If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to
revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.
STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
KALAMAZOO PUBLIC SCHOOLS, UNPUBLISHED
August 10, 2023
Charging Party-Appellant,
v No. 363573
KALAMAZOO EDUCATION ASSOCIATION, MERC
MEA/NEA, Case No. 21-G-1465-CU
Respondent-Appellee.
Before: RIORDAN, P.J., and MARKEY and YATES, JJ.
YATES, J. (dissenting).
Just as all roads once led to Rome, all principles of statutory construction lead, in this case,
to the ineluctable conclusion that a guidance counselor is not a “teacher” for purposes of the Public
Employment Relations Act (PERA), MCL 423.215(3)(j). The Michigan Employment Relations
Commission (the Commission) issued a decision in this case concluding that a guidance counselor
is not a “teacher” under MCL 423.215(3)(j). We must have “ ‘cogent reasons’ for overruling an
agency’s interpretation” of a statute. In re Complaint of Rovas Against SBC Mich, 482 Mich 90,
103; 754 NW2d 259 (2008). The Commission used dictionary definitions of the word “teacher,”
just as Michigan jurisprudence suggests, South Dearborn Environmental Improvement Ass’n, Inc
v Dep’t of Environmental Quality, 502 Mich 349, 361; 917 NW2d 603 (2018), to define the term.
Additionally, the Commission looked to statutory definitions of the word “teacher” and cogently
explained why an expansive definition of the term is incompatible with MCL 423.215(3)(j). As a
result, I believe we have no basis to reject the Commission’s interpretation of the word “teacher”
in MCL 423.215(3)(j), so I dissent.
I. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
The outcome of this appeal turns on the meaning of the word “teacher” included in MCL
423.215(3)(j). This Court must review the Commission’s interpretation of MCL 423.215(3)(j) de
novo. Complaint of Rovas, 482 Mich at 97. “[A]n agency’s interpretation of a statute is entitled
to ‘respectful consideration,’ but courts may not abdicate their judicial responsibility to interpret
statutes by giving unfettered deference to an agency’s interpretation.” Id. at 93. Put another way,
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courts “must respect legislative decisions and interpret statutes according to their plain language.”
Id. This standard requires “ ‘cogent reasons’ for overruling an agency’s [statutory] interpretation.”
Id. at 103.
II. LEGAL ANALYSIS
Kalamazoo Public Schools (the District) insists the Commission erred in defining the term
“teacher” as used in MCL 423.215(3)(j) and, in doing so, mishandled the grievance filed on behalf
of guidance counselor Tiffany Spencer by the Kalamazoo County Education Association (KEA).
Our Supreme Court has explained that, when statutory language is unambiguous, courts “presume
the Legislature intended the meaning that it plainly expressed.” People v Peltola, 489 Mich 174,
181; 803 NW2d 140 (2011). In interpreting a statute, “every word should be given meaning, and
we should avoid a construction that would render any part of the statute surplusage or nugatory.”
Id. (quotation marks omitted). “Terms that are not defined in a statute must be given their plain
and ordinary meanings, and it is appropriate to consult a dictionary for definitions.” City of Grand
Rapids v Brookstone Capital, LLC, 334 Mich App 452, 464; 965 NW2d 232 (2020) (quotation
marks and citation omitted).
The PERA expressly governs the employment relationship between a public employer and
its employees. See MCL 423.201 et seq. Under MCL 423.215(1), a public employer has a duty
to “bargain collectively with the representatives of its employees.” Such bargaining must be done
in good faith, and there are certain subjects over which the public employer is required to bargain,
such as wages, hours, and other conditions of employment. Id. Conversely, there are subjects that
cannot be part of collective bargaining. As MCL 423.215(3)(j) explains:
(3) Collective bargaining between a public school employer and a bargaining
representative of its employees shall not include any of the following subjects:
* * *
(j) Any decision made by the public school employer regarding teacher placement,
or the impact of that decision on an individual employee or the bargaining unit.
The PERA does not define a “teacher,” but the word is defined in several other statutes and
rules concerning teachers. The Teachers’ Tenure Act, MCL 38.71 et seq., defines a “teacher” as
“a certificated individual employed for a full school year by any board of education or controlling
board.” MCL 38.71(1). The Legislature explicitly stated, however, that that definition applies to
the word “teacher” “as used in this act.” Id. Also, the Revised School Code, MCL 380.1 et seq.,
contains a definition of a “teacher” that differs from the definition in the Teachers’ Tenure Act. In
a section addressing teacher evaluations and training, the Revised School Code defines a “teacher”
in MCL 380.1249(8) as follows:
As used in this Section, “teacher” means an individual who has a valid
Michigan teaching certificate or authorization or who is engaged to teach under
section 1233b; who is employed, or contracted for, by a school district, intermediate
school district, or public school academy; and who is assigned by the school district,
intermediate school district, or public school academy to deliver direct instruction
to pupils in any of grades K to 12 as a teacher of record. [Emphasis added.]
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Presented with competing definitions of a “teacher” from the Teachers’ Tenure Act and the
Revised School Code, the Commission relied instead on the dictionary definition of a “teacher” to
resolve whether MCL 423.215(3)(j) applies to Spencer. Because the Legislature had not indicated
whether the term “teacher placement” in MCL 423.215(3)(j) should apply to an employee whose
employment is regulated by the Teachers’ Tenure Act or who satisfies the definition of a “teacher”
in the Revised School Code, the Commission sought to divine the plain and ordinary meaning of
a “teacher” by consulting dictionaries. After quoting the definition of a “teacher” in each of those
dictionaries, the Commission noted that “[a]n individual employed as a Guidance Counselor meets
none of these definitions of a ‘teacher.’ ” The Commission also observed that any definition of a
“teacher” that includes a guidance counselor does not advance the purpose of MCL 423.215(3)(j),
which was to “improve teaching and education by rewarding well-performing classroom teachers
and penalizing sub-standard classroom teachers.” (Emphasis added.)
The District faults the Commission for not following the lead of the Revised School Code
by deferring to the certification of Spencer as a teacher. The District contends that, by not treating
Spencer as a “teacher,” the Commission improperly exercised the authority vested in the Michigan
Department of Education to determine who is a teacher. But that argument conflates two issues:
(1) who constitutes a teacher under MCL 423.215(3)(j); and (2) who is qualified to be a teacher as
decided by the Michigan Department of Education and the Revised School Code. The governing
inquiry is whether Spencer constitutes a “teacher” for purposes of MCL 423.215(3)(j), not whether
she is qualified to be a teacher under the Revised School Code. Hence, the District’s contention
that all employees who are qualified to be teachers are subject to “teacher placement” under MCL
423.215(3)(j) cannot survive scrutiny. Under that approach, an individual hired for a non-teaching
position such as a counselor who holds a teaching certificate would have to surrender that teaching
certificate or risk being involuntarily placed as a classroom teacher.1 That interpretation—which
dictates that an individual employed by a school district who is certified to be a teacher risks being
involuntarily reassigned to a classroom position regardless of the position that the individual was
hired to occupy—defies logic. Thus, the District has not demonstrated that the Commission erred
in refusing to determine that anyone qualified to be a teacher under the requirements in the Revised
School Code must be deemed a “teacher” for purposes of MCL 423.215(3)(j).
The majority contends that the Commission should have adopted the Teachers’ Tenure Act
definition of a “teacher” in applying MCL 423.215(3)(j). The majority observes that the Teachers’
Tenure Act is referenced in MCL 423.215(3)(k), (l), (m), and (n), so it would make sense to believe
that the Legislature intended “teacher” as used in MCL 423.215(3)(j) to share the Teachers’ Tenure
Act’s definition of the word. But this argument is contrary to principles of statutory interpretation.
“Generally, when language is included in one section of a statute but omitted from another section,
it is presumed that the drafters acted intentionally and purposely in their inclusion or exclusion.”
1
Under Michigan law, every fulltime teacher “must hold a valid teaching certificate to teach in a
department of the school.” MCL 380.1233(1). In contrast, a person can “serve in a counseling
role in the school district or intermediate school district” based on possession of “a valid teaching
certificate with a school counseling endorsement[,]” MCL 380.1233(2)(a), or by meeting statutory
criteria separate from teacher certification. MCL 380.1233(2)(b) and (c).
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Peltola, 489 Mich at 185. The fact that the Legislature included explicit references to the
Teachers’ Tenure Act in four subsections of MCL 423.215(3), but did not include any such
reference in MCL 423.215(3)(j), strongly suggests the Legislature did not intend that the Teachers’
Tenure Act would apply to MCL 423.215(3)(j).2 See Peltola, 489 Mich at 185.
To be sure, this Court has instructed the Commission to give a broad interpretation to MCL
423.215(3)(j). See Ionia Ed Ass’n v Ionia Pub Schs, 311 Mich App 479, 486-487; 875 NW2d 756
(2015). But if the definition of a “teacher” selected by the Commission is accurate, that instruction
does not apply in this case. No authority suggests that interpreting a statute broadly obligates the
Commission to exceed the bounds of definitions of relevant words. Affording the Commission’s
interpretation of MCL 423.215(3)(j) “respectful consideration,” as we must do, neither the District
nor the majority has furnished “cogent reasons” for overruling the Commission’s definition of the
term “teacher.” See Complaint of Rovas, 482 Mich at 97, 103. The Commission properly relied
on the dictionary definition of the word “teacher,” which is not defined in the PERA. Brookstone
Capital, LLC, 334 Mich App at 464. Because the majority has not shown a conflict between the
Commission’s definition and the Legislature’s intent, we have no basis to reject the definition of
a “teacher” chosen by the Commission. See Complaint of Rovas, 482 Mich at 103. Accordingly,
I believe we must accept the Commission’s ruling that Spencer, as a guidance counselor, was not
a “teacher” for purposes of placement under MCL 423.215(3)(j).
III. LEGISLATIVE DEVELOPMENTS
In a rare instance of immediate legislative assistance in this Court’s work on interpreting a
statute, our Legislature recently spoke to the significance of MCL 423.215(3)(j) by totally excising
that subsection from the PERA. See 2023 PA 115. Thus, the Legislature, in its handiwork and its
analysis, left no doubt that the amendment renders “teacher placement” subject to the collective-
bargaining process. To be sure, the effective date of that amendment has not yet arrived because
it was not given immediate effect, but the elimination of MCL 423.215(3)(j) and the concomitant
recognition of the right to arbitrate challenges to transfers of all teachers and guidance counselors
alike depends on nothing more than the passage of time. In other words, the Commission showed
remarkable prescience in ordering the parties to arbitrate the transfer of the guidance counselor in
this matter because, regardless of her status as a “teacher,” her transfer will soon have to be handled
through arbitration. Because our decision in this case comes with an obvious expiration date, I see
no reason to deny the KEA arbitration of the transfer at issue here. Accordingly, I dissent.
/s/ Christopher P. Yates
2
The majority and I draw diametrically opposed conclusions from the references to the Teachers’
Tenure Act in other subsections of MCL 423.215(3), but not in MCL 423.215(3)(j). In my view,
the omission of any reference to the Teachers’ Tenure Act in MCL 423.215(3)(j) must be deemed
intentional, so the omission conclusively reveals that the Teachers’ Tenure Act should not be used
to interpret MCL 423.215(3)(j). In contrast, the majority reasons that, “because MCL 423.215(3)
includes multiple explicit references to the TTA, we conclude that the TTA and MCL 423.215(3)
are in pari materia.”
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