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Blairsville-Saltsburg School District seeking to dismiss lawsuit over school closure and subsequent merger

PENNSYLVANIA RECORD

Sunday, December 22, 2024

Blairsville-Saltsburg School District seeking to dismiss lawsuit over school closure and subsequent merger

Federal Court
Matthewmhoffman

Hoffman | Tucker Arensberg

PITTSBURGH – Litigation which claims that the Blairsville-Saltsburg School District failed to follow proper protocols before unilaterally deciding to close one of its high schools and merge its students with another, is now facing a motion to dismiss from the district.

Save Our Saltsburg Schools of Saltsburg initially filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania on May 6 versus Blairsville-Saltsburg School District, of Blairsville.

“Defendant District is comprised of two elementary schools and two middle high schools. Defendant District’s middle high schools are Saltsburg Middle High School, serving students residing in Saltsburg, Pennsylvania, with offices located at 84 Trojan Lane, Saltsburg, Pennsylvania 15681, and Blairsville Middle High School, serving students residing in Blairsville, Pennsylvania, with offices located at 100 School Lane, Blairsville, Pennsylvania 15717. Defendant District has a fiduciary duty to act in the best interest of its students,” the suit said.

“On or about Feb. 24, 2020, Defendant District’s school board voted to schedule a public hearing, pursuant to 24 Pa. C.S. Section 7-780, to discuss possible closures and/or consolidations within its district, specifically, to consolidate BMHS and SMHS and to permanently close SMHS. Plaintiff believes, and therefore avers, that defendant District’s board never considered or proposed a consolidation plan which would result in the permanent closure of BMHS, even though SMHS was only recently built. There was, and is, no rational basis for this difference in treatment between SMHS and BMHS.”

According to the complaint, members of the defendant District’s board stated they would move forward with the proposed consolidation and closure, in advance of a statutorily-mandated public hearing soliciting input from the affected communities.

During a public hearing held in January, the suit said students, alumni, parents, teachers, business owners and other community members voiced major opposition to the potential consolidation of SMHS and BMHS, and the proposed closure of SMHS.

Their concerns included, but were not limited to, the fact that “Saltsburg students would be subjected to long bus rides which would endanger their safety, decrease their accessibility to extracurricular activities, and limit their ability to obtain a quality education once they finally arrived at the Blairsville campus.”

“On or about April 9, 2021, plaintiff provided defendant District’s board with an expert report echoing the concerns of the community at large. This report concluded that consolidation was not in the best interest of the District or its students for various reasons, including, but not limited to, the following: Consolidation would likely increase cyber-schooling, leading to learning loss; consolidation would increase student bussing time, affecting academic performance; consolidation would reduce Saltsburg and Blairsville students’ overall participation in extracurricular actives, especially athletics; consolidation would result in the loss of parallel teaching positions that could benefit students; and consolidation would likely reduce parent involvement in the education of students and Defendant District, generally,” the suit stated.

“On April 22, 2021, defendant District’s board voted to consolidate BMHS and SMHS and to permanently close SMHS.”

The plaintiff argued that the District’s board made the decision to consolidate BMHS and SMHS and to permanently close SMHS prior to the public hearing and before the District’s board gathered any public input or necessary information and/or data regarding the effects of consolidation – constituting a violation of due process.

“Furthermore, the consolidation and permanent closure of SMHS has deprived plaintiff, through its members who are Saltsburg students, of an equal and adequate public education. Blairsville students will not be subjected to the same conditions, as described above, which will ultimately negatively impact Saltsburg students’ access to education and ability to learn. There was, and is, no rational basis for this difference in treatment between Blairsville students and Saltsburg students,” per the suit.

“Plaintiff believes, and therefore avers, that defendant District’s board intentionally failed to act in good faith and solely for the best interests of its students when it voted to consolidate BMHS and SMHS and permanently close SMHS. The decision of defendant District’s board constituted a breach of its fiduciary duty to the plaintiff, through its members who are Saltsburg students.”

UPDATE

The District filed a motion to dismiss the suit on May 19, arguing that the plaintiff’s federal and state law clams are unsupported and should lead to the case being thrown out.

“Plaintiff’s due process claims fail because there is no constitutionally protected liberty or property interest or other right established by the United States Constitution, the Pennsylvania Constitution or state statutory or common law to an education at any particular school building. Without such an interest, the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment is inapplicable. Plaintiff’s Equal Protection claim fails because, as determined by Mullen, there is no right under federal or state law to attend a school building of one’s choosing and, therefore, there exists no deprivation of an underlying right to support such a claim under 42 U.S.C. Section 1983,” according to the dismissal motion.

“Further, plaintiff’s Equal Protection claim fails because its complaint does not plead facts that, if proven, demonstrate that similarly situated persons have been treated differently or would demonstrate that there was no rational basis for any difference in treatment. Furthermore, because a decision to close a school building and to reassign students to attend a different school building does not affect a fundamental right or involve a suspect classification, it is accorded a strong presumption of validity.”

Regarding the state law claims, the defense argues that the Pennsylvania Constitution “does not establish a right for students to receive an education at the school of their choice.”

For counts of procedural due process, equal protection (class of one) and breach of fiduciary duty, the plaintiff is seeking compensatory general damages against defendant District, in the amount proven at trial, compensatory special damages, costs of suit, pre- and post-judgment interest as permitted by law and such other relief, including injunctive and/or declaratory relief, as this Court may deem proper.

The plaintiff is represented by Joel S. Sansone and Elizabeth Tuttle of the Law Offices of Joel Sansone, in Pittsburgh.

The defendant is represented by Matthew M. Hoffman of Tucker Arensberg in Pittsburgh, plus Ned J. Nakles Jr. and Ryan P. Cribbs of Nakles & Nakles, in Latrobe.

U.S. District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania case 2:21-cv-00601

From the Pennsylvania Record: Reach Courts Reporter Nicholas Malfitano at nick.malfitano@therecordinc.com

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