Court Opinion

ID: 9754308
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-28 19:55:00.789402+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:27:51.932187
License: Public Domain

Concurring and Dissenting Opinion by
BELL, C.J.
I agree with the majority that the Baltimore Teachers’ Union, American Federation of Teachers, Local 340, AFL-CIO, the plaintiff in the action for declaratory judgment and injunctive relief it filed in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City and the appellant in this Court, has standing to sue the Maryland State Department of Education, one of the appellees, in order to challenge both the Department’s statutory authority to contract with a wholly private concern, to which it ceded virtually complete autonomy, for the operation and management of three Baltimore City public schools and the validity of the regulations the Department promulgated to make the challenged contractual arrangement possible. Clearly, the holding that the appellant has demonstrated its standing by showing how the regulations and the contract disturbed “minimum labor standards for the bargaining unit,” 379 Md. 192, 199-200, 840 A.2d 728, 732-33 (2003) and diminished its “status as the representative of public employees,” id. at 200, 840 A.2d at 732, is correct.
*207I do not agree with the majority’s decision on the merits, however. On this appeal, the appellant asks the Court to answer a single question:
“When the Maryland State Board of Education exercises its Visitatorial’ power to ‘reconstitute’ a public school, may it compel a local board of education to fully privatize the school, so that the school’s curriculum, administration and faculty members are selected, employed, and controlled, not by a local board, but instead by a for profit business corporation whose stock is publicly-traded?”
Rather than answer that question, the majority holds that, whether originally authorized or not, the General Assembly, by virtue of the enactment of legislation subsequent to the promulgation of the challenged regulations and the execution of the challenged contract, has ratified both the regulations and the operations and management contract with the private concern. More particularly, it says:
“Even if the State Board lacked the statutory authority to promulgate the reconstitution regulations in 1993, subsequent enactments by the General Assembly remove any doubt as to the statutory authorization for the State Board’s actions. The General Assembly has passed legislation which confirms and ratifies the State Board’s power to issue the reconstitution regulations and to enter into third party contracts pursuant to those regulations. The legislation makes clear that the General Assembly knew of and approved of the State board’s exercise of its statutory authority to contract with Edison [Schools, Inc., the private concern] for the operation and management of the three public elementary schools.”
379 Md. at 200, 840 A.2d at 733. The legislation to which the majority refers are Laws of 1997, ch. 105, § 1, codified at Maryland Code (1978, 1999 Replacement Volume) § 4-309, and, in particular, subsection (d)(15) of the Education Article;1 Laws of 1999, ch. 600, § 1, codified at § 6-306 of the Edu*209cation Article, and, in particular, section (a) and subsections (b)(2) and (4);2 and Laws of 2000, ch. 688, codified at Maryland Code (1993, 1997 Replacement Volume, 2000 Cum.Supp.) § 22-216 of the State Personnel and Pensions Article.3
*210Reconstitution of public schools is treated in Title 13A, Subtitle 01, Chapter 04 of the Code of Maryland Regulations (“COMAR”). COMAR 13A.01.04.02B (8) defines “reconstitution” as
“(a) ... changing one or more of a school’s:
“(i) Administration;
*209“(14) Include measurable outcomes and time lines for the implementation and evaluation of the reforms made in accordance with the master plan and the reporting of this information to the Governor, the Mayor of Baltimore City, and, in accordance with § 2-1246 of the State Government Article, the General Assembly;
*211“(ii) Staff;
“(in) Organization; or
“(iv) Instructional program.
“(b) [and] may include contracting with a third party as provided in Regulation .07 of this chapter.”
The regulations provide for both local, see, COMAR 13A.01.04.07, and state, see COMAR 13A.01.04.08, reconstitution. Pursuant to the former, the local board of education is charged with “working with each reconstitution-eligible school” and developing and submitting “a reconstitution proposal that is school-specific,” to the State Board for approval or approval with conditions. COMAR 13A.01.04.07C (6) and (7). State reconstitution occurs when the State Board is charged with “determining] the program and management reconstitution of the school.” Regulation .08B also addresses how that program and management reconstitution may be handled. It provides:
“B. Contract With Third Party.
“(1) The State Board of Education may order the school to be operated under contract with a third party pursuant to conditions established by the State Board of Education.
“(2) The State Board of Education, the local board of education, and the third-party contractor shall be parties to the contract.
“(3) The contract may be for an initial term not to exceed 5 years, and may be subject to renewal upon review and approval by the State Board of Education.
“(4) The contract shall include specific benchmarks by which the third-party contractor shall be measured. The State Board of Education shall monitor the contractor’s performance.
“(5) The local school system shall pay to the third-party contractor for the term of the contract the higher of an amount equal to the average system-wide per pupil expenditure times the full time equivalent enrollment for kindergarten and higher grades in the State reconstituted school as of September 30, or the total actual cost of *212operating the school for the previous school year. Adjustments in the average per pupil expenditure calculation may be made for certain targeted funding programs in accordance with the legal requirements for those programs. In addition the contractor will receive funds equal to the amount of support the school system received in the previous school year for pre-kindergarten services at the identified school.”
“Third party,” referred to in Regulations .02B (8) and .08B, is defined in Regulation .02B (10) to mean “an entity, public or private, who is not managing the school at the time of a reconstitution decision.”
The Maryland Constitution requires the General Assembly to “establish throughout the State a thorough and efficient System of Free Public Schools; and [to] provide by taxation, or otherwise, for their maintenance.” Article VIII, § 1. The provision of that system is a two-tiered endeavor, shared by the State Board, the head of the State Department of Education and a principal department of State government, § § 2-101 and 2-102 of the Education Article, and the twenty four local boards, including Baltimore City, of education. The State Board’s powers and authority are enumerated in § 2-205 of the Education Article. They include determining the elementary and secondary educational policies of the State, subsection (b)(1); causing implementation of provisions of the Education Article that are within its jurisdiction, subsection (b)(2); enforcing the provisions of the Education Article within its jurisdiction and its bylaws, rules, and regulations, through legal proceedings where necessary, subsection (d); finally deciding controversies and disputes concerning the meaning of the Education Article and the bylaws, rules, and regulations adopted pursuant to it, subsection (e); exercising, through the State Superintendent, “general control and supervision over the public schools and educational interests of this State,” subsection (g); establishing basic policy and guidelines for the program of instruction for the public schools, subsection (h)(1); investigating, employing additional expert assistance for the purpose, the educational needs of this State and methods to *213improve educational conditions, subsection (i)(l)(i). In addition, the State Board is required to adopt bylaws, rules, and regulations, applicable to all jurisdictions and having “the force of law when adopted and published,” for the administration of the public schools, § 2-205(c), as well as “for the approval and accreditation of all public schools.” § 2-206(e).
On the other hand, the local boards, including the New School Board of Baltimore City, has some responsibilities for public education in their jurisdictions. Those responsibilities are enumerated, in the case of county boards, in § 4-108 of the Education Article:
“Each county board shall:
“(1) To the best of its ability carry out the applicable provisions of this article and the bylaws, rules, regulations, and policies of the State Board;
“(2) Maintain throughout its county a reasonably uniform system of public schools that is designed to provide quality education and equal educational opportunity for all children;
“(3) Subject to this article and to the applicable bylaws, rules, and regulations of the State Board, determine, with the advice of the county superintendent, the educational policies of the county school system; and
“(4) Adopt, codify, and make available to the public bylaws, rules, and regulations not inconsistent with State law, for the conduct and management of the county public schools.”
Section 4-303, applicable to the New School Board, provides, as relevant:
“(b) Purpose. — The purpose of the Board is to:
“(1) Raise the level of academic achievement of the students in the Baltimore City Public School System; and
“(2) Improve the management and administration of the public school system in Baltimore City.
“(c) Academic achievement. — The Board shall be held accountable for the academic achievement of the public school students in Baltimore City.
“(d) Powers and duties.—
*214“(1) The Board shall have the authority and be responsible for all functions relating to the Baltimore City Public School System.
“(2) Notwithstanding any provision of local law governing the Baltimore City Public School System, the Board may adopt rules and regulations and prescribe policies and procedures for the management, maintenance, operation, and control of the Baltimore City Public School System.
“(3) The Board shall assume responsibility for all of the functions formerly performed by the Superintendent of Public Instruction of Baltimore City and the Board of School Commissioners of Baltimore City.”
To be sure, the State Board has visitatorial power over the local boards, Wiley v. Allegany County Sch. Com’rs, 51 Md. 401, 405-06 (1879) (after noting the State Board’s duty with regard to the public education law, to make by-laws for the administration of the public school system, and to suspend or remove examiners or teachers, characterizing the provision requiring it to “explain the true intent and meaning of the law, and ... decide, without expense to the parties concerned, all controversies and disputes that may arise under it,” as “a visitatorial power of the most comprehensive character.”), which we have held, gives it the “last word on any matter concerning educational policy or the administration of the system of public education.” Wilson v. Board of Educ., 234 Md. 561, 565, 200 A.2d 67, 69 (1964). In Board of Education v. Waeldner, 298 Md. 354, 360, 470 A.2d 332, 335 (1984), we referred to the State Board’s general control and supervision over the public schools and educational interests, its authority to determine the elementary and secondary educational policies, its obligation to adopt bylaws, rules, and regulations and its responsibility for the interpretation of the public education law and the resolution of disputes arising under it to explain the extent of the visitatorial power. Nevertheless, we have described the visitatorial power “as one of supervision, regulation and direction.” Zeitschel v. Board of Education of Carroll County, 274 Md. 69, 80-81, 332 A.2d 906, 912 (1975), citing Peter v. Prettyman, 62 Md. 566, 576 (1884), a case involving *215the visitatorial power of circuit court judges. More particularly, we said:
“We think it beyond question that the power of visitation vested in the State Board is one of general control and supervision; it authorizes the State Board to superintend the activities of the local boards of education to keep them within the legitimate sphere of their operations, and whenever a controversy or dispute arises involving the educational policy or proper administration of the public school system of the State, the State Board’s visitatorial power authorizes it to correct all abuses of authority and to nullify all irregular proceedings.”
Id. at 81, 332 A.2d at 913.
We have also said:
“Of course, the visitatorial power of the State Board is not without limits. It cannot be asserted to finally decide purely legal questions. Hobbs v. Hodges, 176 Md. 457, 5 A.2d 842 (1939); Board of Education v. Cearfoss, 165 Md. 178, 166 A. 732 (1933). Neither can the State Board exercise the visitatorial power fraudulently, in bad faith, or in breach of trust. Coddington v. Helbig, 195 Md. 330, 73 A.2d 454 (1950). Another obvious limitation is that the visitatorial power cannot be exercised in direct contravention of statute. The State Board is manifestly of legislative creation; it has only such powers as the legislature has vested in it, expressly or by necessary implication. See Purnell v. State Bd. of Ed., 125 Md. 266, 93 A. 518 (1915). Cf. Peters v. Hobby, 349 U.S. 331, 75 S.Ct. 790, 99 L.Ed. 1129 (1955); Stark v. Wickard, 321 U.S. 288, 64 S.Ct. 559, 88 L.Ed. 733 (1944). At one time, State Board bylaws were expressly required not to be at variance with statute. Ch. 463, Acts of 1874. This language was later eliminated. Ch. 506, Acts of 1916. But with or without such language, it is clear that ‘rules and regulations adopted by administrative agencies, to be valid, must be reasonable and consistent with the letter and policy of the statute under which the agency acts.’ Farber’s, Inc. v. Comptroller, 266 Md. 44, 50-51, 291 A.2d 658, 662 (1972); Comptroller v. M.E. Rockhill, Inc., 205 Md. *216226, 233, 107 A.2d 93, 97 (1954). We said as much in Metcalf v. Cook, 168 Md. 475, 178 A. 219 (1935), a case involving an alleged conflict between a State Board bylaw requiring new teachers to graduate in the upper 4/5ths of their class and an existing statute which provided that teaching certification may be issued to college graduates.”
Halsey v. Board of Education, 273 Md. 566, 572-573, 331 A.2d 306, 310 (1975).
None of the legislation on which the majority relies for ratification expressly and directly does so. To be sure, each mentions reconstitution in some context, § 4-309(d)(15) referring to “schools that are subject to a State reconstitution notice;” § 6-306(b)(4) mentioning “a reconstitution school, a reconstitution-eligible school;” and SPP § 22-216(a) referencing an individual “hired by a third party contractor to work in a school that is reconstituted by order of Maryland State Board of Education,” not one of the three statutes expressly ratifies, or even refers specifically to, the COMAR regulations or the reconstitution contract with the private concern. Nor does any one of them define what is meant by reconstitution. According to COMAR 13A.01.04.02B(8), reconstitution could occur if only one of the four components of a public school operation has been taken over and the third party is involved only with that component and, therefore, some control is retained by the local board. And the statutes do not distinguish between local reconstitution and state reconstitution. That is important because, if the former, the shared relationship is not disrupted, because the local board would retain the responsibility for the local school’s performance.
In my view, these three fleeting and imprecise references are simply insufficient to constitute legislative ratification of the State Board’s promulgation of regulations authorizing reconstitution, a process of recent vintage and inconsistent with the two tiered approach to the provision and governance of public education or of the reconstitution contract at issue. As the appellant points out, the public education law is comprehensive and a part of a statutory scheme. Given that scheme and the responsibilities it places on local boards and in *217this case, on the New Board, for reconstitution as proposed in this case to occur, it submits and I agree, would require, in effect, repeal or amendment of several sections of the Education Article, i.e.
“§ 4-101 (a) (‘Educational matters that affect the counties shall be under the control of a county board of education in each county’); § 4-303(d) (‘The Board shall have authority and be responsible for all functions relating to the Baltimore City Public School System’); § 4-103(a) (‘[E]ach county board shall: (1) Appoint all principals, teachers, and other certificated and non-certificated personnel; and (2) Set their salaries’); § 4-311(a) (‘the [N]ew Board shall establish a personnel system governing certificated and non[-]eertificated employees’); § 6-201(a) (‘The county board shall employ individuals in the positions that the county board considers necessary for the operation of public schools in the county’); § 6-201(b)(2) (‘T}he county superintendent shall (i) Assign [personnel] to their positions in the schools; (ii) Transfer [personnel] as the needs of the schools require; (iii) Recommend them for promotion; and (iv) Suspend them for cause and recommend them for dismissal in accordance with § 6-202 of this article’); § 6-402(d) (defining ‘public school employer’ as the county board of education or the New Baltimore City Board of School Commissioners); § 4-123(e) (mandating that if a county board enters into an agreement for the cooperative or joint administration of a program it ‘does not relieve any county board or other participant of any obligation or responsibility imposed on it by law’).”
If the majority is correct, the public education statutory scheme can be disrupted and undermined, not by specific legislative direction, i.e. legislation that, by its express terms, is intended to do so, but by implication, on the basis of legislation that repeals or amends those parts of the Public Education Law that gives local boards a role to play in the governance of the public schools within their jurisdiction. It is well settled that repeals by implication are not favored. Ronald Fishkind Realty v. Sampson, 306 Md. 269, 286, 508 A.2d 478, 487 (1986); Dep’t of Nat. Resources v. France, 277 *218Md. 432, 460, 357 A.2d 78 (1976). In State v. Harris, 327 Md. 32, 39, 607 A.2d 552, 555-56 (1992), this Court observed:
“[A] repeal by implication does not occur unless the language of the later statute plainly shows that the legislature intended to repeal the earlier statute. Montgomery County v. Bigelow, 196 Md. 413, 423, 77 A.2d 164 (1950); Pressman v. Elgin, 187 Md. 446, 450, 50 A.2d 560 (1947). Generally, therefore, a later statute will not be held to repeal an earlier statute by implication unless there is some express reference to the earlier statute. Gannon & Son v. Emerson, 291 Md. 443, 455, 435 A.2d 449 (1981); Kirkwood v. Provident Savings Bank, 205 Md. 48, 55, 106 A.2d 103 (1954); Thomas v. State, 173 Md. 676, 681, 197 A. 296 (1938).”
In any event, as the majority acknowledges, in order for legislative ratification to be viable, the legislative body must have been empowered prospectively to authorize the act it would adopt and validate in retrospect. Washington Nat’l Arena v. Prince George’s Co. 287 Md. 38, 45, 410 A.2d 1060, 1064, cert. denied, 449 U.S. 834, 101 S.Ct. 106, 66 L.Ed.2d 40 (1980); Co. Council v. Carl M. Freeman Assoc., 281 Md. 70, 79, 376 A.2d 860, 865 (1977). I am not convinced that the State Board was authorized to promulgate the regulations at issue or that the General Assembly could have authorized it to do so without providing some guidelines to inform its decision in that regard. After all, it is the General Assembly, and not the State Board, that is charged with the establishment and maintenance of a thorough and efficient system of public schools in the State. Md. Const. Art. VIII § 1. In the discharge of that responsibility, the General Assembly enacted the statutory scheme under which the State’s public schools presently operate. To the State Board the Legislature gave substantial authority, general supervision over the system, even the last word on matters of educational policy and the administration of the system. But it also gave substantial responsibility to the local boards.
The regulations at issue are significantly at odds with the statutory scheme established by the Legislature. So much so that, in my view, they are more appropriately the subject of *219legislation and, indeed, constituted law making, and, so, were beyond the authority of the State Board to promulgate. The State Board is an administrative agency, a part of the executive branch of government. The Legislature, without, at the least, providing safeguards and standards to direct its exercise, may not delegate the power to make laws to an administrative agency, an arm of the executive branch of government. Department of Transportation v. Armacost, 311 Md. 64, 80, 532 A.2d 1056, 1063 (1987); Pressman v. Barnes, 209 Md. 544, 555, 121 A.2d 816, 822 (1956).
I addressed this issue at great length in dissent in Lussier v. Md. Racing Commission, 343 Md. 681, 701-720, 684 A.2d 804, 813-823 (1996). For the reasons there expressed, I believe the State Board inappropriately promulgated the regulations and that the General Assembly, because it gave no advance guidance, did not ratify, and, indeed could not have ratified, the State Board’s actions in that regard.
Therefore, and for the foregoing reasons, I dissent.

. Maryland Code (1978, 1999 — Replacement Volume) § 4-309(d)(15), now § 4-309(c)(17) of the Education Article, details one of the actions *208the General Assembly required the master plan it mandated the New Baltimore City Board of School Commissioners to develop as necessary to achieve educational reform in the Baltimore City public schools, the purpose of the legislation. It provides: "Improve the status of schools that are subject to a State reconstitution notice." None of the other 15 actions mentions, or relates, to reconstitution:
"(1) Complete incorporation of the key recommendations of the 1992 Towers Perrin/Cresap Management Study report and the 1994 and 1995 MGT of America, Inc. reports;
"(2) Incorporate the requirements of the long-term compliance plan and goals in Vaughn G. v. Amprey, et al, case no. MJG-84 — 1911, United States District Court for the District of Maryland, concerning the delivery of education services to students with disabilities;
"(3) Provide for the reorganization of the central office of the Baltimore City Public School System;
"(4) Provide effective curriculum and instructional programs for the Baltimore City Public School System, including the development and dissemination of:
"(i) A cilywide curriculum framework reflecting State learning outcomes, including Maryland School Performance Program standards, and an appropriate developmental sequence for students;
"(ii) An effective program of professional development and training for the staff of the Baltimore City Public School System including development and implementation of a performance-based system-wide personnel evaluation system for teachers, principals and administrators; and
"(iii) An effective educational program for meeting the needs of students at risk of educational failure;
"(5) Provide effective management information systems for the Baltimore City Public School System, including the capacity to accurately track student enrollment, attendance, academic records, discipline records, and compliance with the provisions of the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act;
"(6) Provide an effective financial management and budgeting system for the Baltimore City Public School System to ensure the maximization and appropriate utilization of all available resources;
"(7) Provide effective staff hiring and assignment;
"(8) Develop an effective system of providing instructional materials and support services;
"(9) Develop model school reform initiatives;
"(10) Provide appropriate methods for student assessment and remediation;
"(11) Develop and implement a student code of discipline as required in § 7-306 of this article;
"(12) Develop an effective system for planning and providing for construction, repair, and maintenance services for school buildings which shall include a review by the Board to assure the most efficient and productive use of the system's resources, including examination and reduction of the cost of underutilized schools and proposals for school mergers or closures if appropriate;
"(13) Increase parental participation;
*209* * * * * *
"(16) Develop an effective system of teacher input regarding implementation of school reform initiatives, that includes active and ongoing consultation with classroom teachers at the elementary, middle, and high school levels.”

. Section 6-306 of the Education Article, as relevant, provides:
"(a) Definition. — In this section, 'county grant for national certification’ means an annual grant distributed to a teacher certified by the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards established:
“(1) Outside of the collective bargaining process; or
"(2) As part of a collective bargaining agreement with the local employee organization.
"(b) State budgetary funding. — (1) For fiscal year 2000 and each subsequent fiscal year, the Governor shall include in each year’s operating budget funding for the stipends and bonuses provided in this subsection.
“(2) A classroom teacher who holds a standard professional certificate or an advanced professional certificate who is employed by a county board and who holds a certificate issued by the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards shall receive a stipend from the State in an amount equal to the county grant for national certification, up to a maximum of $2,000 per qualified teacher.
"(4) A classroom teacher who holds an advanced professional certificate and teaches in a public school identified by the State Board as a reconstitution school, a reconstitution-eligible school, or a challenge school shall receive a stipend from the State in the amount of $2,000 for each year that the teacher performs satisfactorily in the classroom.”

. Maryland Code (1993, 1997 Replacement Volume, 2000 Cum.Supp.) § 22-216 of the State Personnel and Pensions Article, titled “Employment by private contractors,” provides:
"(a) Applicability of section. — This section applies to an individual who is:
"(1) a member of the Teachers’ Retirement System;
*210"(2) an employee of the New Baltimore City Board of School Commissioners or another county board of education; and
"(3) hired by a third party contractor to work in a school that is reconstituted by order of the Maryland State Board of Education.
"(b) Withdrawal of accumulated contributions. — An individual who is hired by a third party contractor may withdraw the member’s accumulated contributions, within the meaning of § 20-101(b) of this article, at any time while the individual is employed by the third party contractor to work in a school that is reconstituted by order of the Maryland State Board of Education.
"(c) Subsequent employment by New Baltimore City Board or other county board of education. — An individual who is hired by a third party contractor and subsequently becomes employed by the New Baltimore City Board of School Commissioners or another county board of education at any time while the order of reconstitution is in effect and on termination of the contract with the third party contractor:
"(1) is not subject to the provisions of § 22-217 of this subtitle;
“(2) shall be reinstated as a member of the Teachers' Retirement System;
"(3) shall be entitled to restoration of any service credit to which the individual was entitled before employment by the third party contractor whether or not the individual was vested; and
"(4) shall redeposit any of the amounts withdrawn under subsection (b) of this section with regular interest to the date of redeposit or, on retirement, the individual’s retirement allowance shall be reduced by the actuarial equivalent of the accumulated contributions withdrawn with regular interest to the date of retirement.
"(d) Purchase of service credit — Conditions.—Except as provided in subsection (e) of this section, at any time before retirement, an individual may purchase service credit for a period of employment by a third party contractor to work in a school that is reconstituted by order of the Maryland State Board of Education if the individual:
"(1) completes a claim for the service credit and hies it with the Board of Trustees on a form that the Board of Trustees provides; and
"(2) pays to the Board of Trustees in a single payment the member contributions the individual would have made for the period of employment for which service credit is being purchased plus regular interest to the date of payment.
“(e) Same — 5 year limit. — An individual may not purchase more than 5 years of service credit for the period of employment by a third party contractor to work in a school that is reconstituted by order of the Maryland State Board of Education.”