Untitled California Attorney General Opinion ( 2022 )


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  •                   TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
    OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
    State of California
    ROB BONTA
    Attorney General
    _________________________
    :
    OPINION                     :                  No. 18-603
    :
    of                      :               January 21, 2022
    :
    ROB BONTA                      :
    Attorney General                :
    :
    ANYA M. BINSACCA                    :
    Deputy Attorney General             :
    :
    ________________________________________________________________________
    THE HONORABLE TONY THURMOND, State Superintendent of Public
    Instruction, has requested an opinion on questions regarding a county superintendent’s
    authority over a school district in fiscal distress.
    QUESTIONS PRESENTED AND CONCLUSIONS
    1. Does Education Code section 42127.6 allow a county superintendent of schools
    to stay the issuance of bonds by a school district in fiscal distress?
    Yes. If the county superintendent provides notice and justification that a bond
    issuance would be inconsistent with the ability of a school district in fiscal distress to
    meet its financial obligations for the current or subsequent fiscal year, Education Code
    section 42127.6 authorizes the county superintendent to stay the bond issuance.
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    2. May such a stay remain in place pending resolution of an investigation or
    outstanding audit deficiencies?
    Yes. A county superintendent generally may stay any action, including a bond
    issuance, up to the point that the superintendent approves the district’s budget for the
    subsequent fiscal year, so long as the superintendent determines that the action would be
    inconsistent with the ability of the school district to meet its financial obligations for the
    current or subsequent fiscal year.
    BACKGROUND
    The state Constitution creates a structure for governance of public education
    consisting of a state superintendent of public instruction, 1 county superintendents of
    schools, 2 and school districts. 3 Here we are concerned with the powers of a county
    superintendent, whose general duties are set forth in the Education Code, and include the
    broad directives to “superintend the schools of his or her county,” 4 and to “maintain
    responsibility for the fiscal oversight of each school district in his or her county pursuant
    to the authority granted by this code.” 5 County superintendents provide support and
    guidance for the operations of individual schools or local districts, but are not typically
    involved in day-to-day operations. 6 “Policy determinations regarding school districts are
    made by the [district] superintendent and the local school boards.” 7
    We are asked about the scope of a county superintendent’s power with respect to
    school districts showing evidence of fiscal distress. Specifically, if a superintendent
    “determines that a school district will be unable to meet its financial obligations for the
    current or subsequent fiscal year,” the superintendent is given certain powers to facilitate
    the directive to take “all actions that are necessary to ensure that the school district meets
    1
    Cal. Const., art. IX, § 2.
    2
    Cal. Const., art. IX, § 3.
    3
    Cal. Const., art. IX, § 14.
    4
    Ed. Code, § 1240, subd. (a). Future undesignated statutory references are to the
    Education Code.
    5
    Ed. Code, § 1240, subd. (b).
    6
    Cal. County Superintendents Educational Services Assn., Statutory Functions of County
    Boards of Education & County Superintendents of Schools (Aug. 4, 2014), p. 4,
    .
    7
    Ibid.
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    its financial obligations . . . .” 8 Among these powers is the ability to stay or rescind any
    action inconsistent with the ability of the district to meet its obligations for the current or
    subsequent fiscal year. 9
    The question here asks about application of this stay-and-rescind authority to a
    school district’s issuance of bonds. The Education Code authorizes school districts to
    issue bonds. 10 Bonds are “a type of long-term borrowing” that enables a government
    entity to raise money. 11 School districts sell bonds to investors with an agreement to
    repay the money, with interest, on a particular schedule. 12 The district is thus able to
    fund a large project that will provide value over many years, and to spread the repayment,
    often provided by taxpayers, over time. 13 The question here asks about bond “issuance,”
    which refers to “the process of authorizing, selling and delivering by the issuer of a new
    issue of municipal securities,” of which bonds are one type. 14
    ANALYSIS
    Does Education Code Section 42127.6 Allow a County Superintendent of Schools to
    Stay the Issuance of Bonds by a School District in Fiscal Distress?
    The first question presented is whether the stay-and-rescind authority in Education
    Code section 42127.6, subdivision (e)(2) allows a county superintendent to prevent a
    school district found unable to meet its fiscal obligations for the current or subsequent
    8
    Ed. Code, § 42127.6, subd. (e). This provision also applies if the school district board
    certifies that the district is unable to meet its financial obligations for the remainder of the
    current fiscal year or the subsequent fiscal year. (Ed. Code, § 42131, subd. (a)(1).)
    9
    Ed. Code, § 42127.6, subd. (e)(2).
    10
    See generally Ed. Code, tit. 1, div. 1, ch. 10 (School Bonds).
    Legislative Analyst’s Office, Ballot Pages, Bonds,
    11
     (as of Jan. 19, 2022).
    12
    Ibid.
    13
    Ibid.
    14
    Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board Glossary, “issuance,” available at
    , “municipal securities,”
    available at .
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    fiscal year from issuing bonds. This subdivision gives the county superintendent the
    authority to:
    Stay or rescind any action that is determined to be inconsistent with
    the ability of the school district to meet its obligations for the current or
    subsequent fiscal year. This includes any actions up to the point that the
    subsequent year’s budget is approved by the county superintendent of
    schools. The county superintendent of schools shall inform the governing
    board of the school district in writing of the county superintendent’s
    justification for any exercise of authority under this paragraph. 15
    We first look to the statute’s language to determine whether the Legislature
    intended to include a bond issuance within the actions the county superintendent may
    stay. 16 We initially observe that there is nothing in the statutory language to indicate that
    bonds are excluded from its ambit. Rather, the stay-and-rescind provision is worded
    broadly, allowing the county superintendent to stop any action determined inconsistent
    with the district’s ability to meet its financial obligations. 17 The statute requires the
    county superintendent to justify a stay or rescission in writing to the school board. 18 But
    so long as the county superintendent can articulate that a bond issuance is “inconsistent”
    with a school district’s ability to meet its financial obligations for the current or following
    year, nothing in the stay-and-rescind provision prevents the county superintendent from
    staying a bond issuance.
    In addition, the statute exempts certain items—but not bonds—from the county
    superintendent’s stay-and-rescind power. The statute “does not authorize the county
    superintendent of schools to abrogate any provision of a collective bargaining agreement
    15
    Ed. Code, § 42127.6, subd. (e)(2).
    16
    Tuolumne Jobs & Small Business Alliance v. Superior Court (2014) 
    59 Cal.4th 1029
    ,
    1037.
    17
    Ed. Code, § 42127.6, subd. (e)(2).
    18
    Ibid. This justification requirement is reinforced by section 42127.6(f), which dictates
    that any time a county superintendent imposes a budget revision or exercises the stay-
    and-rescind authority, the action “shall be accompanied by a notification that shall
    include the actions to be taken, the reasons for the actions, and the assumptions used to
    support the necessity for these actions.” Additionally, the State Superintendent of Public
    Instruction monitors the efforts of the county superintendent, and can assume the county
    superintendent’s authority if they are not effective in resolving the district’s financial
    problems. (Ed. Code, § 42127.6, subd. (k).)
    4
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    that was entered into by a school district before the date that the county superintendent of
    schools assumed authority pursuant to subdivision (e).” 19 That the Legislature carved out
    an exception for provisions of collective bargaining agreements, but did not do so for
    bonds, is strong evidence that the Legislature intended the superintendent’s stay-and-
    rescind powers to extend to bonds. 20
    Taking a wider view of the statutory scheme, we observe that in designing the
    powers and responsibilities of county superintendents with respect to fiscally distressed
    school districts, the Legislature created “a complex progression of investigation, findings,
    notification, appellate review, further findings and further appellate review before the
    county superintendent of schools may exercise fiscal emergency powers.” 21 The county
    superintendent, when first presented with evidence of fiscal distress, investigates the
    district’s financial condition, and assesses whether the district will be able to meet its
    financial obligations for the current and two subsequent fiscal years. 22 If the county
    superintendent “determines that a school district may be unable to meet its financial
    obligations for the current or two subsequent fiscal years,” the superintendent must
    propose remedial actions, and take “all actions that are necessary to ensure that the school
    district meets its financial obligations.” 23 The possible remedial actions include
    assigning a fiscal expert to advise the district, conducting studies of the district’s financial
    and budgetary conditions, requiring the district to encumber financial obligations, having
    the district submit proposals for addressing the causes of the fiscal distress, withholding
    compensation for the district board or district superintendent, and assigning a Fiscal
    Crisis and Management Assistance Team to review teacher hiring, retention, and
    assignment. 24
    If, after taking those actions, the county superintendent “determines that a school
    district will be unable to meet its financial obligations for the current or subsequent fiscal
    year,” the superintendent must take “all actions that are necessary to ensure that the
    school district meets its financial obligations . . . ,” including at least one of the actions
    19
    Ed. Code, § 42127.6, subd. (g).
    20
    Sierra Club v. State Bd. of Forestry (1994) 
    7 Cal.4th 1215
    , 1230 (“if exemptions are
    specified in a statute, [the court] may not imply additional exemptions unless there is a
    clear legislative intent to the contrary”).
    21
    Polster v. Sacramento County Office of Education (2009) 
    180 Cal.App.4th 649
    , 665.
    22
    Ed. Code, § 42127.6, subd. (a)(1).
    23
    Ibid.
    24
    Ed. Code, § 42127.6, subds. (a)(1)(A)-(G).
    5
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    enumerated in section 42127.6, subdivision (e). 25 The enumerated actions at this stage
    include imposing a budget revision on the school district, assisting in developing a
    financial plan or a budget, appointing a financial advisor to perform these actions, and the
    power we are asked about here, the stay-and-rescind authority. 26
    Thus, the stay-and-rescind authority comes into play only in the most severe cases
    of fiscal distress, where a school district will be unable to meet its financial obligations
    for the current or subsequent year. 27 Given the precarity of a school district’s financial
    position at this stage, the Legislature saw fit to give county superintendents the ability to
    stay any action inconsistent with the district’s ability to meet its financial obligations.
    This legislative purpose is best honored by concluding that a county superintendent who
    determines that a bond issuance is inconsistent with a school district’s ability to meet its
    financial obligations may prevent that bond issuance using the stay-and-rescind authority.
    In sum, if the county superintendent provides the required notice and justification
    showing that a bond issuance is inconsistent with a school district’s ability to meet its
    financial obligations for the current or following year, the county superintendent may
    stay the bond issuance.
    May Such a Stay Remain in Place Pending Resolution of an Investigation Related to
    the Fiscal Distress or Outstanding Audit Deficiencies?
    Because we conclude that a county superintendent may stay a school district’s
    issuance of bonds when the issuance would be inconsistent with the district’s ability to
    meet its financial obligations, we consider the second question presented: whether that
    stay may remain in place pending resolution of certain events. Specifically, we have
    been asked whether a stay may remain in place pending the resolution of a district
    attorney’s investigation, a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation, or the
    district’s satisfaction of action items identified in an audit by a county office of
    education.
    We begin by reiterating that the stay-and-rescind power vests broad discretion in
    the county superintendent to “[s]tay or rescind any action that is determined to be
    inconsistent with the ability of the school district to meet its obligations for the current or
    subsequent fiscal year.” 28 The statute does not speak to particular events justifying the
    25
    Ed. Code, § 42127.6, subd. (e).
    26
    Ed. Code, § 42127.6, subds. (e)(1)-(5).
    27
    Ed. Code, § 42127.6, subd. (e).
    28
    Ed. Code, § 42127.6, subd. (e)(2).
    6
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    maintenance or requiring the termination of a stay. Rather, it speaks to the county
    superintendent’s basis for imposing the stay; so long as the county superintendent
    articulates that the stayed action is incompatible with the district meeting its financial
    obligations in the current or subsequent fiscal year, the stay is valid.
    We cannot say in the abstract that a particular type of investigation would
    categorically justify the county superintendent staying any particular school district
    action, nor can we say that an investigation’s conclusion would so change the
    circumstances that a stay would no longer be justified. Similarly, we cannot say that a
    district’s need to satisfy action items from an audit categorically justifies a stay, nor that
    the satisfaction of those action items would necessarily mean that a stay was no longer
    justified. Whatever the circumstances, the relevant inquiry is whether the county
    superintendent determines that a school district action is inconsistent with the district’s
    ability to meet its financial obligations. Where that is the case, the county superintendent
    may stay the action “up to the point that the subsequent year’s budget is approved by the
    county superintendent” so long as the stay does not “abrogate any provision of a
    collective bargaining agreement that was entered into by a school district before the date
    that the county superintendent of schools assumed authority pursuant to subdivision
    (e).” 29 The statute places no other temporal or categorical constraints on the county
    superintendent’s discretion.
    29
    Ed. Code, §§ 42127.6, subds. (e)(2), (g).
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Document Info

Docket Number: 18-603

Filed Date: 1/21/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/24/2022