J.E. Archer v. Rockwood Area SD & Somerset Area SD ( 2021 )


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  •          IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Joseph E. Archer, Nancy J. Bonati, Christopher          :
    C. Bosworth, Deborah A. Bosworth, Belita J.             :
    Brown, Stephen C. Brown, Deborah A.                     :
    Cunningham, Paul V. Cunningham, Candace                 :
    DiMarco, Ross F. DiMarco Jr., Janeen Dupre,             :
    Karen A. Farmerie, Wilson J. Farmerie, David A.         :
    Fetchko, Mary Ellen Fetchko, Clifford J. Forrest,       :
    Tracy L. Forrest, Gary D. Gadley, Annette D.            :
    Ganassi, Hemlock Property LLC, Georgia C.               :
    Hernandez, Robert M. Hernandez, Martha E.               :
    Hildebrandt, Mark J. Hileman, Rebecca L. Hileman,       :
    James A. Nassif Qualified Personal Residence            :
    Trust, Susan A. Jurik, Kurt J. Lesker III, William J.   :
    Lloyd, David P. Mendis, Lisa B. Mendis, Joseph C.       :
    Metzgar, Lynette E. Metzgar, Erin Morris, Michael A.    :
    Morris, Netco Inc., Mary Jo Ochson, John C.             :
    Prentice, Douglas Keith Rosetti, Ronald T.              :
    Rossetti, Seven Springs Farm, Inc., Matthew             :
    Tarosky, Three Rivers Enterprises Inc., David A.        :
    Tonnies, Cynthia G. Urgo, Donald J. Urgo, Virginia’s    :
    Pheasant Run Limited Partnership, David A.              :
    Webber, Lorie A. Webber, Harold Wiegel, Steven H.       :
    Wiegel, James P. Wilhelm, Paige M. Wilhelm,             :
    Jackie Wolfe, Jacquelyn K. Wolfe, Tim Wolfe,            :
    and Timothy W. Wolfe,                                   :
    Petitioners                    :
    :
    v.                                       : No. 133 C.D. 2020
    : Argued: February 8, 2021
    Rockwood Area School District and Somerset Area         :
    School District,                                        :
    Respondents                       :
    BEFORE:     HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, President Judge
    HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, Judge (P)
    HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Senior Judge
    OPINION
    BY JUDGE LEAVITT                                                    FILED: March 31, 2021
    Petitioners own contiguous parcels of land located in the Somerset Area
    School District and seek to transfer this land to the Rockwood Area School District
    by establishing an independent school district. The Secretary of Education, Pedro
    A. Rivera, concluded that because no student resides in the proposed independent
    school district, the petition lacked merit from an educational standpoint.
    Accordingly, the Secretary did not evaluate the evidence presented in support of,
    and in opposition to, the petition. Petitioners assert that the Secretary erred because
    the Public School Code of 19491 does not require students to reside in the proposed
    independent school district as a condition precedent to the grant of a transfer petition.
    For the following reasons, we reverse the Secretary’s adjudication and remand the
    matter for specific findings of fact and conclusions of law.
    Background
    Petitioners own 22 acres of contiguous parcels of land in Jefferson
    Township that are assigned to the Somerset Area School District. Petitioners filed
    a petition with the Court of Common Pleas of Somerset County (trial court) to create
    an independent school district in order to have their land transferred from the
    Somerset Area School District to the Rockwood Area School District.
    The petition offered six reasons for the transfer: (1) the schools in the
    Rockwood Area School District are closer to the proposed independent school
    district by at least six miles; (2) the land owned by Petitioner Seven Springs Farm,
    Inc., is divided between the Somerset and Rockwood Area School Districts; (3) the
    residential development known as Pheasant Run is divided between the Somerset
    1
    Act of March 10, 1949, P.L. 30, as amended, 24 P.S. §§1-101–27-2702.
    and Rockwood Area School Districts; (4) Rockwood has a better student/teacher
    ratio; (5) Rockwood offers superior educational opportunities; and (6) Rockwood
    has a lower tax millage. Attached to the petition was a tax map identifying the
    territory proposed for the independent school district. Some of the parcels have not
    been developed, and some of the developed parcels are used as second homes.
    Somerset Area School District opposed the petition, arguing that an
    insufficient number of “taxable inhabitants” had signed the petition because only
    two of the Petitioners had their permanent residence in the proposed independent
    school district. The trial court agreed that an “inhabitant” was a “permanent
    resident” and dismissed the petition. This Court reversed. See In re Independent
    School District for Property Situate in Jefferson Township, 
    74 A.3d 389
     (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 2013) (Jefferson Township). Observing that “taxable inhabitants” had been
    expressly defined in precedent as persons that can “lawfully be taxed,” this Court
    held that Petitioners were “taxable inhabitants” with standing to petition for the
    establishment of an independent school district. 
    Id. at 396
    . The Court reasoned that
    had the legislature intended to limit standing to permanent residents or legally
    domiciled persons, it would have so stated. 
    Id.
    After the Pennsylvania Supreme Court denied Somerset Area School
    District’s petition for allowance of appeal, In re Independent School District for
    Property Situate in Jefferson Township, 
    87 A.3d 321
     (Pa. 2014), the trial court
    entered an order directing the Secretary to determine whether the petition has merit
    from an educational standpoint.
    Pre-Adjudication Determination
    On April 22, 2014, the Department of Education forwarded an
    Educational Impact Projection Questionnaire to both the Somerset and Rockwood
    2
    Area School Districts, requesting extensive information about each school district.
    The Questionnaire sought a summary of each district’s academic results and
    educational outcomes in prior years, including SAT/ACT scores and Pennsylvania
    System of School Assessment (PSSA) test2 scores, as well as information about the
    impact of the proposed transfer on educational opportunities, instructional programs,
    organization/staff, facilities,     special education and transportation.                 The
    Questionnaire sought information about the number of students that would be
    transferred.
    Somerset Area School District responded that it has 2,263 enrolled
    students. Because most of the homes in the proposed independent school district are
    vacation homes, no school-aged children live there. Further, Somerset’s records did
    not show that enrolled students had ever lived there. Somerset stated that the transfer
    would cause a loss of revenue that could adversely affect its pre-kindergarten
    program; the enrollment of its students in the Somerset County Technology Center;
    and its music and art programs. In the event of a transfer, Rockwood Area School
    District would have to assume some of Somerset’s debt, which could have a negative
    financial effect on Rockwood.
    Rockwood Area School District responded that it has 729 enrolled
    students and 23 nonpublic students. A transfer would have a minimal educational
    impact, but with the increase in tax revenue, Rockwood would be able to expand
    educational opportunities for its students.
    2
    The PSSA test is “[a] test developed and implemented by the Department of Education to
    determine only academic achievement relating to objective academic standards in the areas of
    reading, writing, mathematics and science[.]” Section 102 of the Public School Code of 1949, 24
    P.S. §1-102.
    3
    The matter was assigned to Deputy Secretary Matthew S. Stem for a
    determination. He decided that a “central consideration in evaluating educational
    merit is whether the proposed transfer is beneficial for students.” Deputy Secretary
    Determination, 12/11/2018, at 22. Because no students resided in the proposed
    independent school district, he concluded that it was impossible to evaluate the
    educational merit of the proposed transfer. The Deputy Secretary dismissed
    Petitioners’ assertion that the proposed transfer may induce families with school age
    children to reside in the proposed independent school district as “conjectural and
    unsubstantiated.” Id. at 25. The Deputy Secretary explained that
    [t]he legislature clearly envisioned a mechanism to create
    independent school districts predicated upon an existing student
    population that would both educationally benefit from a newly
    created independent school district and support the
    arrangement.... Transferring a territory that is currently devoid
    of students, and significantly, never had any students residing
    within its boundaries and which lacks convincing evidence that
    any students may reside there in the future and enroll in the
    receiving school district, is not aligned with the statutory intent
    of the law.
    Id. (emphasis added). In the absence of “an existing student population” in the
    proposed independent school district, the Deputy Secretary held that the petition
    lacked educational merit. Id.
    Hearing and Adjudication
    Petitioners requested a formal administrative hearing to challenge the
    Deputy Secretary’s decision.     The Secretary appointed a hearing officer, who
    conducted a hearing on August 1, 2019, in which Petitioners and the Somerset Area
    School District participated. They presented a joint stipulation of facts and exhibits,
    as well as witness testimony.
    4
    The parties stipulated to the following. Based on three different bus
    stops, travel to Rockwood schools from the proposed independent school district
    would be shorter by 10.9 to 19.6 miles. Stipulation ¶9. From 2011 to 2019, student
    enrollment in both school districts declined. Id. ¶¶11-12. Somerset reduced its
    administrative staff by one employee; Rockwood did not. Id. ¶¶15-16. During that
    period, Rockwood’s tax millage was 21.89, and Somerset’s increased from 37.96 to
    41.70. Id. ¶¶5-6. In 2012, the student/teacher ratio in Rockwood was 13-1, and 14-
    1 at Somerset. Id. ¶10. The District Report Cards for the 2010-2011 school year
    showed that, in math and reading, Rockwood students performed better. Id. ¶7, Ex.
    E. The territory proposed for the independent school district is a small part of
    Jefferson Township that is contiguous to Rockwood. Id. ¶4, Ex. D. The Pheasant
    Run development is taxed by both districts. Id. ¶¶17-18, Ex. F, G. Seven Springs
    Farm, Inc., is divided between Rockwood and Somerset, with the majority of its land
    in Rockwood. Id. ¶19.
    Petitioners presented the testimony of Annette D. Ganassi, one of the
    Petitioners and a real estate agent. She testified that prospective home buyers
    routinely consider the school district where the home is located, including the
    proximity of schools and the school district’s ratings. They also consider the real
    estate taxes imposed by the school district.
    Ganassi resides in the Pheasant Run development, which is located in
    both Middlecreek Township and Jefferson Township. She testified that “one living
    in Pheasant Run could literally be across the street from someone who is in a
    different school district[.]” Hearing Transcript, 8/1/2019, at 5 (H.T. __). Based on
    her experience as a real estate agent selling properties in Pheasant Run, a family with
    5
    children is more likely to choose a lot in Pheasant Run that is located in the
    Rockwood Area School District.
    Somerset Area School District presented the testimony of Krista
    Suzanne Mathias, the district superintendent. Mathias opined that “in many ways,
    Rockwood is very comparable to Somerset.” H.T. 18. In support, she testified about
    the 2018 Pennsylvania Future Ready Index comparison on the Department’s
    website. It showed that the number of students ranked advanced or proficient in
    language arts tests was 75.3 percent for Somerset and 79 percent for Rockwood. For
    math, the percentage of those ranked advanced or proficient was 56.5 percent for
    Somerset and 60.3 percent for Rockwood. In science and biology, the percentage of
    students ranked advanced or proficient was 70.7 percent for Somerset and 76.1
    percent for Rockwood.          PVAAS3 data, which measures student improvement,
    showed that in language arts and literature, 93.5 percent of Somerset students and
    70 percent of Rockwood students met annual growth expectations. In math and
    Algebra 1, 83.5 percent of Somerset students met growth expectations, and 52
    percent of Rockwood’s students did so. In science and biology, 90.5 percent of
    3
    “PVAAS” stands for the Pennsylvania Value-Added Assessment System. A value-added
    assessment system is defined as “a statistical analysis of results on the [PSSA] test or any other
    test established by the State Board of Education to meet the requirements of section 2603-
    B(d)(10)(i) pursuant to 
    22 Pa. Code §403.3
     (relating to single accountability system) that uses
    measures of student learning to enable the estimation of school or school district statistical
    distributions.” Section 221 of the Public School Code of 1949, added by the Act of November
    17, 2010, P.L. 996, 24 P.S. §2-221.
    The Department’s website, “What Should You Know About PVAAS,” available at
    https://www.education.pa.gov/K-
    12/Assessment%20and%20Accountability/PVAAS/Pages/default.aspx (last visited 3/30/2021),
    explains that PVAAs is “used to measure a district’s, school’s or teacher’s influence on the
    academic progress rates of groups of students from year to year.” Id.
    6
    Somerset students met growth expectations, and 60.5 percent of Rockwood students
    did so.
    Regarding transportation, Mathias testified that the longest bus ride for
    any student in the Somerset Area School District is 50 minutes; the typical ride is
    closer to 30 minutes. Mathias testified that busing is not relevant to the educational
    merit inquiry because, in her opinion, “[t]ime on a bus has nothing to do with what
    happens during the school day when the child is in school.” H.T. 23. Nevertheless,
    Mathias acknowledged that students that had to travel longer to school would have
    to awaken earlier, leaving them more tired at the end of the day.
    The Secretary adopted the Deputy Secretary’s determination as his
    adjudication.       The Secretary rejected Petitioners’ contention that the Deputy
    Secretary added words to Section 242.1 of the Public School Code of 19494 by
    requiring school-aged children to reside in the proposed independent school district.
    The Secretary explained:
    Lacking evidence of any tangible positive impact on any actual
    or reasonably anticipated students in the territory, the
    educational benefits of the [p]etition fail as pure speculation. As
    the Deputy Secretary noted, in this case not only is there no
    evidence that school aged students ever resided in the territory[,]
    there is no material evidence that would suggest that this territory
    is likely to soon have any students.[]
    Accordingly, the Secretary declined to evaluate the evidence.                    Secretary
    Adjudication, 12/13/2019, at 4-5 (footnotes and citation omitted, emphasis added).
    Thus, the Secretary held that the petition to create an independent school district
    lacked merit from an educational standpoint.
    4
    Added by the Act of June 23, 1965, P.L. 139, 24 P.S. §2-242.1.
    7
    Petitioners petitioned this Court for review.5
    Appeal
    Petitioners assert that the Secretary erred by holding that their petition
    lacked merit from an educational standpoint. In In re Petition for Formation of
    Independent School District, 
    17 A.3d 977
    , 990-91 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2011) (Riegelsville
    II), this Court summarized the factors that, historically, have been held to constitute
    educational merit: a reduction in student travel time; better academic results; and
    better school district management. Although Petitioners’ evidence addressed all of
    those factors, the Secretary refused to evaluate it for the stated reason that no students
    reside in the proposed independent school district. Petitioners argue that the Public
    School Code of 1949 does not require an “existing student population” in the
    proposed independent school district in order for a petition to have educational merit.
    The Secretary added language to Section 242.1 of the Public School Code of 1949,
    24 P.S. §2-242.1, which constitutes reversible error.
    For its part, Somerset Area School District requests the Court to affirm
    the Secretary’s adjudication.       It contends that Petitioners did not undertake a
    meaningful comparative analysis of the education provided to students at the two
    school districts. It further contends that this meaningful comparative analysis
    requires expert testimony.
    Analysis
    Section 242.1 of the Public School Code of 1949 authorizes the
    5
    This Court’s review determines whether constitutional rights have been violated, whether the
    adjudication is in accordance with the law, whether the proceedings relating to practice and
    procedure before an agency were violated, and whether necessary findings of fact are supported
    by substantial evidence. 2 Pa. C.S. §704; In re Petition for Formation of Independent School
    District Consisting of Borough of Highspire, 
    228 A.3d 584
    , 589 n.4 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2020) (Borough
    of Highspire).
    8
    “[e]stablishment of independent districts for transfer of territory to another school
    district.” 24 P.S. §2-242.1. Subsection (a) sets forth the procedures for transfer and
    states, in relevant part, as follows:
    (a) A majority of the taxable inhabitants of any contiguous
    territory in any school district or school districts ... may present
    their petition to the court of common pleas ... asking that the
    territory be established as an independent district for the sole
    purpose of transfer to an adjacent school district contiguous
    thereto .... Such petitions shall set forth a proper description of
    the boundaries of the territory to be included in such proposed
    independent district, and the reasons of the petitioners for
    requesting such transfer to another school district and the name
    of the district into which its territory is proposed to be placed.
    The court shall hold hearing thereon .... In all cases where an
    independent district is proposed for transfer from one school
    district to another, the merits of the petition for its creation, from
    an educational standpoint, shall be passed upon the [Secretary
    of Education] and the petition shall not be granted by the court
    unless approved by him. The court of common pleas shall secure
    the reaction from the [Secretary of Education] upon receipt of the
    petition properly filed.
    The court, in its decree establishing such independent district for
    transfer purposes, shall also determine the amount, if any, of the
    indebtedness and obligations of the school district, from whose
    territory such independent district is taken, that said district shall
    assume and pay, and, a statement prorating the State subsidies
    payable between or among the losing district or districts and the
    receiving district.
    24 P.S. §2-242.1(a) (emphasis added). To establish an independent school district
    requires action by a court of common pleas and two state agencies. Riegelsville II,
    
    17 A.3d at 981
    . This Court has summarized the process as follows:
    The common pleas court reviews the petition for completeness.
    The Secretary reviews the petition for educational merit. The
    9
    [State Board of Education] reviews the common pleas court’s
    decree as an application in order to determine whether
    assignment of the newly-created independent school district to
    the receiving school district would violate standards for the
    organization of school districts adopted by the Board and
    established by statute.
    Washington Township Independent School District v. Pennsylvania State Board of
    Education, 
    153 A.3d 1177
    , 1188 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2017). Failure to secure any one of
    the three approvals is “fatal” and constitutes “a final order for purposes of appellate
    court review.” 
    Id.
    Here, the Secretary held that the absence of any students residing in the
    territory proposed for the independent school district was fatal to Petitioners’
    petition. Petitioners argue that “none of the appellate cases” make an existing
    student population a requirement. Petitioners’ Brief at 12. Petitioners presented
    evidence on school proximity, academic results, school management, and tax
    millages, all of which have been held relevant to educational merit in those appellate
    cases. Petitioners contend that the Secretary’s holding cannot be reconciled with
    Section 242.1 of the Public School Code of 1949, 24 P.S. §2-242.1.
    Section 242.1(a) contains a detailed list of what must be contained in a
    petition to establish an independent school district.6 The petition must contain: (1)
    the boundaries of the proposed independent school district; (2) a verification that a
    majority of “taxable inhabitants” in the “contiguous territory” agree to the transfer;
    (3) the reasons for the transfer; and (4) an identification of the school district to be
    6
    The best indication of the legislature’s intent is the language employed in the statute. 1 Pa. C.S.
    §1921(b) (where a statute is unambiguous “the letter of it is not to be disregarded under the pretext
    of pursuing its spirit”). Additionally, when construing the Public School Code of 1949, “we must
    be mindful of both what the statute provides and what it does not provide.” Washington Township,
    153 A.3d at 1184 (emphasis in original and added, citation omitted).
    10
    joined. 24 P.S. §2-242.1(a). See also Jefferson Township, 
    74 A.3d at
    391 (citing
    Riegelsville II, 
    17 A.3d at 981
    ). This list does not include a statement that students
    currently reside in the independent school district. Likewise, it does not require any
    information about the number of students that may be affected or how a transfer
    would benefit them.
    Section 242.1(a) requires the Secretary to consider the “merits of the
    petition” from an “educational standpoint.” 24 P.S. §2-242.1(a) (emphasis added).
    In In re Weaverland Independent School District, 
    106 A.2d 812
    , 813-14 (Pa. 1954),
    the phrase “merits … from an educational standpoint” was challenged as vague and
    an impermissible delegation of legislative power. Acknowledging that a statute must
    prescribe “with reasonable clarity the limits of power delegated,” the Supreme Court
    held that “educational merit” met that clarity standard.       Id. at 814 (quotation
    omitted). It held that “educational merit” referred to “school considerations,” giving
    the phrase “educational merit” its “ordinary meaning.” Id. at 814-15. Specifically,
    the review requires the Secretary to determine whether “the establishment of a
    proposed independent school district will advance or hinder the educational facilities
    in the designated area.” Id. at 815.
    This Court has explained that the term “educational” means “of,
    relating to, or concerned with education or the field of education” and “[s]erving to
    further education.” Borough of Highspire, 228 A.3d at 593 (citing WEBSTER’S
    THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY 723 (2002)). The term “education” refers
    to a course of study, learning, instruction, and training. Id. These are abstract
    precepts.
    It is “error to add words to a statute not chosen by the legislature.”
    Riegelsville II, 
    17 A.3d at
    986 (citing Vlasic Farms, Inc. v. Pennsylvania Labor
    11
    Relations Board, 
    734 A.2d 487
    , 490 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1999)). The Secretary’s analysis
    of educational merit must be done without regard to a discrete student population.
    Indeed, any student population changes over the course of years, as students move
    in or out of the district or graduate. It is noteworthy that it took the Secretary five
    years to make a determination on the educational merit of the proposed independent
    school district.
    The Secretary’s conclusion is also inconsistent with this Court’s
    holding that standing to file a transfer petition is based upon liability for real estate
    taxes, not upon parenthood or residency. Jefferson Township, 
    74 A.3d at 396-97
    . A
    petition for an independent school district transfers territory from one school district
    to another, Riegelsville II, 
    17 A.3d at 988
    ; it does not transfer people.
    We hold that the Secretary erred. A petition for the establishment of an
    independent school district does not require that students presently reside in the
    proposed independent school district in order for the petition to undergo an
    evaluation for merit from an educational standpoint. Section 242.1(a) of the Public
    School Code of 1949 has not predicated such petitions upon an existing student
    population, as recited by the Deputy Secretary and adopted by the Secretary.
    Merit from an educational standpoint begins with “school
    considerations.” In re Weaverland, 106 A.2d at 814. We have held that “school
    considerations” includes the proximity of schools to the proposed independent
    school district. Riegelsville II, 
    17 A.3d at 990-91
    . It also includes consideration of
    the educational outcomes of each district. 
    Id.
     There is no requirement that a petition
    involve an exit from a severely deficient school district in order to show educational
    merit.
    12
    The parties dispute the value of the evidence Petitioners presented.
    Nevertheless, there is a record that addresses relevant factors: school proximity,
    school district management, and educational outcomes. See Riegelsville II, 
    17 A.3d at 990-91
    . Further, the parties stipulated to facts upon which Petitioners rely to
    support their reasons, and these facts are “binding.” Spencer v. City of Reading
    Charter Board, 
    97 A.3d 834
    , 843 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014).
    The Stipulation established that Rockwood schools are significantly
    closer to the proposed independent school district than Somerset schools.
    Stipulation ¶9. A reduction in students’ travel time has been held to demonstrate
    educational merit. See, e.g., In re Establishment of Independent School District
    Consisting of Western Portions of Hamlin and Sergeant Townships, 
    349 A.2d 480
    ,
    481-83 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1975); In re Establishment of an Independent School District
    Consisting of Brady Township, 
    630 A.2d 537
    , 538-40 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1993).
    The Stipulation established that Rockwood has a better student/teacher
    ratio; lower tax millage rates; and fewer administrators. Stipulation ¶¶5-6, 10-11,
    15-16. Petitioners argue that these facts demonstrate that Rockwood is better
    managed. They explain that both districts experienced a decline in enrollment from
    2011 to 2019;
    [h]owever, during that time Somerset increased its taxes by 2.2
    mills yet Rockwood’s taxes did not increase. It is suggested that
    these facts exhibit better management in Rockwood than in
    Somerset. Fewer students and thus fewer teachers should result
    in some reduction in expense yet Somerset still increased their
    taxes. This appears to indicate that Rockwood was better able to
    operate its district.
    Petitioners’ Brief at 11 (emphasis added). Better management has been held to
    demonstrate educational merit. Brady Township, 
    630 A.2d at 538, n.2
    .
    13
    The Stipulation established that Rockwood students scored better than
    Somerset students over a period of seven years. Stipulation ¶7, Ex. E. Section 220
    of the Public School Code of 1949 requires the District Report Cards to provide the
    public with performance information. 24 P.S. §2-220.7 The Public School Code of
    1949 makes district performance a factor in the evaluation of educational merit.
    Riegelsville II, 
    17 A.3d at 991
    .
    The Stipulation established that from 2011 through 2019, Rockwood’s
    tax millage was 21.89, while Somerset’s increased from 39.5 to 41.7. Stipulation
    ¶¶5-6. A transfer petition cannot rely on tax considerations alone without also
    establishing educational merit. Riegelsville II, 
    17 A.3d at 990
    . Nevertheless, tax
    considerations are relevant. 
    Id.
    The Stipulation established that Seven Springs Farm, Inc., and the
    Pheasant Run development are divided between Jefferson Township and
    Middlecreek Township. Rather than consider the effect of this division upon “a
    community of interest,” the Secretary observed that a transfer would “appear” to
    7
    Section 220 was added by the Act of December 9, 2002, P.L. 1317, 24 P.S. §2-220. It states, in
    relevant part, that the Department “shall create a State Report Card based on the information”
    provided therein, which shall include:
    (i) Information regarding the number of schools and school districts that have
    achieved adequate yearly progress and the number of schools and school districts
    that have not achieved adequate yearly progress.
    (ii) Information regarding the number of schools and school districts that have
    achieved each academic performance target and the number of schools and school
    districts that have not achieved each academic performance target.
    24 P.S. §2-220(a)(2)(i), (ii). The District Report Cards are designed to provide students, parents,
    educators, and citizens with an understanding of student and school performance consistent with
    federal law, specifically, the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, 
    20 U.S.C. §§6301-7941
    . See 
    22 Pa. Code §4.51
    (a)(1).
    14
    offend the preference in the Public School Code of 1949 to keep municipalities in
    the same school district. Section 2-201 states that
    [a]ll school districts shall remain as now constituted until
    changed as authorized by this act. Except as otherwise now or
    hereafter constituted, each city, incorporated town, borough, or
    township in this Commonwealth, now existing or hereafter
    created, shall constitute a separate school district….
    24 P.S. §2-201(emphasis added). This Court has construed Section 201 to express
    a legislative preference that “students in a particular borough should attend the same
    schools.” In re Petition for Formation of Independent School District, 
    962 A.2d 24
    ,
    26 n.3 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2008) (Riegelsville I). However, this preference may be offset
    where, as here, houses in the same residential community are assigned to different
    districts. A single parcel, Seven Springs Farm, Inc., is similarly divided. The Public
    School Code of 1949 does not require a slavish adherence to municipal boundaries;
    rather, it expresses a preference that students with the same community of interest
    should attend the same schools.
    The Secretary refused to evaluate either the stipulated facts or hearing
    testimony because they did not relate to “any actual or reasonably anticipated
    students in the territory.” Secretary Adjudication, 12/13/2019, at 4.8 Instead, the
    Secretary held that the evidence was “not capable of evaluation in this case
    considering the lack of students or prospective students in the territory[.]” 
    Id.
     at 4-
    8
    In prior cases, this Court, has considered the effects of the proposed transfer on students residing
    in the territory proposed to be transferred as well as the effects of the transfer on students in the
    receiving district. See, e.g., Washington Township, 153 A.3d at 1181; Borough of Highspire, 228
    A.3d at 586; and Riegelsville II, 
    17 A.3d at 979
    . These cases did not, however, establish the
    principle that a territory cannot be moved from one school district to another unless school-aged
    children reside in the territory.
    15
    5.9 The Secretary erred by refusing to carry out his statutory duty under Section
    242.1(a) of the Public School Code of 1949, 24 P.S. §242.1, to determine whether
    the proposed independent school district has merit from an educational standpoint.
    Conclusion
    The Secretary erred in refusing to evaluate Petitioners’ evidence for the
    sole reason that school-aged children did not reside in the proposed independent
    school district when Petitioners filed their petition. The Public School Code of 1949
    does not require that students presently reside in a proposed independent school
    district. Accordingly, we reverse the Secretary’s adjudication and remand the matter
    to the Secretary to evaluate all of the evidence against the factors that, according to
    precedent, have been held to demonstrate merit from an educational standpoint.
    ____________________________________________
    MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge Emerita
    9
    The Secretary cannot know if or when there will be students in the proposed independent school
    districts.
    16
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Joseph E. Archer, Nancy J. Bonati, Christopher          :
    C. Bosworth, Deborah A. Bosworth, Belita J.             :
    Brown, Stephen C. Brown, Deborah A.                     :
    Cunningham, Paul V. Cunningham, Candace                 :
    DiMarco, Ross F. DiMarco Jr., Janeen Dupre,             :
    Karen A. Farmerie, Wilson J. Farmerie, David A.         :
    Fetchko, Mary Ellen Fetchko, Clifford J. Forrest,       :
    Tracy L. Forrest, Gary D. Gadley, Annette D.            :
    Ganassi, Hemlock Property LLC, Georgia C.               :
    Hernandez, Robert M. Hernandez, Martha E.               :
    Hildebrandt, Mark J. Hileman, Rebecca L. Hileman,       :
    James A. Nassif Qualified Personal Residence            :
    Trust, Susan A. Jurik, Kurt J. Lesker III, William J.   :
    Lloyd, David P. Mendis, Lisa B. Mendis, Joseph C.       :
    Metzgar, Lynette E. Metzgar, Erin Morris, Michael A.    :
    Morris, Netco Inc., Mary Jo Ochson, John C.             :
    Prentice, Douglas Keith Rosetti, Ronald T.              :
    Rossetti, Seven Springs Farm, Inc., Matthew             :
    Tarosky, Three Rivers Enterprises Inc., David A.        :
    Tonnies, Cynthia G. Urgo, Donald J. Urgo, Virginia’s    :
    Pheasant Run Limited Partnership, David A.              :
    Webber, Lorie A. Webber, Harold Wiegel, Steven H.       :
    Wiegel, James P. Wilhelm, Paige M. Wilhelm,             :
    Jackie Wolfe, Jacquelyn K. Wolfe, Tim Wolfe,            :
    and Timothy W. Wolfe,                                   :
    Petitioners                    :
    :
    v.                                       : No. 133 C.D. 2020
    :
    Rockwood Area School District and Somerset Area         :
    School District,                                        :
    Respondents                       :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 31st day of March, 2021, the adjudication of the
    Secretary of Education dated December 13, 2019, is hereby REVERSED. This
    matter is REMANDED to the Secretary for further proceedings in accordance with
    the accompanying opinion.
    Jurisdiction relinquished.
    ____________________________________________
    MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge Emerita
    2
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Joseph E. Archer, Nancy J. Bonati, Christopher        :
    C. Bosworth, Deborah A. Bosworth, Belita J.           :
    Brown, Stephen C. Brown, Deborah A.                   :
    Cunningham, Paul V. Cunningham, Candace               :
    DiMarco, Ross F. DiMarco Jr., Janeen Dupre,           :
    Karen A. Farmerie, Wilson J. Farmerie, David A. :
    Fetchko, Mary Ellen Fetchko, Clifford J. Forrest, :
    Tracy L. Forrest, Gary D. Gadley, Annette D.          :
    Ganassi, Hemlock Property LLC, Georgia C.             :
    Hernandez, Robert M. Hernandez, Martha E.             :
    Hildebrandt, Mark J. Hileman, Rebecca L. Hileman, :
    James A. Nassif Qualified Personal Residence          :
    Trust, Susan A. Jurik, Kurt J. Lesker III, William J. :
    Lloyd, David P. Mendis, Lisa B. Mendis, Joseph C. :
    Metzgar, Lynette E. Metzgar, Erin Morris, Michael :
    A. Morris, Netco Inc., Mary Jo Ochson, John C.        :
    Prentice, Douglas Keith Rosetti, Ronald T. Rossetti, :
    Seven Springs Farm, Inc., Matthew Tarosky,            :
    Three Rivers Enterprises Inc., David A. Tonnies, :
    Cynthia G. Urgo, Donald J. Urgo, Virginia's           :
    Pheasant Run Limited Partnership, David A.            :
    Webber, Lorie A. Webber, Harold Wiegel, Steven :
    H. Wiegel, James P. Wilhelm, Paige M. Wilhelm, :
    Jackie Wolfe, Jacquelyn K. Wolfe, Tim Wolfe, and :
    Timothy W. Wolfe,                                     :
    Petitioners                  :
    :
    v.                           : No. 133 C.D. 2020
    : ARGUED: February 8, 2021
    Rockwood Area School District and Somerset            :
    Area School District,                                 :
    Respondents                  :
    BEFORE:     HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, President Judge
    HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, Judge (P)
    HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Senior Judge
    DISSENTING OPINION BY
    SENIOR JUDGE LEADBETTER                                 FILED: March 31, 2021
    I respectfully dissent. I fully agree with the majority that the absence of
    school-aged students in an area for which a district transfer is proposed does not, in and
    of itself, bar the transfer or automatically mean that there can be no educational merit
    to the transfer. However, I disagree that the Secretary of Education based his decision
    on any such conclusion. In discussing his agreement with the recommendation of the
    hearing examiner, he stated, “I do not believe the Deputy Secretary imposed a specific
    requirement that there be school age students to approve the Petition.” (Sec’y’s Op. at
    p.4.) Rather, he found that under the highly unusual circumstances here, evidence
    regarding the traditional factors would be too speculative to form the basis of a
    conclusion regarding educational merit. I would affirm the Secretary’s analysis in this
    case.
    Here, not only are there no students in the area covered by the Petition,
    there is no evidence that there ever were any, and there is no evidence of likelihood
    that there will be any in the foreseeable future. There are, in fact, only eight full-time
    residents, plus a handful of vacation homes and the Seven Springs resort. Not knowing
    when or where students might reside in the future, or what schools may by then be
    built, makes the potential travel times to schools highly speculative. Likewise, the
    current indicia of academic performance and school district management may or may
    not be the same or even similar in that possibly distant time.
    Petitioning property owners plainly have no legitimate interest in the
    educational value of the school district in which their property sits. Rather, it would
    seem abundantly clear that their sole interest is in reducing their property taxes. If
    ordinary principles of standing were at issue here, they would have none. I consider
    filing a transfer petition for such a reason to be an abuse of the process, and I would
    affirm the Secretary’s denial of the Petition.
    __________________________________
    BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER,
    President Judge Emerita