Va. Education Assn. v. Davison (Corrected)

CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedAugust 31, 2017
Docket161017
StatusPublished

This text of Va. Education Assn. v. Davison (Corrected) (Va. Education Assn. v. Davison (Corrected)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Va. Education Assn. v. Davison (Corrected), (Va. 2017).

Opinion

PRESENT: All the Justices

VIRGINIA EDUCATION ASSOCIATION, ET AL. OPINION BY v. Record No. 161017 JUSTICE CLEO E. POWELL August 31, 2017 BRIAN C. DAVISON

COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION

v. Record No. 161025

BRIAN C. DAVISON

LOUDOUN COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD

v. Record No. 161031

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND Melvin R. Hughes, Judge Designate

The Virginia Department of Education (“VDOE”) appeals from the judgment of the

Circuit Court of the City of Richmond (“circuit court”) directing it to produce student growth

percentile (“SGP”) data for certain Loudoun County Public School students under the Virginia

Freedom of Information Act, Code § 2.2-3700 et seq. (“VFOIA”). The Loudoun County School

Board (“School Board”) and the Virginia Education Association (“VEA”) sought to intervene in

the matter. 1 The circuit court permitted the School Board to intervene limited to the issue of

1 The Virginia School Board Association and the Virginia Association of School Superintendents also filed motions to intervene. They did not appeal. whether Code § 22.1-295.1(C) applied to preclude disclosure of the requested information. 2 The

circuit court denied the motion to intervene filed by the VEA. These appeals followed.

I. BACKGROUND

The facts of the case are not in dispute. Brian C. Davison (“Davison”) contacted

Loudoun County Public Schools requesting Standards of Learning (“SOL”) test results for

students in the County’s schools. Davison was informed that VDOE was the custodian of the

information he sought and was advised to submit his request to VDOE.

Davison thereafter sent a VFOIA request to VDOE for the English and math assessment

SGP aggregated score results for Loudoun County Public Schools sorted by teacher and by

school over the past five years along with an explanation of the methodology used to calculate

the assessment scores. In response to his request, VDOE indicated that score results do not

include information for individual teachers. Davison provided VDOE with a link to its own

website where an exemplar “Annotated Division Report” showed that VDOE had in fact

compiled SGP results by teacher and school in the past.

VDOE next responded that, despite the exemplar on the website, no such reports existed

and that “the records that you are requesting only exist in a database that contains information

directly related to students, they are considered scholastic records, which are exempt from

disclosure under Va. Code Section 2.2-3705.4.” Davison responded that, based on publicly

available information, he believed that VDOE could produce summary reports that did not

include student identifying information. VDOE acknowledged that such reports did exist at one

2 The School Board also sought to intervene to raise the personnel exemption under Code § 2.2-3705.1(1); the personal information exemption under Code § 2.2-3705.1(10), as defined in Code § 2.2-3801; and the scholastic records exemption under Code § 2.2-3705.1(4). We do not reach these issues because of the disposition we make regarding confidentiality of personnel records under Code § 22.1-295.1(C).

2 time, but were no longer produced and again asserted that they were exempt from disclosure

under VFOIA.

On October 2, 2014, Davison filed a verified petition for a writ of mandamus requesting

that the circuit court require VDOE to produce the SGP data. Davison also requested an award

of attorney’s fees, costs, and statutory civil damages for willful violation of VFOIA. 3 VDOE

responded to the petition by demurrer. The circuit court overruled the demurrer and held an ore

tenus hearing. The principal issue covered by the testimony and argument of the parties was

whether the information Davison sought was subject to the exemption in Code § 2.2-3705.4 for

“scholastic records” and the corresponding federal law protecting student privacy. See 20 U.S.C.

§ 1232g.

In an opinion letter dated January 9, 2015, the circuit court found that the VFOIA

exemption and federal protections did not apply. In its ruling, the circuit court noted that the

section VDOE relied on covered a number of exemptions related to scholastic records. The

circuit court noted further that the “issue seem[ed] to be confined to whether the information

sought contains ‘information concerning identifiable individuals.’” Specifically, the court noted

that VDOE admitted that its database could produce reports with the information Davison

requested without disclosing any student identifying information. Moreover, because the

information in such reports was available in other forms, the court rejected VDOE’s contention

that it was being required to “creat[e] . . . a new public record” in order to respond to the request.

The circuit court ordered that the writ of mandamus should issue.

3 Davison named two VDOE employees as defendants for this claim. This issue is not before the Court on appeal.

3 On February 6, 2015, the VEA filed a motion to intervene in the mandamus proceeding.

On February 11, 2015, the School Board also sought to intervene. The circuit court denied the

motions to intervene finding that, as private entities, they were not subject to an action to enforce

VFOIA and, thus, had no standing to intervene. However, the circuit court stated that it would

grant the School Board’s motion to intervene for the limited purpose of asserting an exemption

for “aggregate teacher performance indicators or other data” as being confidential portions of

teachers’ personnel files as defined in Code § 22.1-295.1(C). 4 The circuit court further indicated

that it would grant a motion to rehear filed by VDOE raising the same issue.

On rehearing, the circuit court entered three orders denying VDOE’s demurrer, denying

the motions of the various education associations to intervene, and entering final judgment for

Davison and against VDOE and “the Intervenor Loudoun County School Board on its motion to

intervene previously granted.” The circuit court found “in favor of [Davison] on the remaining

issue: whether Va. Code Ann. § 22.1-295.1 precludes disclosure of teacher identifying

information as and under the term ‘teacher performance indicator’ and whether such disclosure

shall be made under the [c]ourt’s prior ruling on January 9, 2015.” Responding to the School

Board’s argument that the data sought was exempt as personnel records under Code § 22.1-

295.1(C), the circuit court ruled:

While the evidence revealed that student growth percentiles can be used for multiple purposes, including teacher evaluation, on balance considering the testimony and evidence the student growth percentiles have not been used as a teacher performance indicator by Loudoun County Public Schools.

4 The circuit court ordered the production of disaggregated data, with redaction of identifying student information, but no redaction of identifying teacher information. Therefore, VDOE and the Intervenors sought rehearing and intervention.

4 The circuit court directed VDOE to “produce and provide nonexempt fields of

information maintained in its database, excising exempt fields of information in accordance with

law pursuant to Va. Code Ann. § 2.2-3704(G).” The circuit court also awarded Davison $35,000

in attorney’s fees and costs against VDOE.

The VDOE, the VEA, and the School Board each filed notices of appeal from the April

12, 2016 final order.

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