IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Butler Area School District; Alvin :
Vavro, in his official capacity as :
President of the Board of School :
Directors; Jennifer Cummings, in :
her official capacity as Vice President :
of the Board of School Directors; :
John Conrad, in his official capacity :
as a member of the Board of :
School Directors; Jennifer Daniels- :
Wells, in her official capacity as a :
member of the Board of School :
Directors; Bill Halle, in his official :
capacity as a member of the :
Board of School Directors; Thomas :
Harrison, in his official capacity as a :
member of the Board of School :
Directors; Alice Nunes, in her :
official capacity as a member of the :
Board of School Directors; Gary :
Shingleton, in his official capacity :
as a member of the Board of :
School Directors; Mary Waggoner, :
in her official capacity as a member :
of the Board of School Directors; :
Philip A. Melnick, Sr. and Chattle :
Melnick, husband and wife, as :
parents of three children within :
the Butler Area School District, as :
taxpayers within the Butler Area School :
District; and as voters within the Butler :
Area School District; Michael Carben :
and Julie Carben, husband and wife, :
as parents of two children within the :
Butler Area School District, as :
taxpayers within the Butler Area School :
District, and as voters within the Butler :
Area School District; Michele Curzi, :
as a parent of five children within the :
Butler Area School District, as a :
taxpayer within the Butler Area School :
District, and as a voter within the Butler :
Area School District; Laura Ice, as a :
parent of two children within the Butler
:
Area School District, as a taxpayer :
within the Butler Area School District,
:
and as a voter within the Butler Area :
School District; James Lindsay and :
Meredith Lindsay, husband and wife, :
as parents of one child within the Butler
:
Area School District, as taxpayers :
within the Butler Area School District,
:
and as voters within the Butler Area :
School District; and Brad D. Leslie, :
as a parent of a student-athlete within
:
the Butler Area School District, as a :
taxpayer within the Butler Area School:
District, and as a voter within the Butler
:
Area School District, :
Petitioners:
: No. 647 M.D. 2020
v. :
: Argued: June 9, 2021
Dr. Rachel Levine, Secretary of the :
Pennsylvania Department of Health; :
Noe Ortega, acting Secretary of the :
Pennsylvania Department of Education; :
and The Honorable Thomas W. Wolf, :
Governor of Pennsylvania, :
Respondents :
BEFORE: HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge1
HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge
HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
HONORABLE LORI A. DUMAS, Judge2
1
Judge Cohn Jubelirer became the President Judge of this Court in January 2022, after this
case was argued.
2
This case was argued before a panel of this Court that included Judge Crompton. Judge
Crompton’s service with this Court ended on January 2, 2022, before the Court reached a decision on
(Footnote continued on next page…)
2
OPINION NOT REPORTED
MEMORANDUM OPINION
BY JUDGE McCULLOUGH FILED: October 3, 2022
Before the Court are the preliminary objections filed by Dr. Rachel
Levine, Secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of Health (Secretary of Health or
Secretary Levine); Noe Ortega, Acting Secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of
Education (Acting Secretary of Education or Acting Secretary Ortega); and the
Honorable Thomas W. Wolf, Governor of Pennsylvania (Governor or Governor Wolf)
(collectively, Respondents)3 to a Petition for Review (Petition) filed in our original
jurisdiction by the Butler Area School District (School District), members of the School
District’s Board of School Directors (together, Board Petitioners),4 and several parents
of students within the School District (Parent Petitioners)5 (collectively, Petitioners).
the pending preliminary objections. Accordingly, Judge Dumas replaced Judge Crompton as a panel
member and considered the matter as submitted on the briefs.
3
As of the filing of this Memorandum Opinion, Secretary Levine is no longer the Secretary
of Health. She was succeeded by Acting Secretary of Health Alison Beam, who remained Acting
Secretary until her resignation in December 2021. Thereafter Governor Wolf named Keara
Klinepeter as Acting Secretary of Health. Klinepeter resigned the position in April 2022, at which
time Governor Wolf named Denise Johnson as Acting Secretary of Health. Ms. Johnson remains
Pennsylvania’s Acting Secretary of Health to date.
Although the nomination of Acting Secretary Ortega was confirmed by the Pennsylvania
Senate in 2021, he resigned from office effective April 29, 2022. Governor Wolf named Eric Hagarty
as Acting Secretary of Education to replace Mr. Ortega. Mr. Hagarty remains Pennsylvania’s Acting
Secretary of Education to date.
4
The individual Board Petitioners, proceeding in their official capacities only, are Alvin
Vavro, Jennifer Cummings, John Conrad, Jennifer Daniels-Wells, Bill Halle, Thomas Harrison, Alice
Nunes, Gary Shingleton, and Mary Waggoner. (Petition ¶¶ 4-12.)
5
The Parent Petitioners are Philip A. Melnick, Sr. and Chattle Melnick, Michael Carben and
Julie Carben, Michele Curzi, Laura Ice, James Lindsay and Meredith Lindsay, and Brad D. Leslie.
(Footnote continued on next page…)
3
The Petition challenges various orders and related directives issued by Respondents to
public schools in the Commonwealth during the COVID-19 pandemic. Petitioners ask
this Court to set aside the challenged orders and directives and issue permanent
injunctions enjoining Respondents from taking like action in the future.
Respondents lodge several preliminary objections to the Petition, all of
which demur to Petitioners’ claims on various grounds.6 After careful review, we
overrule the preliminary objections in their entirety.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
A. Facts Alleged in the Petition7
Petitioners bring their action pursuant to the Declaratory Judgments Act,
42 Pa. C.S. §§ 7531-7541.8 They aver as follows.
(Petition ¶¶ 14-19.) Although the caption of Petitioners’ filing lists “Chattle” Melnick as a Parent
Petitioner, the verification filed on April 16, 2021, is signed by Philip A. and “Chattele” Melnick.
6
As discussed infra, two out of seven of Respondents’ original preliminary objections have
been withdrawn. All of the remaining preliminary objections demur to the Petition on various
grounds.
7
“In ruling on preliminary objections, we must accept as true all well-pleaded material
allegations in the petition for review, as well as all inferences reasonably deduced therefrom. The
Court need not accept as true conclusions of law, unwarranted inferences from facts, argumentative
allegations, or expressions of opinion.” Pennsylvania Virtual Charter School v. Department of
Education, 244 A.3d 885, 889 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2020) (en banc).
8
Section 7532 of the Declaratory Judgments Act provides as follows:
Courts of record, within their respective jurisdictions, shall have power to
declare rights, status, and other legal relations whether or not further relief
is or could be claimed. No action or proceeding shall be open to objection
on the ground that a declaratory judgment or decree is prayed for. The
declaration may be either affirmative or negative in form and effect, and
such declarations shall have the force and effect of a final judgment or
decree.
(Footnote continued on next page…)
4
On November 23, 2020, the Secretary of Health issued an order, effective
November 24, 2020, entitled “Order of the Secretary of the Pennsylvania Department
of Health Directing Public School Entities in Counties with Substantial Community
Transmission to Attest to Health and Safety Protocols” (Attestation Order). (Petition
Ex. A.) The Attestation Order required public school entities with in-person
instruction to attest, on a form provided by the Department of Education (Attestation
Form), that (1) they had read the “Updated Order of the Secretary of the Pennsylvania
Department of Health Requiring Universal Face Coverings” and the “Recommendation
for Pre-K to 12 Schools Following Identification of a Case(s) of COVID-19,” and (2)
they were complying, would comply, and/or would continue to comply with both. Id.
The Attestation Order was issued to school districts in counties that
exhibited two consecutive weeks of substantial transmission of COVID-19. (Petition
¶ 30.) The Board Petitioners received the Attestation Order in an email sent from
Acting Secretary Ortega and signed by both Acting Secretary Ortega and Secretary
Levine (“Attestation Email”). (Petition ¶¶ 32-33, Ex. D.) The Attestation Email stated
that the Attestation Order “provides authority to [the Department of Education] to
develop and distribute the [A]ttestation [F]orm and directs a mandatory move to remote
learning if a public school entity does not sign the Attestation.” (Petition ¶ 34; Ex. D.)
The Attestation Email further stated that, for districts in counties under a substantial
disease transmission designation for at least two consecutive weeks, in-person
instruction “may not occur until the [A]ttestation [F]orm is signed by the chief public
school administrator and the chair/president of the governing body of the public school
entity and submitted via email to [the Department of Education] by November 30,
2020.” (Petition ¶ 36; Ex. D.) Public school entities that elected not to continue in-
42 Pa. C.S. § 7532.
5
person instruction nevertheless also were required sign and submit the Attestation
Form. (Petition ¶ 37; Ex. D.) Petitioners complied with the Attestation Order but,
because they viewed it as a usurpation of their statutory authority, they did so under
protest. (Petition ¶¶ 41-42.)9
On December 10, 2020, Governor Wolf issued an order entitled “Order of
the Governor of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Directing Limited-Time
Mitigation” (Governor’s Mitigation Order). (Petition Ex. B.) The Governor’s
Mitigation Order, inter alia, suspended in-person extracurricular activities,
interscholastic and intrascholastic athletics, and interstate and intrastate sports leagues
and tournaments. Id. By its terms, the Governor’s Mitigation Order took effect on
December 12, 2020, and expired on January 4, 2021.10 (Petition Ex. B.) Meanwhile,
the Secretary of Health issued a separate mitigation order (Secretary’s Mitigation
Order) that, in relevant part, is substantially identical to the Governor’s Mitigation
Order (together, Mitigation Orders). The Secretary’s Mitigation Order relied upon the
same authority as the Attestation Order and, like the Governor’s Mitigation Order, took
effect on December 12, 2020, and expired on January 4, 2021.
9
The Attestation Order cited as legal authority section 5 of the Disease Prevention and Control
Law of 1955, Act of April 23, 1956, P.L. 1510, as amended, 35 P.S. § 521.5 (DPCL); sections 2102(a)
and 2106 of the Administrative Code of 1929, Act of April 9, 1929, P.L. 177, as amended, 71 P.S. §§
532(a), 536 (Administrative Code); the Department of Health’s regulations at 28 Pa. Code §§ 27.60-
27.68, and section 8 of the Department of Health Act, Act of April 27, 1905, P.L. 312, as amended,
71 P.S. § 1403(a). Id. The Attestation Order took effect on November 24, 2020, and continues “until
further notice.” (Petition Ex. A.)
10
The Governor cited as legal authority for the Mitigation Order various subsections of section
7301 of the Emergency Management Services Code (Emergency Code), 35 Pa. C.S. § 7301. See 35
Pa. C.S. §§ 7301(a) (responsibility for “meeting the dangers to this Commonwealth and people
presented by disasters”); 7301(b) (authority to “issue, amend and rescind executive orders,
proclamations and regulations which shall have the force and effect of law”); and 7301(c) (authority
to declare disaster emergencies).
6
Petitioners filed this action on December 14, 2020. They rely on
constitutional and statutory provisions in asking this Court to both invalidate the
Attestation and Mitigation Orders and issue permanent injunctions barring similar
future action. They first contend that Respondents’ orders involve legislative, rather
than executive, prerogatives, running afoul of article I, section 12 (“No power of
suspending laws shall be exercised unless by the Legislature or by its authority.”) and
article III, section 14 (“The General Assembly shall provide for the maintenance and
support of a thorough and efficient system of public education to serve the needs of the
Commonwealth.”) of the Pennsylvania Constitution. Pa. Const. art. I, § 12; Pa. Const.
art. III, § 14. Petitioners secondly argue that the challenged orders conflict with various
provisions of the Public School Code of 1949 (“School Code”), Act of March 10, 1949,
P.L. 30, as amended, 24 P.S. §§ 1-101 - 27-2702, usurping the powers granted by that
law to local boards of school directors. See sections 520 and 520.1 of the School Code,
24 P.S. §§ 5-520, 5-520.1.11
B. Subsequent Developments
Several relevant legal developments have transpired since the filing of
Respondents’ preliminary objections. When the Attestation and Mitigation Orders
were issued, Governor Wolf had issued a Proclamation of Disaster Emergency
(“Disaster Proclamation”) under section 7301(c) of the Emergency Code, 35 Pa. C.S.
§ 7301(c).12 Governor Wolf continuously renewed the Disaster Proclamation pursuant
11
Section 520.1 was added by the Act of January 14, 1952, P.L. (1951).
12
Section 7301(c) provides, in relevant part, as follows:
(c) Declaration of disaster emergency.--A disaster emergency shall be declared by
executive order or proclamation of the Governor upon finding that a disaster has
occurred or that the occurrence or the threat of a disaster is imminent. The state of
(Footnote continued on next page…)
7
to his powers under that section. However, on May 18, 2021, the voters of the
Commonwealth approved two amendments to the Pennsylvania Constitution that place
limits on the duration of such declarations. The first amended article III, section 9 of
the Pennsylvania Constitution and authorizes the General Assembly to extend or
terminate a declaration of a disaster emergency by a simple majority vote. See Pa.
Const. art. III, § 9.13 The second added section 20 to article IV of the Pennsylvania
Constitution, which, inter alia, limits a declaration of a disaster emergency to a period
of 21 days absent an extension by concurrent resolution of the General Assembly. See
Pa. Const. art. IV, § 20.14 On June 10, 2021, the General Assembly approved a
disaster emergency shall continue until the Governor finds that the threat or danger
has passed or the disaster has been dealt with to the extent that emergency conditions
no longer exist and terminates the state of disaster emergency by executive order or
proclamation, but no state of disaster emergency may continue for longer than 90 days
unless renewed by the Governor. The General Assembly by concurrent resolution may
terminate a state of disaster emergency at any time.
35 Pa. C.S. § 7301(c).
13
Article III, section 9 now provides as follows:
Every order, resolution or vote, to which the concurrence of both Houses may be
necessary, except on the questions of adjournment or termination or extension of a
disaster emergency declaration as declared by an executive order or proclamation, or
portion of a disaster emergency declaration as declared by an executive order or
proclamation, shall be presented to the Governor and before it shall take effect be
approved by him, or being disapproved, shall be repassed by two-thirds of both Houses
according to the rules and limitations prescribed in case of a bill.
Pa. Const. art. III, § 9. This amendment followed our Supreme Court’s decision in Wolf v. Scarnati,
233 A.3d 679 (Pa. 2020) (decided July 1, 2020), in which that Court held that the General Assembly
was not empowered to terminate a declaration of disaster emergency by concurrent resolution.
14
Article IV, section 20 now provides as follows:
(Footnote continued on next page…)
8
concurrent resolution, House Resolution 106, 2021 Gen. Assemb. Reg. Sess. (Pa.
2021), terminating the Disaster Proclamation, as amended and renewed. To date, no
new proclamations have been issued.
DISCUSSION
In their preliminary objections II through VI,15 Respondents object to the
Petition on the following grounds: (1) because the DPCL and Administrative Code
(a) A disaster emergency declaration may be declared by executive order or
proclamation of the Governor upon finding that a disaster has occurred or that the
occurrence or threat of a disaster is imminent that threatens the health, safety or welfare
of this Commonwealth.
(b) Each disaster emergency declaration issued by the Governor under subsection (a)
shall indicate the nature, each area threatened and the conditions of the disaster,
including whether the disaster is a natural disaster, military emergency, public health
emergency, technological disaster or other general emergency, as defined by statute.
The General Assembly shall, by statute, provide for the manner in which each type of
disaster enumerated under this subsection shall be managed.
(c) A disaster emergency declaration under subsection (a) shall be in effect for no more
than twenty-one (21) days, unless otherwise extended in whole or part by concurrent
resolution of the General Assembly.
(d) Upon the expiration of a disaster emergency declaration under subsection (a), the
Governor may not issue a new disaster emergency declaration based upon the same or
substantially similar facts and circumstances without the passage of a concurrent
resolution of the General Assembly expressly approving the new disaster emergency
declaration.
Pa. Const. art. IV, § 20.
15
Respondents initially lodged seven preliminary objections to the Petition, all but one in the
form of demurrers. In their first preliminary objection, Respondents demurred to what they perceived
to be a procedural due process claim. Respondents withdrew the objection after Petitioners clarified
that they were not pursuing such a claim. See Answer ¶ 15; Respondents’ Br. at 10 n.5. In their
seventh preliminary objection, Respondents challenged the adequacy of the original verification
attached to the Petition, which was executed by only a single Petitioner, Alvin Vavro. Respondents
argued that the verification violated Pa.R.Civ.P. 206.3 because certain averments of fact made by the
(Footnote continued on next page…)
9
explicitly authorized Secretary Levine’s issuance of the Attestation Order, it did not
usurp legislative prerogatives or contravene any Pennsylvania law (Preliminary
Objection II); (2) Secretary Levine did not delegate enforcement authority to Acting
Secretary Ortega and, even if she did delegate that authority, the delegation was
permissible under Pennsylvania law (Preliminary Objection III); (3) the Mitigation
Orders were a proper exercise of Governor Wolf’s police powers under the Emergency
Code and Secretary Levine’s powers under the DPCL and Administrative Code, which
powers override the School Code (Preliminary Objections IV and V); and (4)
Petitioners’ request for declaratory relief fails to set forth an actual controversy,
rendering moot the issues raised in the Petition (Preliminary Objection VI).16
A. Preliminary Objection VI
We first address the question raised in Respondents’ preliminary objection
VI, namely, whether Petitioners’ claims are moot. To be clear, this objection does not
on its face concern Secretary Levine’s Attestation Order, which does not have an
expiration date. Respondents on this ground seek dismissal only of “Petitioners’ claims
related to the December 10, 2020 limited time mitigation orders.” (Preliminary
Objections at 19, Wherefore Clause). Respondents contend that because the two
Mitigation Orders have expired, there remains no controversy between the parties
Parent Petitioners could not be verified by Vavro, who had no relevant personal knowledge of those
facts. On April 16, 2021, and May 24, 2021, Petitioners filed additional verifications for all named
Petitioners. Respondents accordingly withdrew Preliminary Objection VII at oral argument. Thus,
only preliminary objections II through VI remain before the Court for disposition.
16
The Court received post-submission filings on August 4, 2021 (Respondents’ “Notice of
Supplemental Authority”), and December 28, 2021 (Petitioners’ “Application to Submit
Supplemental Authority”). The submissions include this Court’s unreported decision in County of
Allegheny v. The Cracked Egg, LLC, (Pa. Cmwlth., No. 101 C.D. 2021, filed July 23, 2021), and the
Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s decision in Corman v. Acting Secretary of the Pennsylvania
Department of Health, 266 A.3d 452 (Pa. 2021). The Court will receive and consider both
submissions to the extent they are relevant.
10
giving Petitioners standing to seek declaratory relief. Granting such relief,
Respondents argue, would amount to this Court rendering a declaration concerning past
conduct or an advisory opinion. Petitioners counter that Respondents took the opposite
position in their brief to the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit in
County of Butler v. Governor, 8 F.4th 226 (3d Cir. 2021).
In considering whether a declaratory judgment action remains an actual
controversy, we apply well-settled principles regarding mootness and its exceptions.
“[W]hether a court should exercise jurisdiction over a declaratory judgment proceeding
is a matter of sound judicial discretion. Thus, the granting of a petition for a declaratory
judgment is a matter lying within the sound discretion of a court of original
jurisdiction.” Brouillette v. Wolf, 213 A.3d 341, 357 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2019) (citation
omitted). “The presence of antagonistic claims indicating imminent and inevitable
litigation coupled with a clear manifestation that the declaration sought will be of
practical help in ending the controversy are essential to the granting of relief by way of
declaratory judgment. . . .” Id. (quoting Gulnac v. South Butler School District, 587
A.2d 699, 701 (Pa. 1991)).
There are certain exceptions to the mootness doctrine, which we consider
here. Where an issue has been rendered moot, a court may nevertheless address the
merits of the claim where “the conduct complained of is capable of repetition yet likely
to evade review, where the case involves issues important to the public interest or
where a party will suffer some detriment without the court's decision.” J.J.M. v.
Pennsylvania State Police, 183 A.3d 1109, 1112 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2018). The Court finds
that the issues raised in the Petition are not moot. Notwithstanding the intervening
circumstances that have transpired since the Petition was filed, it nevertheless presents
an actual controversy that this Court can adjudicate. First, and as Respondents appear
11
to concede, Secretary Levine’s Attestation Order has not expired and at least
technically continues to require public school entities to comply with its requirements.
The issues raised in the Petition regarding the powers of the Secretary of Health under
the DPCL, the Administrative Code, and the Department of Health’s regulations are
not tied to the declaration of a disaster emergency. The Attestation Order claimed
outright the authority under those Pennsylvania laws, and Petitioners challenge the
Secretary of Health’s actions based on their alleged contravention of the School Code.
Thus, regarding the Attestation Order and its related directives, this action has not been
rendered moot.
Regarding the Mitigation Orders, both of which undisputedly have
expired on their own terms, the Court concludes that the issues raised in the Petition
remain viable. Notwithstanding the amendments to the Pennsylvania Constitution that
limit the length of disaster proclamations that the Governor can issue unilaterally,
nothing in the changes to Pennsylvania law necessarily prevents these kinds of orders,
particularly from the Secretary of Health, from being issued. As such, we conclude
that such orders are capable of repetition and are likely to evade review, particularly
now given the short time span of the Governor’s ability to issue disaster proclamations.
Given the broad implications of these orders and the fact that the COVID-19 pandemic
has abated, but not ended, the likelihood that such orders could and would be issued in
the future is more than a theoretical possibility. There is, rather, a “reasonable
expectation that the same complaining party would be subjected to the same action
again.” Mistich v. Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole, 863 A.2d 116, 121
(Pa. Cmwlth. 2004) (quoting Weinstein v. Bradford, 423 U.S. 147, 149 (1975)).
Because the Court concludes that the issues raised in the Petition are not
moot, the Court will overrule this preliminary objection.
12
B. Preliminary Objection II
In their second preliminary objection, Respondents contend that Secretary
Levine’s Attestation Order and its related directives expressly are permitted by the
DPCL and the Administrative Code. They cite section 3(b) of the DPCL, which states
that the Department of Health “shall be responsible for the prevention and control of
communicable and non-communicable disease in any municipality which is not served
by a local board or department of health, including disease control in public and private
schools.” 35 P.S. § 521.3(b). Respondents also cite the Department of Health’s
authority under section 5 of the DPCL to “carry out the appropriate control measures”
with respect to such a disease. 35 P.S. § 521.5. Under the Administrative Code,
Respondents stress that the duties of the Department of Health are to “protect the health
of the people of this Commonwealth, and to determine and employ the most efficient
and practical means for the prevention and suppression of disease,” 71 P.S. § 532(a),
and “to declare certain diseases to be communicable” and “establish such regulations
for the prevention of the spread of such diseases.” 71 P.S. § 536(a). Thus, Respondents
contend that Petitioners’ claims regarding Secretary Levine’s actions fail as a matter of
law.
The Court disagrees. The scope of the Secretary of Health’s authority
under the DPCL and Administrative Code was addressed in our Supreme Court’s
recent decision in Corman v. Acting Secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of
Health, 266 A.3d 452 (Pa. 2021). In Corman, the Court addressed, among other issues,
the question of whether, where no gubernatorial disaster emergency has been declared,
the Secretary of Health can act unilaterally under the provisions of the DPCL and
Administrative Code to issue orders that carry the force of law without going through
the otherwise required steps in the regulatory process. The Secretary of Health issued
13
the mask mandate at issue in Corman on August 31, 2021, more than two months after
Governor Wolf’s Disaster Proclamation, as amended and renewed, was terminated by
the General Assembly. The Supreme Court in Corman concluded that the non-
emergency measures available to the Secretary of Health to control disease under the
DPCL and the Administrative Code are “limited to those adopted by formal rule and
regulation.” Id. at 477. See also id. at 486 (“In sum, absent a gubernatorial disaster
emergency declaration suspending the framework of laws governing agency
rulemaking in Pennsylvania, the Department [of Health] was obligated to follow . . .
the Regulatory Review Act[17], the Commonwealth Documents Law[18], and the
Commonwealth Attorneys Act[19] before promulgating a new disease control measure
with the force of law.”).
Although the Court in Corman did not address whether, and to what
extent, Secretary of Health orders issued during a disaster emergency proclamation
may supersede provisions of the School Code, it did hold that the Secretary of Health’s
powers under the DPCL and the Administrative Code are not unlimited and may not,
in ordinary instances, circumvent the ordinary rulemaking process. The Court opined
that the general policy provisions of the DPCL and the Administrative Code did not, in
themselves, dictate how the Secretary of Health could implement disease control
measures. See id. at 476 (“[T]he [DPCL] expressly cabined the [Department of
Health’s] power to carry out disease control by restricting the available measures to
those promulgated by formal rule or regulation.”); 477 (the general public health policy
17
Act of June 25, 1982, P.L. 633, as amended, 71 P.S. §§ 745.1-745.14.
18
Act of July 31, 1968, P.L. 769, as amended, 45 P.S. § 1102, 1201-1208, 1602; 45 Pa. C.S.
§§ 501-907.
19
Act of Oct. 15, 1980, P.L. 950, as amended, 71 P.S. §§ 732-101 - 732-506.
14
declarations in section 2102(a) of the Administrative Code and section 8(a) of the
Department of Health Act do not “permit the Department or the Secretary of Health to
act by whim or fiat in all matters concerning disease”). Thus, we cannot conclude that
those laws, also relied upon by Respondents here, preclude as a matter of law
Petitioners’ claims regarding the Attestation Order and its alleged contravention of the
School Code. We accordingly will overrule Respondents’ second preliminary
objection.20
C. Preliminary Objection III
In their third preliminary objection, Respondents rely upon the same
statutory authority cited above to counter Petitioners’ suggestion that Secretary Levine
improperly delegated authority to Acting Secretary Ortega to enforce the Attestation
20
For example, the School Code grants local school districts broad powers to act in times of
war and in unforeseen emergencies. See 24 P.S. §§ 5-520, 5-520.1, respectively. Although we do
not now decide the issue, we note that the Court in Corman opined at length regarding the limitation
of the Department of Health’s powers under the DPCL and the Administrative Code, the former of
which limits the Department’s ability to impose disease control measures “as is provided by rule or
regulation.” Corman, 266 A.3d at 476 (quoting 35 P.S. § 521.5). See also id. (quoting section 2106
of the Administrative Code, 71 P.S. § 536(b) (Administrative Code authorizes the Department of
Health to establish and enforce quarantines, but only “in such manner, for such period, and with such
powers, as may now or hereafter be provided by law”)). Further, although the Department of Health’s
regulations authorize several discrete categories of disease control measures (including isolation,
surveillance, segregation, quarantine or modified quarantine, and “any other disease control measure
the Department or the local health authority considers to be appropriate for the surveillance of disease,
when the disease control measure is necessary to protect the public from the spread of infectious
agents”), see 28 Pa. Code § 27.60(a), the Court in Corman nevertheless concluded that the “open-
ended, universal” school mask mandate at issue fell into none of these categories, including the “other
disease control” catch-all provision. Id. at 478-83, 483. Because the Governor’s Disaster
Proclamation had ended, the Department of Health could not issue the mask mandate as a disease
control measure with the force of law without going through the ordinary rule- and regulation-making
process. Id. at 486-87.
15
Order. Respondents contend that Secretary Levine only designated the Department of
Education as the agency to receive the signed Attestation Forms and did not designate
enforcement authority. Respondents nevertheless argue that even if enforcement
authority was delegated, such a delegation was within the Department of Health’s duty
to “carry out the appropriate control measures” in response to the COVID-19
pandemic. 35 P.S. § 521.5.
The DCPL and the Administrative Code provisions relied upon by
Respondents do not specifically address the issue of whether the Secretary of Health
may delegate enforcement of disease control measures to another executive
department. Further, the Court cannot, without more facts, determine whether and to
what extent the Secretary of Health in fact designated enforcement authority to the
Department of Education. The Court cannot say that Petitioners fail to state a claim as
a matter of law. Respondents third preliminary objection therefore will be overruled.
D. Preliminary Objections IV and V
In their fourth and fifth preliminary objections, Respondents contend that
the Mitigation Orders, which suspended sporting events and in-person extracurricular
activities for a three-week period, were a proper exercise of the Commonwealth’s
police powers and did not unlawfully usurp the powers of the General Assembly or
local school boards. Respondents rely upon the Emergency Code and our Supreme
Court’s discussion of the Commonwealth’s police powers in Friends of Danny DeVito
v. Wolf, 227 A.3d 872 (Pa. 2020). They stress that, under the Emergency Code, the
Governor has “broad emergency management powers” when responding to a
“disaster,” including the authority to “issue and rescind executive orders,
proclamations, and regulations which shall have the force and effect of law.” Id. at 885
(quoting 35 Pa. C.S. § 7301(b)). These broad emergency powers, Respondents note,
16
are “firmly grounded in the Commonwealth’s police power . . . ‘to promote the public
health, morals or safety and the general well-being of the community.’” Id. at 886
(quoting Pennsylvania Restaurant and Lodging Association v. City of Pittsburgh, 211
A.3d 810, 817 (Pa. 2019)). They thus argue that “[t]he mere fact that the Board of
School Directors may be authorized to act during a temporary emergency does not
mean their powers override the Commonwealth’s police powers.” (Respondents’ Brief
at 15.) To support the Secretary of Health’s Mitigation Order, Respondents again rely
on the powers granted by the DCPL and the Administrative Code to argue that
Secretary Levine was authorized to issue her Mitigation Order restricting sporting
events and extracurricular activities.
Petitioners respond by arguing that the Governor’s police powers cannot
be construed to override the powers of local school boards set forth in the School Code.
They base their argument chiefly on the fact that, prior to the recent constitutional
amendments, the Governor conceivably could declare a disaster emergency and extend
the declaration indefinitely “to the point where he is running local school districts.”
(Petitioners’ Brief at 26.) Although that contingency is now foreclosed by the recent
constitutional amendments, the question remains whether the Commonwealth’s police
powers in disaster emergencies may override specific grants of emergency powers
given to local public school districts. Respondents have not established that Petitioners’
claim in this regard fails as a matter of law.21 Accordingly, Preliminary Objections IV
and V will be overruled.
21
Although we recognize that our Supreme Court in Friends of Danny DeVito interpreted
broadly the Commonwealth’s police powers and the Governor’s emergency management powers
under the Emergency Code, see Friends of Danny DeVito, 227 A.3d at 186-98, the Court’s decision
did not address specifically the issue presented by Petitioners here; namely, whether the Governor’s
Mitigation Order, issued pursuant to his police and emergency powers, impermissibly contravenes
the School Code and usurps the powers granted thereunder to local school boards.
17
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Court overrules Respondents’ Preliminary
Objections II through VI.
________________________________
PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
Judge Wallace did not participate in the decision for this case.
18
IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Butler Area School District; Alvin :
Vavro, in his official capacity as :
President of the Board of School :
Directors; Jennifer Cummings, in :
her official capacity as Vice President :
of the Board of School Directors; :
John Conrad, in his official capacity :
as a member of the Board of :
School Directors; Jennifer Daniels- :
Wells, in her official capacity as a :
member of the Board of School :
Directors; Bill Halle, in his official :
capacity as a member of the :
Board of School Directors; Thomas :
Harrison, in his official capacity as a :
member of the Board of School :
Directors; Alice Nunes, in her :
official capacity as a member of the :
Board of School Directors; Gary :
Shingleton, in his official capacity :
as a member of the Board of :
School Directors; Mary Waggoner, :
in her official capacity as a member :
of the Board of School Directors; :
Philip A. Melnick, Sr. and Chattle :
Melnick, husband and wife, as :
parents of three children within :
the Butler Area School District, as :
taxpayers within the Butler Area School :
District; and as voters within the Butler :
Area School District; Michael Carben :
and Julie Carben, husband and wife, :
as parents of two children within the :
Butler Area School District, as :
taxpayers within the Butler Area School :
District, and as voters within the Butler :
Area School District; Michele Curzi, :
as a parent of five children within the :
Butler Area School District, as a :
taxpayer within the Butler Area School :
District, and as a voter within the Butler :
Area School District; Laura Ice, as a :
parent of two children within the Butler
:
Area School District, as a taxpayer :
within the Butler Area School District,
:
and as a voter within the Butler Area :
School District; James Lindsay and :
Meredith Lindsay, husband and wife, :
as parents of one child within the Butler
:
Area School District, as taxpayers :
within the Butler Area School District,
:
and as voters within the Butler Area :
School District; and Brad D. Leslie, :
as a parent of a student-athlete within
:
the Butler Area School District, as a :
taxpayer within the Butler Area School:
District, and as a voter within the Butler
:
Area School District, :
Petitioners:
: No. 647 M.D. 2020
v. :
:
Dr. Rachel Levine, Secretary of the :
Pennsylvania Department of Health; :
Noe Ortega, acting Secretary of the :
Pennsylvania Department of Education; :
and The Honorable Thomas W. Wolf, :
Governor of Pennsylvania, :
Respondents :
ORDER
AND NOW, this 3rd day of October, 2022, the Court receives the
parties’ post-submission filings submitted on August 4, 2021, and December 28,
2021. It further is ordered that Respondents’ Preliminary Objections I and VII are
deemed to be withdrawn. Respondents’ Preliminary Objections II through VI are
overruled. Respondents shall answer the petition for review within 30 days of the
date of this order.
________________________________
PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
Butler Area School District; Alvin :
Vavro, in his official capacity as :
President of the Board of School :
Directors; Jennifer Cummings, in :
her official capacity as Vice President :
of the Board of School Directors; :
John Conrad, in his official capacity :
as a member of the Board of :
School Directors; Jennifer Daniels- :
Wells, in her official capacity as a :
member of the Board of School :
Directors; Bill Halle, in his official :
capacity as a member of the :
Board of School Directors; Thomas :
Harrison, in his official capacity as a :
member of the Board of School : No. 647 M.D. 2020
Directors; Alice Nunes, in her :
official capacity as a member of the :
Board of School Directors; Gary :
Shingleton, in his official capacity :
as a member of the Board of :
School Directors; Mary Waggoner, :
in her official capacity as a member :
of the Board of School Directors; :
Philip A. Melnick, Sr. and Chattle :
Melnick, husband and wife, as :
parents of three children within :
the Butler Area School District, as :
taxpayers within the Butler Area :
School District; and as voters within :
the Butler Area School District; :
Michael Carben and Julie Carben, :
husband and wife, as parents of two :
children within the Butler Area :
School District, as taxpayers within :
the Butler Area School District, and :
as voters within the Butler Area :
School District; Michele Curzi, as a :
parent of five children within the :
Butler Area School District, as a :
taxpayer within the Butler Area :
School District, and as a voter :
within the Butler Area School :
District; Laura Ice, as a parent of two
:
Children within the Butler Area :
School District, as a taxpayer within
:
the Butler Area School District, and:
as a voter within the Butler Area :
School District; James Lindsay and :
Meridith Lindsay, husband and wife, :
as parents of one child within the :
Butler Area School District, as :
taxpayers within the Butler Area :
School District, and as voters within
:
the Butler Area School District; :
and Brad D. Leslie, as a parent of a:
student-athlete within the Butler Area
:
School District, as a taxpayer within
:
the Butler Area School District, and:
as a voter within the Butler Area :
School District, :
Petitioners :
:
v. :
:
Dr. Rachel Levine, Secretary of the :
Pennsylvania Department of Health; :
Noe Ortega, acting Secretary of the :
Pennsylvania Department of :
Education; and The Honorable :
Thomas W. Wolf, Governor of :
Pennsylvania, :
Respondents : ARGUED: June 9, 2021
BEFORE: HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, President Judge
HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge
HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
HONORABLE LORI A. DUMAS, Judge
OPINION NOT REPORTED
CONCURRING AND DISSENTING
OPINION BY JUDGE CEISLER FILED: October 3, 2022
I respectfully concur in part and dissent in part. While I agree with most of
the well-reasoned Majority Opinion, I disagree with the Majority’s ruling that
overruled Respondents’ Preliminary Objection IV relating to the December 10, 2020
“Order of the Governor of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Directing Limited-
Time Mitigation” (Mitigation Order).
The Mitigation Order suspended sporting events and in-person extracurricular
activities in schools for a discrete period of time in order to control the spread of
COVID-19. The Governor issued the Mitigation Order pursuant to his police and
emergency powers under Section 7301 of the Emergency Management Services
Code (Emergency Code), 35 Pa. C.S. § 7301. Section 7301(b) and (c) of the
Emergency Code gives the Governor emergency powers when responding to a
“disaster,” including the authority to “issue and rescind executive orders,
proclamations, and regulations which shall have the force and effect of law.” 35 Pa.
C.S. § 7301(b) and (c). Our Supreme Court has explained that these “broad”
emergency powers “are firmly grounded in the Commonwealth’s police power . . .
‘to promote the public health, morals or safety and the general well-being of the
community.’” Friends of Danny DeVito v. Wolf, 227 A.3d 872, 886 (Pa. 2020)
(citation omitted).
As the Majority notes, in 2021, Pennsylvania voters approved two
amendments to the Pennsylvania Constitution that placed some constraints on the
Governor’s authority to act in a disaster emergency. Article IV, Section 20 of the
Pennsylvania Constitution now states:
(a) A disaster emergency declaration may be declared by executive
order or proclamation of the Governor upon finding that a disaster has
occurred or that the occurrence or threat of a disaster is imminent that
threatens the health, safety or welfare of this Commonwealth.
(b) Each disaster emergency declaration issued by the Governor under
subsection (a) shall indicate the nature, each area threatened and the
conditions of the disaster, including whether the disaster is a natural
disaster, military emergency, public health emergency, technological
disaster or other general emergency, as defined by statute. The General
Assembly shall, by statute, provide for the manner in which each type
of disaster enumerated under this subsection shall be managed.
(c) A disaster emergency declaration under subsection (a) shall be in
effect for no more than twenty-one (21) days, unless otherwise extended
in whole or part by concurrent resolution of the General Assembly.
(d) Upon the expiration of a disaster emergency declaration under
subsection (a), the Governor may not issue a new disaster emergency
declaration based upon the same or substantially similar facts and
circumstances without the passage of a concurrent resolution of the
General Assembly expressly approving the new disaster emergency
declaration.
Pa. Const. art. IV, § 20 (emphasis added). Furthermore, Article III, Section 9
authorizes the General Assembly to extend or terminate a disaster emergency
declaration by a simple majority vote. Id. art. III, § 9.
In their Petition for Review, Petitioners aver that the Governor’s Mitigation
Order contravenes the provisions of the Public School Code of 1949 (School Code),
Act of March 10, 1949, P.L. 30, as amended, 24 P.S. §§ 1-101 to 27-2702, and usurps
local school boards’ power under the School Code to act during a temporary
emergency. Pet. for Rev. ¶¶ 82-89, 95-96. Petitioners also aver that Section 7301
of the Emergency Code does not authorize the Governor to close schools, as that
EC - 2
power is reserved exclusively for local school boards. Id. ¶¶ 78-79.1 Specifically,
they assert that the School Code gives school boards the authority to “adopt and
enforce such reasonable rules and regulations as [they] may deem necessary and
proper, regarding the management of . . . school affairs,” Section 510 of the School
Code, 24 P.S. § 5-510, and to “[k]eep the schools of the district in session such days
and number of days per week as they deem necessary or desirable” during temporary
emergencies, Section 520.1 of the School Code, 24 P.S. § 5-520.1.2 Pet. for Rev. ¶¶
85, 88.
As the Majority points out, however, Petitioners’ chief argument regarding
the “usurping” of local school boards’ authority is that the Governor could
conceivably declare a disaster emergency and then extend it indefinitely “to the point
where he is running local school districts.” Pet’rs’ Br. in Opp’n to Prelim. Objs. at
26. The Majority recognizes that this “contingency is now foreclosed by the recent
constitutional amendments,” but nonetheless overrules the Preliminary Objection
because, in the Majority’s view, “the question remains whether the
Commonwealth’s police powers in disaster emergencies may override specific
grants of emergency powers given to local public school districts.” Butler Area Sch.
Dist. v. Levine (Pa. Cmwlth., No. 647 M.D. 2020, filed October 3, 2022), slip op. at
17. I disagree, because I do not believe such a question remains.
While local school boards are authorized to take certain actions relating to
school affairs during a temporary emergency, the Governor clearly has the power to
act unilaterally during a disaster emergency under the Emergency Code. Petitioners
1
As Respondents correctly note, the Governor’s Mitigation Order did not close schools. It
merely limited in-person sporting events and extracurricular activities in schools for a three-week
period.
2
Added by the Act of January 14, 1952, P.L. (1951) 1940.
EC - 3
cite no authority for the proposition that a school board’s powers in a temporary
emergency supersede the Governor’s broad police powers in a disaster emergency.
See Dist. of Columbia v. Brooke, 214 U.S. 138, 149 (1909) (recognizing that an
exercise of police power is “one of the most essential of powers, . . . [and] always
one of the least limitable of the powers of government”) (emphasis added). Rather,
once the Governor declares a disaster emergency, the Emergency Code grants him
expansive emergency management powers, including the power to issue executive
orders that “shall have the force and effect of law,” 35 Pa. C.S. § 7301(b) (emphasis
added), as well as the power to “[s]uspend the provisions of any regulatory statute
prescribing the procedures for conduct of Commonwealth business, or the orders,
rules or regulations of any Commonwealth agency, if strict compliance with the
provisions of any statute, order, rule or regulation would in any way prevent, hinder
or delay necessary action in coping with the emergency,” 35 Pa. C.S. § 7301(f)(1)
(emphasis added). It is evident from these provisions that the General Assembly
intended that the Governor – not state agencies or local school boards – has the
ultimate decision-making authority when it comes to managing a disaster emergency
in our Commonwealth. See Wolf v. Scarnati, 233 A.3d 679, 704 (Pa. 2020)
(recognizing that, in enacting the Emergency Code, the General Assembly decided
“that the Governor should be able to exercise certain powers when he or she makes
a ‘finding that a disaster has occurred or that the occurrence of the threat of a disaster
is imminent’” and “made the basic policy choices about which circumstances are
necessary to trigger the Governor’s powers under the statute”) (quoting 35 Pa. C.S.
§ 7301(a)); id. at 705 (stating that “[t]he General Assembly, under its lawmaking
powers, could have provided the Governor with less expansive powers under the
Emergency . . . Code” but “[i]t did not do so”).
EC - 4
More importantly, Petitioners’ concerns that the Governor’s powers under the
Emergency Code are unfettered have been eliminated by the recent amendments to
the Pennsylvania Constitution. Article III, Section 9 permits the General Assembly
to extend or terminate a disaster emergency declaration, or any portion thereof, by a
simple majority vote, without the need for the Governor’s review or approval.
Article IV, Section 20 also limits the duration of a disaster emergency declaration to
21 days, absent an affirmative extension by concurrent resolution of the General
Assembly. These measures were put into place, in large part, to prevent the
hypothetical scenario envisioned by Petitioners, in which the Governor could
continue to unilaterally extend a disaster declaration until he was essentially
“running local school districts.” Pet’rs’ Br. in Opp’n to Prelim. Objs. at 26.
Our Supreme Court recently observed, in a case involving an executive order
issued during the COVID-19 pandemic, that “[t]he protection of the lives and health
of millions of Pennsylvania residents is the sine qua non of a proper exercise of
police power.” Friends of Danny DeVito, 227 A.3d at 892. I believe the Emergency
Code gave the Governor the authority to issue the Mitigation Order to control the
spread of COVID-19 in our schools during the height of the pandemic. See id. at
889 (“The COVID-19 pandemic is, by all definitions, a natural disaster and a
catastrophe of massive proportions.”); Wolf, 233 A.3d at 705 (“[I]t is the scope of
the emergency, not the Governor’s arbitrary discretion, that determines the extent of
the Governor’s powers under the [Emergency Code].”). Therefore, unlike the
Majority, I would conclude that the Petition for Review fails to state a legally
sufficient claim that the Governor’s Mitigation Order, issued during a disaster
emergency, violated the School Code or improperly usurped the authority of local
school boards.
EC - 5
Accordingly, because I would sustain Respondents’ Preliminary Objection IV
relating to the Governor’s Mitigation Order, I respectfully dissent from that aspect
of the Majority’s Opinion.
__________________________________
ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
Judges Wojcik and Dumas join in this Concurring and Dissenting Opinion.
EC - 6