Princeton Education Ass'n v. Princeton Board of Education

480 F. Supp. 962
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedFebruary 20, 1979
DocketC-1-79-20
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 480 F. Supp. 962 (Princeton Education Ass'n v. Princeton Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Princeton Education Ass'n v. Princeton Board of Education, 480 F. Supp. 962 (S.D. Ohio 1979).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

DAVID S. PORTER, Chief Judge.

This action came before the Court for a hearing on plaintiff’s motion for a preliminary injunction on February 1,1979. Plaintiffs are the Princeton Education Association [“PEA”], Connie M. Cox, Jack L. Rudicil, Edgar B. Teets, and Margaret K. Valentine. PEA is an unincorporated association whose membership consists of certified teachers employed by the Princeton City School District [“the District”] and is authorized to sue on behalf of its members pursuant to ORC § 1745.01. Plaintiffs Cox, Teets, Rudicil and Valentine are certified teachers employed by the Princeton City School District. The defendants include the Princeton Board of Education [“the Board”], Margaret Shardelow, Jerry Mitchell, Clara Gough, Carl Friedman, and G. Mitchell Lippert. The Board is a school board as defined in ORC Chapter 3313, and is charged with the administration of the affairs of the Princeton City School District. Its capacity to be sued is provided for in ORC § 3317. Defendants Shardelow, Mitchell, Gough, Friedman, and Lippert are members of the Board. In addition, defendant ' Shardelow is president of the Board, and defendant Mitchell is vice president of the Board. Jurisdiction in this Court is founded upon 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and 28 U.S.C. § 1343.

Plaintiffs claim that the Board has on several occasions denied them the opportunity to speak during a portion of Board meetings devoted to public comment on matters pertaining to school administration. Plaintiffs argue that the Board thereby has interfered with and restrained them in the exercise of their First Amendment right to express their views to the Board, and to participate in public discussions during Board meetings. On these matters, we hereby enter the following findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Fed.R. Civ.Pro. 52.

At issue in this case is written Board Policy No. 1343 regarding the conduct of Board meetings, which provides:

Every agenda shall provide an item for visitor recognition for residents of the Princeton School District.* The time allotted for this participation shall be at the discretion of the president, but shall in no instance exceed five minutes for any one group or individual. Additional time may be granted by action of the board.
. * Employees shall utilize the grievance procedure and consultation procedure when applicable.
# # * * # *

[See Plaintiffs’ Exhibit (PI. Ex.) No. 1 and Defendants’ Exhibit (Dft. Ex.) No. 1.] The visitor recognition portion of Board meetings is loosely structured, and public comment is not confined to particular subjects. Non-residents occasionally have been recog *965 nized by the Board, but upon learning that a speaker does not reside within the District, the Board generally asks the speaker to be seated. In addition, teachers occasionally have attempted to comment on matters subject to the consultation procedure, but also have been asked to be seated. It appears that speakers occasionally resist such requests by the Board and disruptive outbursts by the audience are not uncommon, particularly on such controversial subjects as the dispute presently before the Court. The Board has had difficulty in conducting the visitor recognition portion of its meetings in an orderly fashion. 1

The practical effect of the Board’s policy is twofold: visitors who are not residents of the Princeton City School District generally are not recognized to address the Board on any subject; and teachers, both resident and non-resident, may not address the Board on subjects to which the grievance procedure or the consultation procedure is applicable. The consultation procedure, described m more detail below, 2 is applicable to all “matters pertaining to terms and conditions of employment,” while the grievance procedure, also described in footnote 2, applies to questions or disputes “involving the alleged violation of the personnel policies of the board of education.” It excludes matters of broad educational policy, and matters subject to the consultation procedure.

The affidavits and testimony in this case reveal the following chronology of events, leading to this lawsuit: plaintiffs Cox, Valentine, Teets, and Rudicil each have at various times attempted to address the Board during the visitor recognition section of Board meetings, and each has been denied the opportunity to speak.

At a Board meeting on May 8, 1978, plaintiff Valentine approached the microphone during the visitor recognition portion. Defendant Shardelow asked the nature of her business and, upon learning that *966 Ms. Valentine wished to discuss “Board policies,” inquired into Ms. Valentine’s residence. Upon learning that Ms. Valentine is not a resident of the Princeton District, after a very brief period, Ms. Shardelow ruled Ms. Valentine out of order on the basis of her residence.

At the Board meeting of November 6, 1978, plaintiffs Cox, Teets, and Rudicil each had a similar experience. Plaintiff Cox took her turn at the microphone, and stated her name and address. Upon learning that Ms. Cox does not reside within the District, defendant Shardelow asked Ms. Cox to be seated. Plaintiff Teets also approached the microphone, and also was asked to take his seat because he is not a Princeton resident. Mr. Teets asked for clarification of the Board’s policy not to allow non-residents to address the Board, but was ruled out of order. When Mr. Teets continued to speak, defendant Mitchell forcefully suggested that he take his seat.

Plaintiff Rudicil, who does reside within the District, subsequently approached the microphone, and was asked to state the subject upon which he wished to address the Board. Upon stating that he wished to discuss the Board’s refusal to recognize nonresidents, two Board members vehemently ruled him out of order. Mr. Rudicil was not permitted to pursue the matter.

Events at subsequent Board meetings were much the same. At the Board’s November 27,1978 meeting plaintiff Valentine again was refused permission to address the Board because of her residence; and at the Board meetings of December 11, 1978 and January 8, 1979, plaintiffs Valentine, Teets, and Cox each again were refused permission to speak because of their residence.

Plaintiffs Teets, Cox, and Rudicil, however, testified that at the December 11, 1978 meeting, Harry Cordell, a non-resident employee, was permitted to address the Board, despite the Board’s knowledge that Mr. Cordell is not a Princeton resident. This was substantiated by the testimony of Joseph Snavely, a Princeton resident who was present at the meeting in question.

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480 F. Supp. 962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/princeton-education-assn-v-princeton-board-of-education-ohsd-1979.