each administrative stage in more detail.

1.Revocation Hearings (District Board)

The District’s written resolution detailed 27 reasons for scheduling a hearing to revoke the Charter School’s charter. Among the 27 grounds, the Board identified the following issues:

1. Entanglement of the Church with the Charter School’s operations;
2. Excessive CEO Benefits and Salary;
3. Violations of State Ethics Law by employing Bloom’s relatives, including his wife and children, creating conflicts of interest;
4. Benefit to Bloom or improper financial benefits to the Church, (payment of excessive rent and fees, e.g., gym floor, LED sign used to display messages);
5. Paying more than fair market value rates for rent, and failing to negotiate at arm’s length; and,
6. Operating Charter School to constitute an alter ego of the Church, its landlord.

See Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 150a-152a (Revocation Resolution). Prior to hearing, the parties engaged in discovery. Over the course of a year, the Board conducted 16 hearings, resulting in 2,000 pages of transcribed testimony.

The evidence during the revocation hearings revealed the following facts. The District renewed the charter for a period of five years, until 2011. R.R. at 16a-25a. After renewal, the District became concerned the Charter School did not comply with its charter. The District sent a letter dated April 10, 2007, seeking information to ensure charter compliance. The letter advised the Charter School that if it did not provide the requested information within 60 days, revocation proceedings may be commenced. S.R.R. at 752b-754b. The Charter School responded without disclosing its renegotiations of its most recent lease with the Church.

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Bluebook (online)
88 A.3d 275, 2014 WL 717951, 2014 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pocono-mountain-charter-school-inc-v-pocono-mountain-school-district-pacommwct-2014.