Alarcon v. Albuquerque Pub. Schs. Bd. of Educ.

1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO 2 Opinion Number: ________________ 3 Filing Date: November 30, 2017 4 No. A-1-CA-34843 5 ADRIAN ALARCON, 6 Petitioner-Appellee, 7 v. 8 ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS 9 BOARD OF EDUCATION and 10 BRAD WINTER Ph.D., 11 SUPERINTENDENT OF 12 ALBUQUERQUE PUBLIC SCHOOLS, 13 Respondents-Appellants. 14 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY 15 Shannon C. Bacon, District Judge 16 consolidated with 17 No. A-1-CA-34424 18 CENTRAL CONSOLIDATED SCHOOL 19 DISTRICT NO.22, 20 Petitioner-Appellant, 21 v. 1 CENTRAL CONSOLIDATED 2 EDUCATION ASSOCIATION, 3 Respondent-Appellee. 4 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY 5 Alan M. Malott, District Judge 6 J. Edward Hollington & Associates, P.A. 7 J. Edward Hollington 8 Albuquerque, NM 9 for Appellee Alarcon 10 Modrall, Sperling, Roehl, Harris & Sisk, P.A. 11 Nathan T. Nieman 12 K. Cameron Johnson 13 Albuquerque, NM 14 for Appellants Albuquerque Public Schools 15 Modrall, Sperling, Roehl, Harris & Sisk, P.A. 16 Arthur D. Melendres 17 Zachary L. McCormick 18 Albuquerque, NM 19 for Appellant Central Consolidated School District 20 Jones, Snead, Wertheim & Clifford, P.A. 21 Jerry Todd Wertheim 22 Roxie P. Rawls-De Santiago 23 Santa Fe, NM 24 for Appellee Central Consolidated Education Association 1 OPINION 2 VIGIL, Judge. 3 {1} These consolidated cases present us with a common question: whether changes 4 made in 2003 to the Public School Code, NMSA 1978, §§ 22-2-1 to -33-4 (except 5 Article 5A) (1967, as amended through 2017), vest the local superintendent of a 6 school district with plenary power and authority to act on all school personnel 7 matters, to the exclusion of the local school board. The issue is presented in two 8 separate contexts. 9 {2} In Alarcon v. Albuquerque Public Schools, (No. A-1-CA-34843), (the APS 10 appeal), the district court concluded that the discharge hearing for a certified school 11 employee under the School Personnel Act, §§ 22-10A-1 to -39, must be conducted 12 by the school board. The district court issued a permanent writ of mandamus to the 13 Albuquerque Public Schools (APS) and its superintendent, directing that a proposed 14 discharge hearing be conducted by the APS school board. 15 {3} In Central Consolidated School District No. 22 v. Central Consolidated 16 Education Association, (No. A-1-CA-34424), (the School District appeal), the district 17 court affirmed the order of the Public Employee Labor Relations Board (PELRB) that 18 the school board is required to hear and decide appeals from decisions of the school 19 superintendent under grievance procedures set forth in the collective bargaining 1 agreement (CBA) negotiated between the Central Consolidated Education 2 Association (Union) and the Central Consolidated School District (School District) 3 pursuant to the Public Employee Bargaining Act (PEBA), NMSA 1978, §§ 10-7E-1 4 to -26 (2003, as amended through 2005). 5 {4} In both cases, the respective school boards asserted that changes made to the 6 Public School Code in 2003 divested school boards of all authority to act on any 7 personnel matters and vested exclusive authority to act on all personnel matters in the 8 local superintendent. The linchpins in both cases are the 2003 revisions made to the 9 Public School Code by H.B. 212 (House Bill 212), 46th Leg., 1st Sess., ch. 153 (N.M. 10 2003), which require us to engage in statutory interpretation. We first set forth our 11 standard of review, then discuss House Bill 212 in general terms before addressing 12 the specific arguments made in each appeal. 13 I. STANDARD OF REVIEW 14 {5} We are required to construe statutes enacted and amended by the Legislature 15 in both appeals. We review questions of statutory construction de novo. See Weiss v. 16 Bd. of Educ. of Santa Fe Pub. Sch., 2014-NMCA-100, ¶ 4, 336 P.3d 388. Our 17 mandated task in construing a statute is to “search for and effectuate” the intent of the 18 Legislature. Id. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). This task begins with 19 an examination of the actual language of the statute, “which is the primary indicator 2 1 of legislative intent.” Id. “We look first to the plain language of the statute and give 2 words their ordinary meaning unless the Legislature indicates a different one was 3 intended, and we take care to avoid adopting a construction that would render the 4 statute’s application absurd or unreasonable or lead to injustice or contradiction.” 5 Miller v. Bank of Am. N.A., 2015-NMSC-022, ¶ 11, 352 P.3d 1162 (citation omitted). 6 When the Legislature amends a statute, we presume the Legislature is aware of 7 existing law, including opinions of our appellate courts, and we normally presume it 8 intends to change existing law. Aguilera v. Bd. of Educ., 2006-NMSC-015, ¶¶ 19, 24, 9 139 N.M. 330, 132 P.3d 587. 10 {6} Because we are reviewing a decision of the PELRB in the School District 11 appeal, there is an additional dimension to our standard of review in that case. Section 12 10-7E-23(B) of the PEBA provides for judicial review of a final decision of the 13 PERLB, and the standard of review to be applied is as follows: 14 A person or party, including a labor organization affected by a final 15 rule, order or decision of the board or local board, may appeal to the 16 district court for further relief. All such appeals shall be based upon the 17 record made at the board or local board hearing. All such appeals to the 18 district court shall be taken within thirty days of the date of the final 19 rule, order or decision of the board or local board. Actions taken by the 20 board or local board shall be affirmed unless the court concludes that the 21 action is: 22 (1) arbitrary, capricious or an abuse of discretion; 3 1 (2) not supported by substantial evidence on the record 2 considered as a whole; or 3 (3) otherwise not in accordance with law. 4 Id. In our appellate review of whether the district court erred in affirming the 5 PELRB’s decision, we follow the same standard of review used by the district court 6 sitting in its appellate capacity, and at the same time determine whether the district 7 court erred. N.M. Corr. Dep’t v. AFSCME Council 18, ___-NMCA-___, ¶ 9, ___P.3d 8 ___ (No. A-1-CA-34737, Sept. 5, 2017); see Paule v. Santa Fe Cty. Bd. of Cty. 9 Comm’rs., 2005-NMSC-021, ¶ 26, 138 N.M. 82, 117 P.3d 240 (stating that in 10 administrative appeals the appellate court reviews the administrative decision under 11 the same standard used by the district court while also determining whether the 12 district court erred in its review); see Regents of Univ. of N.M. v. Fed’n of Teachers, 13 1998-NMSC-020, ¶ 17, 125 N.M. 401, 962 P.2d 1236 (applying the general 14 administrative standard of review applicable to appeals from administrative agencies 15 to an appeal from a decision of the PELRB). 16 {7} Under the terms of the statute, the School Board bears the burden of 17 demonstrating on appeal that the decision of the PELRB is “arbitrary, capricious or 18 an abuse of discretion”; is “not supported by substantial evidence on the record 19 considered as a whole”; or is “otherwise not in accordance with law.” Section 10-7E- 20 23(B). Our Supreme Court has recently repeated how these factors are considered on 4 1 appeal as follows: “An agency’s action is arbitrary and capricious if it provides no 2 rational connection between the facts found and the choices made, or entirely omits 3 consideration of relevant factors or important aspects of the problem at hand. An 4 agency abuses its discretion when its decision is not in accord with legal procedure 5 or supported by its findings, or when the evidence does not support its findings. 6 Substantial evidence means such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept 7 as adequate to support a conclusion, and we neither reweigh the evidence nor replace 8 the fact finder’s conclusions with our own.” Albuquerque Cab Co. v. N.M. Pub. 9 Regulation Comm’n, ___-NMSC-___, ¶ 8 (No. S-1-SC-36169 & S-1-SC-36174, 10 consolidated, Sept. 18, 2017) (alterations, internal quotation marks, and citations 11 omitted). We apply a whole-record standard of review, and we independently review 12 the entire record of the administrative hearing to determine if the School Board has 13 met its burden. See AFSCME Council 18, ___-NMCA-___, ¶ 9. While we may give 14 heightened deference to an agency’s determination on matters that fall within its 15 special expertise, we still apply a de novo standard of review to statutory 16 construction. See Albuquerque Cab Co., ___-NMSC-___, ¶ 8; see also AFSCME 17 Council 18, ___-NMCA-___, ¶ 9 (noting that an appellate court applies a de novo 18 standard of review when reviewing an agency’s rulings on statutory construction). 5 1 II. HOUSE BILL 212 2 {8} Prior to the adoption of House Bill 212 in 2003, local school boards were 3 required by Section 22-5-4 (2002), to be involved in the day-to-day operations of 4 school districts on an operational level. For example, school boards were required to 5 “supervise and control” all the public schools in the school district; to apply for 6 waivers of certain provisions of the Public School Code relating to length of school 7 day, staffing patterns, subject area or the purchase of instructional materials; to 8 “supervise and control” all property owned or in the possession of the school district; 9 and to “repair and maintain” all property belonging to the school district. In addition, 10 while the 2002 version of Section 22-5-4 provided in Subsection (C) that the local 11 school board had the powers or duties to “delegate administrative and supervisory 12 functions of the school board to the superintendent of schools[,]” the statute failed to 13 specify what those functions were, and certain administrative and supervisory 14 functions, such as the power to hire, terminate, or discharge employees, could not be 15 delegated. Section 22-5-4 (2002). For completeness, we set forth Section 22-5-4 16 (2002) as it existed prior to the changes made by House Bill 212.1 1 17 22-5-4. Local school boards; powers; duties. 18 A local school board shall have the following powers or duties: 19 A. subject to the regulations of the state board, supervise and control 6 1 all public schools within the school district and all property belonging 2 to or in the possession of the school district; 3 B. employ a superintendent of schools for the school district 4 and fix his salary; 5 C. delegate administrative and supervisory functions of the local 6 school board to the superintendent of schools; 7 D. subject to the provisions of law, approve or disapprove the 8 employment, termination or discharge of all employees and certified 9 school personnel of the school district upon a recommendation of 10 employment, termination or discharge by the superintendent of schools; 11 provided that any employment relationship shall continue until final 12 decision of the board. Any employment, termination or discharge 13 without the prior recommendation of the superintendent is void; 14 E. apply to the state board for a waiver of certain provisions of the 15 Public School Code . . . relating to length of school day, staffing 16 patterns, subject area or the purchase of instructional materials for the 17 purpose of implementing a collaborative school improvement program 18 for an individual school; 19 F. fix the salaries of all employees and certified school personnel of 20 the school district; 21 G. contract, lease, purchase and sell for the school district; 22 H. acquire and dispose of property; 23 24 I. have the capacity to sue and be sued; 25 J. acquire property by eminent domain as pursuant to the procedures 26 provided in the Eminent Domain Code [NMSA 1978, Sections 42A-1-1 27 to -33 (1974, as amended through 1981)]; 28 K. issue general obligation bonds of the school district; 7 1 {9} Specific to the cases before us here, before House Bill 212 was enacted, 2 Section 22-5-4(D) (2002) provided that a local school board had the “power or duty” 3 to: 4 [A]pprove or disapprove the employment, termination, or discharge of 5 all employees and certified school personnel of the school district upon 6 a recommendation of employment, termination or discharge by the 7 superintendent of schools; provided that any employment relationship 8 shall continue until final decision of the board. Any employment, 9 L. repair and maintain all property belonging to the school district; 10 M. for good cause and upon order of the district court, subpoena 11 witnesses and documents in connection with a hearing concerning any 12 powers or duties of the local school boards; 13 N. except for expenditures for salaries, contract for the expenditure of 14 money according to the provisions of the Procurement Code [NMSA 15 1978, §§ 13-1-28 to -199 (1984, as amended through 2016)]; 16 O. adopt regulations pertaining to the administration of all powers or 17 duties of the local school board; 18 P. accept or reject any charitable gift, grant, devise or bequest. The 19 particular gift, grant, devise or bequest accepted shall be considered an 20 asset of the school district or the public school to which it is given; and 21 Q. offer and, upon compliance with the conditions of such offer, pay 22 rewards for information leading to the arrest and conviction or other 23 appropriate disciplinary disposition by the courts or juvenile authorities 24 of offenders in case of theft, defacement or destruction of school district 25 property. All such rewards shall be paid from school district funds in 26 accordance with regulations that shall be promulgated by the department 27 of education. 8 1 termination or discharge without the prior recommendation of the 2 superintendent is void[.] 3 Section 22-5-4(D) (2002). Thus, prior to 2003, the school board had the sole power 4 to employ, terminate, or discharge an employee, and the superintendent only had 5 power to recommend the employment, termination, or discharge of an employee. See 6 Daddow v. Carlsbad Mun. Sch. Dist., 1995-NMSC-032, ¶ 28, 120 N.M. 97, 898 P.2d 7 1235 (noting that under this prior version of the statute, the school board was the only 8 entity with the power to make personnel decisions, and the limited role of the 9 superintendent was to make recommendations before a personnel decision by the 10 board was made). 11 {10} House Bill 212, sometimes referred to as the Public School Reform Act, made 12 sweeping changes to statutes dealing with public education, and at the same time, 13 enacted many new statutes to reform public education in New Mexico. To this end, 14 House Bill 212 is 107 pages long and consists of 72 sections. In stating its legislative 15 findings and purpose for enacting House Bill 212, the Legislature determined, among 16 other findings, that one of the keys to student success in New Mexico is “a 17 multicultural education system that . . . elevates the importance of public education 18 in the state by clarifying the governance structure at different levels.” NMSA 1978, 19 § 22-1-1.2(B)(6) (2015). House Bill 212, section 2 enacted this as Section 22-1- 20 1.2(B)(5). However, in 2007, the Legislature modified S.B. 561 (Senate Bill 561), 9 1 48th Leg., 1st Sess., ch. 308, Section 1 (N.M. 2007), added a new Subsection (5) and 2 moved what was originally Subsection (B)(5) to Subsection (B)(6)). To this end: 3 The [L]egislature finds further that the public school governance 4 structure needs to change to provide accountability from the bottom up 5 instead of from the top down. Each school principal, with the help of 6 school councils made up of parents and teachers, must be the 7 instructional leader in the public school, motivating and holding 8 accountable both teachers and students. Each local superintendent must 9 function as the school district’s chief executive officer and have 10 responsibility for the day-to-day operations of the school district, 11 including personnel and student disciplinary decisions. 12 Section 22-1-1.2(F) (emphasis added). In accordance with these findings, House Bill 13 212 defined a “local school board” to mean, “the policy-setting body of a school 14 district[,]” and a “local superintendent” to mean “the chief executive officer of a 15 school district[.]” NMSA 1978, Section 22-1-2(H), (I) (2015). Consistent with these 16 findings and definitions, House Bill 212 deleted Subsection (D) from Section 22-5-4 17 quoted above, and adopted a new statute, Section 22-5-14, setting forth powers and 18 duties of the superintendent. House Bill 212, §§ 21, 25. Section 22-5-14 in pertinent 19 part states: 20 A. The local superintendent is the chief executive officer of the school 21 district. 22 B. The local superintendent shall: 23 (1) carry out the educational policies and rules of the state board 24 [department] and local school board; 10 1 (2) administer and supervise the school district; 2 (3) employ, fix the salaries of, assign, terminate or discharge all 3 employees of the school district; [and] 4 .... 5 (5) perform other duties as required by law, the department or the 6 local school board. 7 {11} House Bill 212 clarified the powers and duties of local school boards and 8 superintendents and structured their relationship in a familiar and well understood 9 framework: the school board enacts policy of the school district and employs a 10 superintendent as the chief executive officer to implement its policies in the day-to- 11 day operations of the school district. That is, the local school board governs the 12 school district through its authority to enact the regulations, standards, and rules 13 under which the school district operates, and it employs the local superintendent as 14 the highest ranking manager of the school district to implement them on an 15 operational level in the day-to-day operations of the local school board. Cf. Black’s 16 Law Dictionary 289, 1345 (10th ed. 2014) (defining “chief executive officer” as “a 17 corporation’s highest-ranking administrator or manager, who reports to the board of 18 directors” and “policy” in part as “a standard course of action that has been officially 19 established”); NMSA 1978, § 21-7-7 (1995) (“The board of regents shall have power 20 and it shall be its duty to enact laws, rules and regulations for the government of the 11 1 university of New Mexico. The board of regents may hire a president for the 2 university of New Mexico as its chief executive officer and shall determine the scope 3 of the president’s duties and authority.”); State ex rel. Clark v. Johnson, 1995-NMSC- 4 048, ¶ 33, 120 N.M. 562, 904 P.2d 11 (“[I]t is the Legislature that creates the law, and 5 the Governor’s proper role is the execution of the laws.”); Salazar v. Town of 6 Bernalillo, 1956-NMSC-125, ¶¶ 8, 11, 62 N.M. 199, 307 P.2d 186 (agreeing that as 7 the chief executive officer of the town, a mayor has power to issue orders necessary 8 or proper for the execution and enforcement of existing ordinances, regulations, and 9 orders of the town council). 10 III. THE APS APPEAL 11 {12} This case requires us to determine whether the discharge hearing for a certified 12 school employee under Section 22-10A-27 (Section 27) of the School Personnel Act, 13 Sections 22-10A-1 to -39 must be conducted by the local school board or its 14 superintendent. The district court concluded that the hearing must be conducted by 15 the school board and issued a permanent writ of mandamus to APS and its 16 Superintendent, Brad Winter, Ph.D., directing that a proposed discharge hearing for 17 Adrian Alarcon (Teacher) be conducted by the APS School Board. APS appeals, and 18 agreeing with the district court, we affirm. 12 1 A. BACKGROUND 2 {13} During the 2014-2015 school year, APS notified Teacher, a certified licensed 3 school instructor, of its intent to discharge Teacher from its employment pursuant to 4 Section 27. APS also advised Teacher that he had a right to appeal the intended 5 discharge at a discharge hearing under Section 27, and Teacher filed a timely appeal 6 and request for a discharge hearing. APS scheduled the hearing before an assistant 7 superintendent, and Teacher objected on grounds that he was entitled to a discharge 8 hearing before the school board, not the superintendent. APS responded that under 9 its interpretation of legislative intent and implementation of Section 27, its practice 10 beginning in 2003 was for the superintendent, or the superintendent’s designee to 11 conduct the discharge hearing and issue a written decision on the employee’s appeal 12 after the hearing. Teacher responded, again objecting to the procedure imposed by 13 APS as contrary to the “clear, specific, and unambiguous” procedures set forth in 14 Section 27, which require the discharge hearing to be held before the school board, 15 and not the superintendent. Teacher said that he had “no choice but to appear at the 16 only hearing provided to him by APS, subject to objections that [the] proceedings are 17 contrary to state law.” 18 {14} Instead of appearing at the hearing under the procedure dictated by APS, and 19 before the hearing was scheduled to be held, Teacher obtained an alternative writ of 13 1 mandamus from the district court directing that the discharge hearing be held before 2 the school board and not the superintendent, or that APS show cause for its lack of 3 compliance and why the writ should not be made permanent. In its answer to the 4 alternative writ, APS argued in part that the 2003 revisions to the Public School Code 5 by House Bill 212 transferred powers previously exercised by the local school board 6 to the local superintendent, with the result that to the exclusion of local school boards, 7 the local superintendent has the sole authority to discharge employees. After a 8 hearing on the merits, the district court disagreed with APS and issued a permanent 9 writ of mandamus, directing that the discharge hearing be held before the school 10 board, not the superintendent. The district court also ordered that Teacher remain 11 employed by APS with all benefits and that the proposed discharge hearing be stayed 12 during the pendency of the appeal, as stipulated by the parties. APS appeals. 13 B. ANALYSIS 14 {15} APS argues three reasons why it contends the district court erred, which we 15 summarize as follows: (1) the permanent writ of mandamus disregards and renders 16 meaningless the legislative intent of the 2003 amendments to the Public School Code, 17 which “explicitly both divested local school boards of the authority to hire and 18 terminate or discharge employees and vested that authority in local superintendents”; 19 (2) the district court erred in issuing the permanent writ of mandamus because APS 14 1 did not have a clear legal duty to provide Teacher with a discharge hearing before the 2 school board; and (3) the district court erred in issuing the permanent writ of 3 mandamus because Teacher did not exhaust available plain, speedy, and adequate 4 administrative remedies. We address each argument in turn. 5 1. Legislative Intent 6 {16} APS argues that the 2003 amendments to the Public School Code reflect a 7 specific legislative intent to vest the local superintendent with plenary authority over 8 all personnel decisions, thereby divesting local boards of authority to hold discharge 9 hearings and the ultimate power to discharge employees. APS argues that this specific 10 legislative intent was expressed when House Bill 212 deleted Subsection (D) from 11 the enumerated powers of local school boards in Section 22-5-4 (providing that a 12 local school board must approve or disapprove the employment, termination, or 13 discharge of all employees of the school district) and simultaneously enacted a new 14 statute, Section 22-5-14(B)(3), vesting the local superintendent with the power and 15 duty to “employ, fix the salaries of, assign, terminate or discharge all employees of 16 the school district.” [Emphasis omitted.] 17 {17} We conclude that APS reads House Bill 212, and the amendments it made to 18 the Public School Code, too narrowly, without taking into account other changes 19 made by House Bill 212 to the Public School Code, or the fact that the Legislature re- 15 1 codified, but did not repeal Section 27. This case involves the contemplated 2 “discharge” of Teacher, a certified school employee. A “discharge” under the School 3 Personnel Act is “the act of severing the employment relationship with a certified 4 school employee prior to the expiration of the current employment contract[.]” 5 Section 22-10A-2(A); see Section 22-1-2(BB) (defining a “certified school 6 employee” as “a licensed school employee”). 7 {18} House Bill 212 re-compiled, but did not otherwise amend, the procedure for 8 discharging a certified school employee under Section 27 of the School Personnel 9 Act. House Bill 212, Section 72(F) (recompiling former NMSA 1978, Section 22-10- 10 17 (2002) as Section 27). “In the absence of a clear legislative directive to abandon 11 existing law, we continue to apply it.” Aguilera, 2006-NMSC-015, ¶ 24. Importantly, 12 Section 27(A) explicitly states that a discharge may “only” occur according to the 13 procedure it then sets forth in detail. Equally important, Section 27(A) states that a 14 certified school employee may be discharged only for “just cause,” meaning “a reason 15 that is rationally related to an employee’s competence or turpitude or the proper 16 performance of the employee’s duties and that is not in violation of the employee’s 17 civil or constitutional rights.” Section 22-10A-2(G); see Aguilera, 2006-NMSC-015, 18 ¶¶ 16-25 (discussing “just cause” in the context of a reduction in force policy of a 19 school district). 16 1 {19} The requirements for discharging a certified school employee under Section 27 2 are clear and explicit.2 Under Section 27, the local school board is vested with 5 2 Section 27 provides: 6 A. A local school board or the governing authority of a state agency 7 may discharge a certified school employee only for just cause according 8 to the following procedure: 9 (1) the superintendent shall serve a written notice of his intent 10 to recommend discharge on the certified school employee in accordance 11 with the law for service of process in civil actions; and 12 (2) the superintendent shall state in the notice of his intent to 13 recommend discharge the cause for his recommendation and shall 14 advise the certified school employee of his right to a discharge hearing 15 before the local school board or governing authority as provided in this 16 section. 17 B. A certified school employee who receives a notice of intent to 18 recommend discharge pursuant to Subsection A of this section may 19 exercise his right to a hearing before the local school board or governing 20 authority by giving the local superintendent or administrator written 21 notice of that election within five working days of his receipt of the 22 notice to recommend discharge. 23 C. The local school board or governing authority shall hold a 24 discharge hearing no less than twenty and no more than forty working 25 days after the local superintendent or administrator receives the written 26 election from the certified school employee and shall give the certified 27 school employee at least ten days written notice of the date, time and 28 place of the discharge hearing. 29 D. Each party, the local superintendent or administrator and the 30 certified school employee, may be accompanied by a person of his 31 choice. 17 1 the exclusive authority to discharge a certified school employee. Further, the school 2 board can only discharge where “just cause” is proven by the superintendent by a 3 preponderance of the evidence. Procedurally, the superintendent “shall” serve the 4 employee with a written notice of his intent to “recommend” discharge, stating in the 5 notice the cause for his recommendation, as well as informing the employee of his 6 right to a discharge hearing “before the local school board.” Section 27(A). The 7 E. The parties shall complete and respond to discovery by deposition 8 and production of documents prior to the discharge hearing. 9 F. The local school board or governing authority shall have the 10 authority to issue subpoenas for the attendance of witnesses and to 11 produce books, records, documents and other evidence at the request 12 of either party and shall have the power to administer oaths. 13 G. The local superintendent or administrator shall have the burden of 14 proving by a preponderance of the evidence that, at the time of the 15 notice of intent to recommend discharge, he had just cause to discharge 16 the certified school employee. 17 H. The local superintendent or administrator shall present his evidence 18 first, with the certified school employee presenting his evidence 19 thereafter. The local school board or governing authority shall permit 20 either party to call, examine and cross-examine witnesses and to 21 introduce documentary evidence. 22 I. An official record shall be made of the hearing. Either party may 23 have one copy of the record at the expense of the local school board or 24 governing authority. 25 J. The local school board shall render its written decision within 26 twenty days of the conclusion of the discharge hearing. 27 (Emphasis added.) 18 1 employee “may” exercise his right to a discharge hearing before the school board by 2 giving written notice of that election, Section 27(B), and if the employee makes that 3 election, the school board “shall” hold a discharge hearing. Section 27(C). At the 4 hearing, the superintendent “shall” have the burden of proving that, at the time of the 5 notice of intent to recommend discharge, he “had just cause to discharge the certified 6 school employee.” Section 27(G). The superintendent “shall” present his evidence 7 first, followed by the certified school employee’s proof. Section 27(H). After hearing 8 and considering the evidence, “the local school board shall render its written 9 decision[.]” Section 27(J); see Larsen v. Bd. of Educ., 2010-NMCA-093, ¶ 7, 148 10 N.M. 920, 242 P.3d 487 (describing in general terms the statutory process under 11 Section 27 for discharging a certified school employee). This framework is consistent 12 with the roles assigned to school boards and superintendents by House Bill 212, and 13 corresponds with both the duty of the superintendent to carry out the rules of the 14 school board and the power of the school board to adopt and interpret its own rules. 15 {20} We also note that prior to the adoption of House Bill 212 in 2003, a hearing 16 before the school board was always required for a discharge to take place, because 17 the 2002 version of Section 22-5-4, quoted in footnote 1, directed that the school 18 board had the exclusive authority to employ, terminate, or discharge a school 19 employee, and that “any employment relationship shall continue until final decision 19 1 of the board.” Under Section 22-5-14(B)(3), if a certified school employee does not 2 exercise his right to a hearing, the discharge now becomes effective without the 3 necessity for school board action. In addition, before the Public School Code was 4 amended in 2003 by House Bill 212, no employee could be employed, terminated, or 5 discharged without the express approval of the school board. Under Section 22-5- 6 14(B)(3), subject to any other laws or requirements that may apply, the superintendent 7 has authority to employ, terminate and discharge all noncertified school employees 8 of the school district without school board approval. However, the procedural and 9 substantive rights contained in Section 27 are a legislative expression that the 10 discharge of a certified school employee is anything but a managerial task to be 11 performed by the superintendent in the day-to-day operations of the school district. 12 {21} Discharging a teacher in the middle of the school year is significant because 13 a teacher may not have an opportunity to find other employment, causing extreme 14 hardship to the teacher. See Aguilera, 2006-NMSC-015, ¶ 32. Certified school 15 employees have historically been accorded procedural and substantive rights by the 16 Legislature to encourage individuals to enter the profession of teaching our children 17 and to protect educators in their employment. See id. ¶¶ 8-15 (discussing statutory 18 and jurisprudential goals of teachers’ tenure statutes). These goals are expressed in 19 the Public School Code, where the Legislature finds that one of the keys to student 20 1 success in New Mexico is to have a multi-cultural system that “attracts and retains 2 quality and diverse teachers[.]” Section 22-1-1.2(B)(1). In recognition of the realities 3 attending a discharge in the middle of the school year, and consistent with its 4 commitment to protect the rights of certified school employees, we conclude that the 5 Legislature consciously left intact the procedural and substantive protections of 6 Section 27, and that it intended those protections to co-exist with Section 22-5-14. 7 {22} For all the foregoing reasons, we reject the argument made by APS that there 8 is an irreconcilable conflict between Section 22-5-14 on the one hand, and Section 9 27, on the other hand. Section 27 under the Personnel Act and Section 22-5-14(B)(3) 10 under the Public School Code can be construed in harmony with each other. See 11 Miller, 2015-NMSC-022, ¶ 12 (stating that we consider statutes dealing with the same 12 general subject together, in a way that facilitates the achievement of their respective 13 goals when possible); Luboyeski v. Hill, 1994-NMSC-032, ¶ 10, 117 N.M. 380, 872 14 P.2d 353 (“Whenever possible, we must read different legislative actions as 15 harmonious instead of as contradicting one another.”); NMSA 1978, Section 12-2A- 16 10(A) (1997) (“If statutes appear to conflict, they must be construed, if possible, to 17 give effect to each.”). 18 {23} We also reject the argument that House Bill 212 repealed, by implication, 19 Section 27. The repeal of an earlier statute by implication is not favored, and we 21 1 strive to construe statutes harmoniously with each other when possible. See State ex 2 rel. Brandenburg v. Sanchez, 2014-NMSC-022, ¶¶ 11, 17, 329 P.3d 654. There must 3 be more than a mere difference in the provisions in order for a later statute to be 4 construed as repealing an earlier statute. See Alvarez v. Bd. of Trs. of La Union 5 Townsite, 1957-NMSC-022, ¶ 10, 62 N.M. 319, 309 P.2d 989. “There must be what 6 is often called such a positive repugnancy between the provisions of the old and the 7 new statutes that they cannot be reconciled and made to stand together.” Id.; see 8 Stokes v. N.M. Bd. of Educ., 1951-NMSC-031, ¶ 5, 55 N.M. 213, 230 P.2d 243 9 (stating that a statute is repealed by implication when the latter statute is so 10 inconsistent with and repugnant to the former law on the same subject as to be 11 irreconcilable with it, “and especially does this result follow where the latter act 12 expressly notices the former in such a way as to indicate an intention to abrogate”). 13 {24} In its final argument, APS refers us to two pages from a publication that was 14 apparently issued in June 2003 by the Department of Education (now known as the 15 Public Education Department) and the Legislative Education Study Committee. The 16 document is entitled, “HB 212 Public School Reform[:] Questions & Answers for 17 School Districts and Constituents By Section” and two pages from the document are 18 attached as an exhibit to APS’ answer to the alternative writ of mandamus.Therein, 19 an unknown author states that the words “local superintendent” should be substituted 22 1 for the words “local school board” wherever they appear in Section 22-10-17 (2002), 2 which we have already noted, is now codified as Section 27. While conceding that the 3 document itself is not a formal rule or regulation, APS contends that it is tantamount 4 to an agency rule or regulation entitled to deference in interpreting Section 27. The 5 document was not admitted into evidence at the hearing on the merits, and it is not 6 the subject of any stipulation by the parties. Without any information concerning the 7 document, such as how it came about, why it was published, or who wrote it, we do 8 not further consider the two pages from the document. We would otherwise be 9 speculating on their significance on how they relate to the question of legislative 10 intent before us. 11 2. Clear Legal Duty to Provide a Hearing 12 {25} APS argues that the district court erred in issuing the permanent writ of 13 mandamus because “[APS did] not have a clear legal duty to provide [Teacher] with 14 a discharge hearing before the [s]chool [b]oard[.]” See NMSA 1978, Section 44-2-4 15 (1884) (stating that mandamus may issue to a board or person “to compel the 16 performance of an act which the law specially enjoins as a duty”); see generally 17 Mimbres Valley Irrigation Co. v. Salopek, 2006-NMCA-093, ¶¶ 10-15, 140 N.M. 18 168, 140 P.3d 1117 (describing in general how the statutes governing mandamus 19 operate). 23 1 {26} We generally review the granting or denial of a writ of mandamus under an 2 abuse of discretion standard. See State ex rel. Stapleton v. Skandera, 2015-NMCA- 3 044, ¶ 5, 346 P.3d 1191. However, within that context, we are required to interpret 4 Section 27, as well as the statutes relating to a writ of mandamus. Our review is 5 therefore de novo. See Weiss, 2014-NMCA-100, ¶ 4. 6 {27} We begin with Section 27. We have already quoted and described the operation 7 of Section 27. The mandatory obligation given to superintendents and school boards 8 on the procedure to follow before a certified school employee can be discharged 9 could not be more clearly stated. The school board “shall” hold a discharge hearing 10 once a certified school employee demands a hearing. There is no option. And there 11 is no room for interpretation. APS argues that the Legislature “unequivocally 12 divested” and “eradicated” a school board of authority to discharge employees, and 13 invested “exclusive authority” in the superintendent to discharge school personnel 14 such as Teacher. We have already answered those arguments. 15 {28} For additional support of its argument that it had no clear legal duty to provide 16 Teacher with a discharge hearing before the school board, APS asks us to consider 17 two additional attachments to its answer to the alternative writ. One of the exhibits 18 is a decision and order issued by the secretary of education suspending the “Board of 19 Education of the Questa Independent School District.” Nothing in this decision and 24 1 order requires or allows a certified school employee’s discharge hearing to be held 2 before the superintendent. The second exhibit consists of the findings of fact and 3 conclusions of law of an independent arbitrator following a de novo hearing held 4 under Section 22-10A-28 (providing that an appeal from a discharge hearing before 5 the school board lies with an independent arbitrator who conducts a de novo hearing). 6 A de novo hearing is an entirely new hearing that is conducted as if there had been 7 no prior hearing. See State ex rel. Bevacqua-Young v. Steele, ___-NMCA-___, ¶ 9, 8 ___ P.3d ___ (No. A-1-CA-34882, July 17, 2017). Therein, the arbitrator concluded 9 that the procedure utilized by APS to hold a discharge hearing before the 10 superintendent does not violate Section 27, on the basis that Section 27 and 22-5-14 11 are in “direct conflict” with one another. The arbitrator did no analysis, and again, 12 this decision does not require APS to direct that discharge hearings be held before the 13 superintendent. To the extent APS is arguing that because it previously ordered that 14 the discharge hearing of a certified school employee be conducted by the 15 superintendent, it is now required to do so in all cases, we are not persuaded. 16 {29} Section 27 is clear in its mandate that a discharge hearing is to be conducted 17 before the school board, where the superintendent has the burden of proving that, at 18 the time of the notice of intent to recommend discharge, the superintendent had just 19 cause to discharge the certified employee. Section 22-5-14 does not unequivocally 25 1 divest the school board from conducting a discharge hearing, and Section 22-5-14 can 2 be applied harmoniously with Section 27. APS had a clear, legal duty under Section 3 27 to provide Teacher with a discharge hearing before the school board, and it had 4 no authority by regulation or otherwise, to violate the clear, unequivocal mandate of 5 Section 27. The discretion otherwise afforded the Public Education Department and 6 APS “may not justify altering, modifying or extending the reach of a law created by 7 the Legislature.” State ex rel. Taylor v. Johnson, 1998-NMSC-015, ¶ 22, 125 N.M. 8 343, 961 P.2d 768. See In re Adjustments to Franchise Fees, 2000-NMSC-035, ¶ 19, 9 129 N.M. 787, 14 P.3d 525 (stating that “[w]ith respect to the principle of separation 10 of powers, an unlawful conflict or infringement occurs when an administrative 11 agency goes beyond the existing New Mexico statutes or case law it is charged with 12 administering and claims the authority to modify this existing law or to create new 13 law on its own” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)); Chalamidas v. Envtl. 14 Improvement Div., 1984-NMCA-109, ¶ 13, 102 N.M. 63, 691 P.2d 64 (stating that 15 “[a]n agency cannot amend or enlarge its authority through rules and regulations.”). 16 {30} We therefore reject the argument of APS that it did not have a clear, legal duty 17 to provide Teacher with a discharge hearing before the school board. 18 3. Failure to Exhaust Administrative Remedies 19 {31} For its last argument, APS contends that because Teacher did not attend the 26 1 discharge hearing before the superintendent, and then appeal, the writ of mandamus 2 was improper because Teacher failed to exhaust the plain, speedy, and adequate 3 administrative remedies available to him. See NMSA 1978, § 44-2-5 (1884) (“The 4 writ [of mandamus] shall not issue in any case where there is a plain, speedy and 5 adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law.”). Because this argument also presents 6 us with a question of statutory construction, our review is de novo. SeeWeiss, 2014- 7 NMCA-100, ¶ 4. 8 {32} APS argues that because Teacher could appeal an adverse decision from a 9 discharge hearing conducted by the superintendent to an independent arbitrator who 10 hears the case de novo, and from there, to the district court under Section 22-10A-28, 11 Teacher had a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy at law, which he failed to pursue, 12 and Teacher was therefore not entitled to a writ of mandamus. For the same reason, 13 APS argues that the district court was precluded from exercising subject matter 14 jurisdiction over the mandamus action. We disagree with both assertions. 15 {33} APS’ argument overlooks Teacher’s assertion from the very beginning: that he 16 was entitled to a discharge hearing before the school board, a substantive and 17 procedural right afforded to all certified public school employees by the Legislature 18 under Section 27. APS was acting ultra vires (unauthorized and beyond its power) in 19 directing Teacher to appear at the discharge hearing before his accuser, the 27 1 superintendent, rather than before the school board, as required by Section 27. No de 2 novo appeal before an independent arbitrator, and from there, to the district court, will 3 restore Teacher to the substantive and procedural right to a discharge hearing before 4 the school board provided by Section 27. 5 {34} The constitutional right to a pre-termination hearing afforded all school 6 employees under Cleveland Bd. of Educ. v. Loudermill, 470 U.S. 532 (1985), includes 7 the right of an employee to present his or her side of the case because of its obvious 8 value in reaching an accurate decision on a proposed termination. See id. at 543. 9 “Even where the facts are clear, the appropriateness or necessity of the discharge may 10 not be; in such cases, the only meaningful opportunity to invoke the discretion of the 11 decisionmaker is likely to be before the termination takes effect.” Id. Under New 12 Mexico law, this means having a fair opportunity to invoke the discretion of the 13 individual or body charged with the pre-termination decision. See City of 14 Albuquerque v. Chavez, 1998-NMSC-033, ¶ 15, 125 N.M. 809, 965 P.2d 928. Here, 15 the Legislature has mandated that the discretion lies with the school board, not the 16 superintendent, and with good reason. At the very least, there is an appearance of 17 impropriety in requiring an employee, such as Teacher, to appear before his accuser, 18 the superintendent. The Legislature left this decision to the elected members of the 19 local board of education, who can take a more dispassionate view of the evidence and 28 1 decide if an employee’s conduct warrants a discharge or some lesser sanction. When 2 an employee, such as Teacher, is denied his rights under Section 27, an 3 “impermissibly high risk” exists that the employee will be erroneously terminated. 4 See Chavez, 1998-NMSC-033, ¶ 15. 5 {35} In addition, our case law does not require Teacher to appear in a hearing that 6 is contrary to the requirements of Section 27, and then appeal, in lieu of seeking a 7 writ of mandamus. We begin with our holding that Section 27 absolutely affords 8 Teacher the right to a discharge hearing before the school board. In Franco v. 9 Carlsbad Municipal Schools, 2001-NMCA-042, ¶¶ 4, 6-8, 130 N.M. 543, 28 P.3d 10 531, a tenured, non-certified school employee was terminated, but not advised of his 11 right to appear before the school board at a pre-termination hearing to give the board 12 his explanation of why he should not be terminated. After the employee was awarded 13 damages in a wrongful termination suit, the school district appealed, arguing that the 14 district court erred in allowing the suit to go forward because the employee had failed 15 to exhaust his administrative remedies. Id. ¶ 2. Rejecting this argument, this Court 16 said that the issue was not whether the school district would have afforded the 17 employee his right to a hearing before the school board or arbitration had he 18 requested it, but whether the school district “thwarted” the school employee’s ability 19 to invoke those rights by not giving him notice of those rights. Id. ¶ 17. What we said 29 1 in Franco applies here: 2 Actions to terminate constitutionally protected rights must be 3 conducted with scrupulous fairness. Such was not the case in the matter 4 before us. [The employee] was terminated by the [d]istrict without being 5 afforded the mandatory pre-termination or post-termination process to 6 which he was entitled. Exhaustion of administrative remedies, as a 7 precursor to [the employee’s] suit for damages, was not required because 8 the [d]istrict, by its actions, deprived [the employee] of his right to 9 initiate and sustain the administrative process mandated by statute—a 10 process which would have provided him with a meaningful opportunity 11 to challenge the grounds for termination. 12 Id. ¶ 20 (citation omitted). Here the school district insisted that Teacher not be given 13 the hearing he was entitled to receive under Section 27. Proceeding as the school 14 district insisted would not have restored Teacher to the hearing he was entitled to 15 receive. 16 {36} Sanchez v. Board of Education, 1961-NMSC-081, ¶¶ 1-4, 68 N.M. 440, 362 17 P.2d 979, involved a dispute between a teacher and the local school board over 18 whether he had been dismissed. The teacher sought a writ of mandamus to compel his 19 reinstatement, which the district court granted. Id. ¶ 1. As in this case, the teacher was 20 entitled to be served with a notice of dismissal in which the school board specified 21 its reasons to terminate the teacher, followed by a hearing before the local school 22 board Id. ¶ 7. Pertinent to the issue before us here, our Supreme Court said, “It should 23 be apparent that, under the circumstances here present, there must be a notice of 24 dismissal containing the causes therefor, and a hearing in conformity with the law. 30 1 A refusal to grant him such a hearing would probably warrant the granting of a writ 2 of mandamus to require a hearing, but such was not the relief sought nor granted. 3 Such a remedy may still be available should the board continue to refuse to follow the 4 clear direction of the statute.” Id. ¶ 8. Because the teacher in Sanchez had not 5 followed the required statutory procedure, our Supreme Court concluded that 6 dismissal of the teacher’s suit was proper. Id. ¶¶ 14, 17. Here, in contrast, Teacher 7 enforced his statutory right to a hearing before the school board as provided by 8 Section 27 by seeking and obtaining a writ of mandamus. 9 {37} Finally, in Stapleton v. Huff, 1946-NMSC-029, ¶ 2, 50 N.M. 208, 173 P.2d 612, 10 superseded by statute as stated in Sanchez, 1961-NMSC-081, the teacher had been 11 a certified school employee for twenty-two years. Stapleton, 1946-NMSC-029, ¶ 2. 12 After being advised that his contract would not be renewed, the teacher appeared at 13 a hearing before the local school board, then appealed to the state board of education. 14 Id. ¶ 3. In neither hearing was the teacher afforded his statutory right to confront and 15 cross-examine the witnesses against him. Id. ¶¶ 3-4. After concluding that by 16 appealing to the State Board of Education, the teacher waived the errors committed 17 by the local school board, id. ¶ 10, our Supreme Court said that the teacher was 18 deprived of his right to the hearing that was statutorily required before the State 19 Board of Education. Id. ¶ 13. Our Supreme Court said, “What the [teacher] has been 31 1 denied is the hearing before [the] State Board of Education to which he was entitled 2 under the law. This being a clear legal right is enforcible by mandamus[.]” Id. ¶ 14. 3 This holding was consistent with Brown v. Romero, 1967-NMSC-057, 77 N.M. 547, 4 425 P.2d 310. In Brown, a teacher sued a local school board and the state board of 5 education for breach of tenure rights and for a de novo trial on the issue of her tenure 6 rights, when her own pleadings disclosed that she was denied her statutory rights to 7 a hearing before the local school board and the state board of education. Id. ¶¶ 1-5. 8 Our Supreme Court said, “Mandamus was available as a remedy to test [the teacher’s] 9 right to a hearing before the governing board.” Id. ¶ 8. 10 {38} Teacher had a clear statutory right to a hearing to contest his pending discharge 11 before the School Board just like the teachers in Stapleton and Brown, and under the 12 circumstances, a writ of mandamus was a proper vehicle for protecting that right. As 13 a result, Teacher was not required to appear at the proposed discharge hearing before 14 the superintendent, and then appeal before an arbitrator for a de novo hearing, 15 followed by a limited appeal to the district court in lieu of seeking and obtaining the 16 writ of mandamus. 17 C. RESULT 18 {39} For all the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the district court did not err in 19 issuing the permanent writ of mandamus to APS. 32 1 IV. THE SCHOOL DISTRICT APPEAL 2 {40} Pursuant to PEBA, Sections 10-7E-1 to -26, the Union and the School District 3 entered into a CBA in 2012 to provide terms and conditions of employment for all 4 certified school employees, all transportation employees, and all educational support 5 professionals of the School District (the bargaining unit). This appeal requires us to 6 determine whether the changes made to the Public School Code by House Bill 212 7 prohibit the school board of the School District from hearing and deciding the 8 Union’s grievance pursuant to the grievance procedure negotiated by the parties in 9 the CBA. 10 A. BACKGROUND 11 1. Proceedings Before the PELRB 12 {41} The Union filed a complaint with the PELRB alleging: (1) that the school 13 board of the School District failed and refused to process grievances as required by 14 the CBA in violation of the PEBA (grievance complaint); and (2) that the School 15 District gave certain employees additional work and paid them an additional 16 “foreman” stipend, thereby changing the terms and conditions of their employment 17 without bargaining with the Union as required by the PEBA (foreman stipend 18 complaint). See Section 10-7E-9(A)(3) and (F) (providing that the PELRB has the 19 power to enforce the PEBA, and to this end, may establish rules necessary for the 33 1 filing, hearing of, and determination of complaints of practices prohibited by the 2 PEBA). 3 {42} In its answer to the grievance complaint, the School District asserted the 4 defense that revisions made in 2003 to the Public School Code by House Bill 212 5 transferred powers from the school board to the superintendent of the school district, 6 with the result that the school board had no authority to hear and decide grievances. 7 In its answer to the foreman stipend complaint, the School District admitted that three 8 existing employees agreed to take on additional responsibilities for an additional 9 stipend, but denied that there was a PEBA violation because no new foreman 10 positions were created. In addition, the School District argued that if bargaining was 11 required, the Union waived the failure to bargain because it agreed to, and acquiesced 12 in, the School District’s long practice of paying additional stipends to employees to 13 perform additional tasks beyond those inherent in their base job. 14 {43} An evidentiary hearing lasting more than twelve hours was held before the 15 designated hearing officer, Thomas J. Griego. See Section 10-7E-12(C) (providing 16 that the PELRB may appoint a hearing examiner to conduct an adjudicatory hearing 17 in a dispute on whether there has been a violation of the PEBA). After the parties 18 submitted their respective requested findings of fact and conclusions of law, the 19 hearing officer filed a detailed thirty-nine-page report and recommended decision, 34 1 setting forth his findings of fact, reasoning, and conclusions of law. The hearing 2 officer found in favor of the Union on both complaints. The hearing officer rejected 3 the School District’s defenses and concluded that the School District committed 4 prohibited labor practices under the PEBA when: (1) the school board refused to 5 review grievances appealed to the school board pursuant to the negotiated grievance 6 procedure contained in the CBA; and (2) the School District gave three employees 7 in the bargaining unit additional work and paid them an additional “foreman” stipend 8 without bargaining those changes with the Union. 9 2. The Grievance Complaint 10 {44} The hearing officer found that the parties negotiated a CBA in which they 11 agreed upon procedures for filing and processing grievances. The grievance 12 procedure has five steps. Each succeeding step is followed if the preceding step does 13 not resolve the issue. We summarize those steps as follows: Step 1: the “discussion 14 level” in which a grievant meets with the immediate supervisor to attempt resolving 15 the issue; Step 2: the “supervisor level” in which a written grievance is submitted to 16 the immediate supervisor, and the supervisor communicates a written decision in 17 writing; Step 3: the “superintendent level” which is invoked by appealing the 18 immediate supervisor’s decision in writing to the superintendent who renders a 19 written decision after meeting with the grievant and the supervisor and reviewing the 35 1 record and information presented; Step 4: the “board level” which is invoked by 2 appealing to the school board through the superintendent; and Step 5: the “arbitration 3 level” after the school board renders its decision, in which the arbitrator conducts a 4 hearing and renders a final and binding decision. 5 {45} The question before the hearing officer was whether the school board complied 6 with Step 4 at the school board level. The CBA provides that if the Union “is not 7 satisfied” with the superintendent’s decision, the Union “may appeal” to the board of 8 education “through the [s]uperintendent.” The CBA further specifically provides that 9 at Step 4: 10 The [school b]oard will review the grievance and, at the [school b]oard’s 11 discretion, the [Union] may be invited to appear before the 12 [s]uperintendent and the [school b]oard at their initial or subsequent 13 meeting to present its position and respond to question[s]. The [Union] 14 shall be advised in writing of the decision of the [school b]oard within 15 thirty (30) days of the [school b]oard’s receipt of the request for review. 16 The hearing officer first rejected the School District’s defense that the school board 17 had no authority to hear and decide grievances as required by Step 4 because 18 amendments to the Public School Code enacted by House Bill 212 in 2003 transferred 19 certain duties from the school board to the superintendent. Secondly, the hearing 20 officer found that the School District failed to comply with its duties under Step 4. 21 {46} The hearing officer found that the school board adopted a blanket policy to 22 send all grievances brought before it back to the superintendent. The hearing officer 36 1 further found that, consistent with the blanket policy, the School District violated 2 Step 4 multiple times. In one instance, the school board placed a grievance on its 3 agenda but took no action on the grievance and did not issue a written decision 4 concerning the grievance to the Union. In a second instance, the superintendent 5 refused to place a filed appeal on the school board’s agenda because he summarily 6 dismissed it himself without advising the board members; and in a third instance, the 7 school board refused to review an appeal because the Union had also filed a 8 prohibited practices complaint regarding the same issue. 9 {47} The hearing officer concluded that by refusing to review grievances appealed 10 to the school board under Step 4 of the negotiated grievance procedure, the School 11 District committed a prohibited practice in violation of Section 10-7E-19(G) and (H) 12 of the PEBA (providing that it is a violation of the PEBA to “refuse or fail to comply 13 with a provision of the [PEBA] or [PELRB] rule” and to “refuse or fail to comply 14 with a [CBA]”). 15 3. The Foreman Stipend Complaint 16 {48} The hearing officer found that the School District designated three bargaining 17 employees as “transportation foreman” and made changes to their duties, hours, and 18 pay, without bargaining with the Union, in violation of the PEBA. The hearing officer 19 also rejected the School District’s defense that the Union waived the failure to 37 1 bargain on grounds that the Union had acquiesced in the historical practice of 2 “management unilaterally establishing stipends and to whom they [would] be paid.” 3 To the contrary, the hearing officer found, in the CBA, that the Union and the School 4 District had entered into a memorandum of understanding to create a joint committee 5 to review the requirements to be met for an employee’s “increment, stipend, or 6 activity allowance.” 7 {49} The hearing officer also made a specific finding that the “facts negate the 8 [School] District’s claim of waiver.” The hearing officer concluded that evidence 9 presented by the School District established that most of the stipends the School 10 District referred to were of employees outside the Union’s bargaining unit. As for 11 those employees who were in the bargaining unit and received stipends, the hearing 12 officer found that “there is no evidence to support the proposition that the [U]nion 13 was made aware of the payment of those stipends and given an opportunity to bargain 14 them, a pre-requisite to waiver.” 15 {50} The hearing officer concluded that by giving three bargaining unit employees 16 additional work and paying them an additional “foreman” stipend without bargaining 17 those changes with the Union, the School District committed a prohibited practice in 18 violation of Section 10-7E-19(F) and (G) of the PEBA (stating it is a violation of the 19 PEBA “[to] refuse to bargain collectively in good faith with the exclusive 38 1 representative[,]” and “[to] refuse . . . to comply with a provision of the [PEBA] or 2 [PELRB] rule[.]”). 3 {51} The School District appealed from the conclusions of the hearing officer and 4 the findings of fact supporting them to the PELRB. The PELRB voted unanimously 5 to adopt the hearing officer’s findings of fact, conclusions of law, and rationale as its 6 own. See Section 10-7E-9(D) (providing that the PELRB shall decide issues by 7 majority vote and shall issue its decisions in the form of written orders and opinions). 8 B. PROCEEDINGS BEFORE THE DISTRICT COURT 9 {52} The School District next appealed the decision of the PELRB to the district 10 court. See Section 10-7E-23(B) (providing that a person or party affected by a final 11 order or decision of the PELRB may appeal to the district court); Rule 1-074 NMRA 12 (setting forth the procedure for an administrative appeal to the district court). After 13 the School District filed its statement of appellate issues, the Union responded, and 14 the School District filed its reply to the Union’s response, the district court held a 15 hearing. Following the hearing, the district court filed a memorandum opinion and 16 order affirming the order of the PELRB. 17 {53} Like the hearing officer and the PELRB, the district court concluded that the 18 2003 amendments to the Public School Code did not prohibit the school board from 19 performing its duties at Step 4 of the CBA. The district court further determined that 39 1 the School District contractually obligated itself to review the superintendent’s 2 decision when his decisions were appealed pursuant to Step 4 of the CBA grievance 3 process. Because “[a]n appeal, to be meaningful, involves the exercise of independent 4 judgment as to whether the decision rendered by the superintendent is correct[,]” and 5 the School District failed to point to any evidence that the school board was providing 6 meaningful review at Step 4, the district court concluded that the hearing officer’s 7 conclusion (adopted by the PELRB) that the School District violated the CBA was 8 not arbitrary and capricious. 9 {54} In the district court, the School District no longer argued that it was not 10 required to bargain with the Union the changes it made to the terms and conditions 11 of employment to certain employees by giving them additional duties and paying 12 them an additional foreman stipend. Instead, the Union relied on its defense that the 13 Union had waived the failure to bargain. On this point, the district court found that 14 substantial evidence supported the hearing officer’s (and PERB’s) finding that there 15 was no waiver by the Union. 16 {55} The School Board filed a petition for writ of certiorari with this Court, which 17 we granted. See Rule 12-505 NMRA (setting forth procedure for review by the Court 18 of Appeals of decisions of the district court from administrative appeals). The issues 19 presented are: (1) whether the 2003 revisions made to the Public School Code by 40 1 House Bill 212 stripped the school board of authority to hear and decide grievances 2 as provided in the CBA; and (2) whether substantial evidence supports the finding of 3 the PELRB that the Union did not waive its right to bargain the changed terms and 4 conditions of employment of employees who were given additional duties and paid 5 an additional stipend by the School District. 6 C. ANALYSIS 7 {56} The School District’s argument is grounded on the same amendments made to 8 the Public School Code by House Bill 212 that APS relies on in its appeal. To 9 reiterate, House Bill 212 enacted a new statute, Section 22-5-14 (Section 14) which 10 gives the superintendent the powers to “administer and supervise the school district” 11 and to “employ, fix the salaries of, assign, terminate or discharge all employees of the 12 school district[.]” Section 14(B)(2), (3). Secondly, House Bill 212 deleted Section 22- 13 5-4(D) (providing that a local school board was invested with the “powers or duties” 14 to “approve or disapprove the employment, termination, or discharge of all employees 15 and certified school personnel of the school district upon a recommendation . . . by 16 the superintendent”) from the enumerated powers and duties of a school board. The 17 School Board contends that because of the powers given to superintendents, and 18 because the school board is “given no authority with respect to school personnel” that 41 1 “[t]he Legislature took away the power of school boards to interfere in personnel 2 matters when it enacted [House Bill] 212.” 3 {57} We address the School District’s argument within the context of the PEBA, 4 which like House Bill 212, was enacted by the Legislature in 2003. Public Employees 5 were not given the right to engage in collective bargaining until 1992 when the 6 Legislature enacted the PEBA for the first time. 1992 N.M. Laws, ch. 9; see Regents 7 of Univ. of N.M., 1998-NMSC-020, ¶ 3 (noting that with the passage of the PEBA in 8 1992, public employees in New Mexico were given the right to engage in collective 9 bargaining for the first time). However, the 1992 version of PEBA had a sunset 10 provision that took effect in 1999, seven years later. 1992 N.M. Laws, ch. 9, § 30. 11 Four years later in 2003, New Mexico once again recognized the right of public 12 employees to engage in collective bargaining with the passage of the PEBA for the 13 second time. 2003 N.M. Laws, ch. 4, § 1. (We also note that with the passage of 2003 14 N.M. Laws, ch. 5, the Legislature also enacted the PEBA again. Several sections of 15 Chapter 5 are identical to those contained in Chapter 4, and these are noted in the 16 Compiler’s notes to the statutory sections. ) The 2003 version of the PEBA is the 17 current version and is codified at §§ 10-7E-1 to -26. See 2005 N.M. Laws, ch. 333, 18 § 1 (adding the statutory reference). 42 1 {58} One of the stated purposes of the PEBA “is to guarantee public employees the 2 right to organize and bargain collectively with their employers,” Section 10-7E-2. 3 “Collective bargaining” is defined to mean “the act of negotiating between a public 4 employer and an exclusive representative for the purpose of entering into a written 5 agreement regarding wages, hours and other terms and conditions of employment[.]” 6 Section 10-7E-4(F). The parties to collective bargaining are the “exclusive 7 representative” of the public employees and the “appropriate governing body” of the 8 public employer. Section 10-7E-17(A). The “exclusive representative” is “a labor 9 organization that, as a result of certification, has the right to represent all public 10 employees in an appropriate bargaining unit for the purposes of collective 11 bargaining[.]” Section 10-7E-4(I). “The appropriate governing body of a public 12 employer is the policymaking individual or body representing the public employer[,]” 13 and “[a]t the local level, the appropriate governing body is the elected or appointed 14 representative body or individual charged with management of the local public body.” 15 Section 10-7E-7. 16 {59} Consistent with its definition of “collective bargaining,” the PEBA mandates 17 that with the exception of certain retirement programs, exclusive representatives and 18 public employers “shall bargain in good faith on wages, hours and all other terms and 19 conditions of employment and other issues agreed to by the parties[,]” and the parties 43 1 “shall enter into written collective bargaining agreements covering employment 2 relations.” Section 10-7E-17(A)(1), (2). Pertinent here, “An agreement shall include 3 a grievance procedure to be used for the settlement of disputes pertaining to 4 employment terms and conditions and related personnel matters.” Section 10-7E- 5 17(F). 6 1. Authority of the School Board to Hear and Decide Grievances 7 {60} With the foregoing background in mind, we now examine the School District’s 8 arguments in detail. Specifically, the School District argues that under Step 4 of the 9 grievance procedure in the CBA in an appeal from the decision of the superintendent, 10 a school board is impermissibly allowed to overrule the superintendent, contrary to 11 Section 14 which states that “[p]ersonnel decisions are in the domain of the 12 [s]uperintendent, not the [s]chool [b]oard.” Further, the School District asserts, 13 because Section 14 vests all hiring and firing authority with the superintendent, if the 14 school board has authority to overrule the superintendent at Step 4 of the grievance 15 process, “then the actual power to hire and fire was never actually changed.” This 16 result, the School District argues, violates two principles of statutory construction: 17 (1) that the Legislature does not intend to enact a nullity when it passes a new law; 18 and (2) that an amendment to an act expresses a legislative intent that the amendment 19 prevails over any remaining contradictory provisions because it is a later declaration 44 1 of legislative intent, and in adopting the amendment, the Legislature is presumed to 2 have intended to change existing law. 3 {61} The School District’s arguments focus on Section 22-5-4(A), which provides 4 that a local school board has the power or duty, “subject to the rules of the 5 department, [to] develop educational policies for the school district.” While 6 conceding that the school board is a “policy-making body,” the School District asserts 7 that under the foregoing language, the school board “only has the legal authority to 8 make policies which are . . . subject to the rules of the department, and . . . 9 ‘educational.’ ” Thus, the School District proclaims, the school board “is not given 10 authority to make whatever policies it may choose on whatever subjects it may 11 choose.” The School District asserts that because the “policies” involved 12 here—grievances under the CBA—are “labor or personnel matters, not educational 13 issues” and because House Bill 212 “took the local school boards out of the personnel 14 arena, except for one employee—the superintendent[,]” the school board had no 15 authority to negotiate and sign the CBA. We are not persuaded. 16 {62} The School District’s argument overlooks the fact that in addition to other 17 changes discussed above, House Bill 212, Section 3 also enacted Section 22-1-2(H), 18 which defines the school board as the “policy-setting body” of the school district. 19 Simply stated, “policy” means “to organize and regulate the internal order of: 45 1 Govern.” Webster’s Third New Int’l Dictionary (Unabridged ed. 2002). As we have 2 already pointed out, House Bill 212 reformed and restructured the relationship 3 between the school board and superintendent, and consistent with this purpose, House 4 Bill 212 clarified the respective duties of the school board and the superintendent. 5 Under House Bill 212, the school board governs the school district by exercising its 6 power to enact policy through the adoption of regulations, standards, and rules. At the 7 same time, the school board employs the superintendent as its chief executive officer 8 to implement and carry into effect at an operational level in the day-to-day operations 9 of the school district. 10 {63} Section 22-5-4 does not alter or limit this relationship. To accept the School 11 District’s arguments on their face requires us to conclude that Section 22-1-2(H), 12 defining the school board as “the policy-setting body” of the school district, is mere 13 surplusage to 22-5-4 (A), in providing that among the “powers and duties” of a school 14 board is, “subject to the rules of the department, [to] develop educational policies for 15 the school district[.]” This interpretation violates a fundamental principle of statutory 16 construction, that we are to give effect to all parts of statutes, particularly when they 17 are enacted together. See Albuquerque Cab Co., ___-NMSC-___, ¶ 9 (“We read 18 related statutes in harmony and give effect to all provisions.”); Regents of Univ. of 19 N.M., 1998-NMSC-020, ¶ 28 (“We will construe the entire statute as a whole so that 46 1 all the provisions will be considered in relation to one another.”). Following this 2 mandate, we give effect to both statutes, which we conclude are in fact 3 complementary to each other. 4 {64} The public education department has what appears to be exclusive and plenary 5 control over all education policies of the state. It was created pursuant to Article XII, 6 Section 6 of the New Mexico Constitution. See NMSA 1978, Section 9-24-9 (2004). 7 Among its far reaching statutory powers is the power to “determine policy for the 8 operation of all public schools and vocational education programs in the state,” to 9 “supervise all schools and school officials coming under its jurisdiction,” and to 10 “prescribe courses of instruction to be taught in all public schools in the state, 11 requirements for graduation and standards for all public schools[.]” Section 22-2- 12 2(B), (C), (D). To achieve these ends, the secretary of education “shall have control, 13 management and direction of all public schools, except as otherwise provided by 14 law.” Section 22-2-1. These statutes can be read as excluding a local school district 15 from having any authority to enact educational policy for its own school district. 16 {65} However, the purposes of House Bill 212 are to have a “multicultural education 17 system” that “integrates the cultural strengths of its diverse student population into 18 the curriculum[,]” and “recognizes that cultural diversity in the state presents special 19 challenges for policymakers, administrators, teachers and students” and to also 47 1 change public school governance “from the bottom up instead of from the top down,” 2 Section 22-1-1.2(B)(3), (4), and (F). In order to avoid any question and to be 3 consistent with its purposes, House Bill 212 expressly and explicitly states that a local 4 school board has the “powers or duties” to “develop educational policies for the 5 school district” (that are “subject to the rules of the department”) in Section 22-5- 6 4(A). Granting a school board such authority is not a limitation, but an express 7 recognition that each local board is a partner with the public education department in 8 making education policy for that particular school district by taking into account the 9 state’s multicultural diversity to achieve student success. This authority is not unique 10 to Section 22-5-4(A), as there are other additional express grants of policy-setting 11 authority given to local school boards in the Public School Code. See, e.g., Section 12 22-5-4.3(A) (directing that a local school board “shall establish student discipline 13 policies”); Section 22-5-4.4(A) (stating that a school employee shall report student 14 drug or alcohol abuse “pursuant to procedures established by the local school 15 board”); Section 22-5-4.7(A) (providing that a school district shall establish a policy 16 providing for the expulsion of a student who knowingly brings a weapon to a school); 17 Section 22-5-6(A) (providing that a “local school board may waive the nepotism rule 18 for family members of a local superintendent”); Section 22-10A-5(C) (requiring a 19 local school board, together with a regional education cooperative, to “develop 48 1 policies and procedures to require background checks on an applicant who has been 2 offered employment, a contractor or a contractor’s employee with unsupervised 3 access to students at a public school”). We therefore conclude that the powers and 4 duties granted to school boards in Section 22-5-4(A) are in addition to, and not a 5 limitation, on the general power to enact policy for the school district recognized in 6 Section 22-1-2(H). “Statutes must be construed so that no part of the statute is 7 rendered surplusage or superfluous.” Regents of Univ. of N.M., 1998-NMSC-020, ¶ 8 28 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). 9 {66} We therefore reject the School District’s additional assertion that the PELRB 10 and district court erred in determining that the school board is the public employer 11 under the PEBA and that when the school board signed the CBA, it did not have 12 authority to do so. Under the PEBA, the “appropriate governing body” to engage in 13 collective bargaining and enter into a CBA is “the policymaking . . . body 14 representing the public employer” that at the local level is “the elected or appointed 15 representative body . . . charged with management of the local public body.” Section 16 10-7E-7. The school board is the policymaker here, and it satisfies the definition in 17 all other respects. (Members of the school board are elected under Section 22-5-1.1). 18 {67} Summarizing, the PEBA provides that the locally elected body of the employer, 19 which makes the employer’s policies, is the proper party to engage in collective 49 1 bargaining with a labor organization which has the right to represent all the public 2 employees of the bargaining unit in collective bargaining. Collective bargaining 3 means negotiating for the purpose of “entering into a written agreement regarding 4 wages, hours and other terms and conditions of employment[.]” Section 10-7E-4(F). 5 The wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment between a public 6 employer and its public employees without question implicate policies of the 7 employer, and PEBA therefore dictates that the policymaker of the public employer 8 is the proper party to engage in such negotiations and to enter into a CBA agreement. 9 Here, the policymaker and employer is the school board, and it was the proper party 10 to enter into the CBA with the Union. 11 {68} We note two more facts before concluding our discussion of this issue. By 12 hearing an appeal at Step 4 of the grievance process, the school board is not making 13 personnel decisions on an operational level. We agree, that as the chief executive 14 officer of the school district, these are responsibilities of the superintendent. 15 Moreover, by hearing an appeal at Step 4 of the grievance process, the school board 16 is not “interfering” in personnel matters or “overruling” a personnel decision of the 17 superintendent as suggested by the School District. These assertions overlook what 18 a “grievance” is under the CBA. The CBA defines a “grievance” as “an allegation by 19 an employee, group of employees, or the [Union], that there has been a violation, 50 1 misinterpretation, or misapplication of a specific provision of the [CBA].” Thus, at 2 Step 4 of the grievance process, the CBA provides that the school board, as the policy 3 maker who negotiated and agreed to the CBA, simply determines whether its own 4 policy (i.e., a specific provision in the CBA) has been violated, misinterpreted, or 5 misapplied. Making such a determination is not “interfering” in personnel matters nor 6 does it constitute “overruling” a personnel decision of the superintendent. Instead, as 7 the Union asserts, because the CBA applies to all employees, the school board is not 8 involved in making a personnel decision on a personal basis, but under the 9 contractual structure of the CBA through which all individual personnel matters are 10 administered. 11 {69} Finally, the School District’s arguments completely overlook the fact that in 12 addition to the president of the school board, the superintendent of the school district 13 signed the CBA on behalf of the school district. While we have placed no weight on 14 this fact in our analysis, even if we agreed with the School District’s premise that the 15 school superintendent has the exclusive power under the CBA to hear a grievance, 16 by signing the CBA, the superintendent could be deemed to have delegated that 17 authority to the school board. 18 2. Waiver of the Union’s Right to Bargain for the Stipends 19 {70} The hearing officer found that the School District unilaterally added duties 51 1 and responsibilities to three hourly employees in the transportation department, 2 designated them “transportation foreman” and changed their compensation by paying 3 them a stipend of $4,000 per year. The additional duties and responsibilities were 4 different from those usually performed by bargaining unit transportation employees, 5 and would otherwise require overtime pay. Prior to these changes, the position of 6 “[t]ransportation [f]oreman” did not exist. The Union became aware of the increased 7 duties and pay and requested collective bargaining over the changes, but the School 8 District refused. The hearing officer rejected the School District’s argument that 9 because it had previously paid stipends to other employees without negotiating them, 10 the Union waived its right to bargain over these changes, and held that the School 11 District violated the PEBA when it refused to bargain over the changes. The hearing 12 officer did not, however, order rescission of the new duties and stipends because the 13 Union did not request it, and because the CBA has in place a mechanism (discussed 14 below) for ongoing discussions that are taking place under the CBA. The district 15 court agreed and affirmed. 16 {71} The School District states that its argument under this point “is primarily one 17 of law, that is, whether the merger of two unions requires that the custom and practice 18 of the employer and the surviving union continue to be recognized as a custom and 19 practice, or whether the merger is a merger for some purposes but not for all.” 52 1 However, the factual basis for this argument is not clearly presented to us by 2 references to the transcript and record. See Rule 12-318(A)(3) NMRA (requiring 3 briefs in chief to contain a summary of the facts that “shall contain citations to the 4 record proper, transcript of proceedings, or exhibits supporting each factual 5 representation”); Muse v. Muse, 2009-NMCA-003, ¶ 72, 145 N.M. 451, 200 P.3d 104 6 (“We will not search the record for facts, arguments, and rulings in order to support 7 generalized arguments.”). 8 {72} From the briefs of the parties, we gather the following. The Union originally 9 represented only certified academic employees who were paid a salary. Examples are 10 teachers, psychologists, and nurses. The Union expanded the bargaining unit to 11 include hourly paid maintenance and transportation employees, thereby merging two 12 separate bargaining units into one. 13 {73} Before the bargaining units were merged, when a school required additional 14 services to be performed beyond the salaried position, such as running the science 15 fair, sponsoring the chess club, or coaching cross-country, academic employees were 16 paid stipends for the additional work. The School District would have us consider 17 Exhibit 9 as evidence that “[t]here are, in fact over a thousand such stipends currently 18 in effect.” Exhibit 9 is a computer generated document consisting of twenty-four 19 pages with numerous codes, but there is no evidence informing us how to understand 53 1 the exhibit or what the codes mean. We therefore do not consider Exhibit 9 further). 2 The CBA at issue here is the first CBA in which negotiations for the combined unit 3 had occurred, and during the negotiations, the duties and payment for a maintenance 4 foreman stipend, and an asbestos inspector stipend, and an “on-call” stipend for 5 employees that had just been merged into the unit were negotiated. The additional 6 duties and stipends paid to academic employees before the “merger” had not been 7 negotiated with the Union. The parties therefore also negotiated a memorandum of 8 understanding as part of the present CBA to “examine the minimum requirements to 9 be met for individuals to be eligible to receive their increment, stipend, or activity 10 allowance” to be submitted to the superintendent and the Union for consideration and 11 implementation. 12 {74} From the foregoing factual summary, gleaned from the briefs, we infer that the 13 School District’s argument is that because of its past practice of giving salaried 14 academic employees additional duties and pay in the form of a stipend without 15 negotiating those changes, or an objection from the Union, the Union was bound by 16 that practice with respect to the maintenance and transportation employees that were 17 subsequently added to the bargaining unit. The School District contends that under 18 federal law, which the PELRB looks to in interpreting the PEBA, the prior practice 19 became part of the new CBA. In support of its argument, however, the School District 54 1 only refers us to cases that apply the concept of the “common law of the shop” to 2 interpreting ambiguous phrases contained in a CBA. See United Steelworkers of Am. 3 v. Warrior & Gulf Navigation Co., 363 U.S. 574, 578, 581-582 (1960) (holding that 4 the interpretation of contract terms in a CBA “is not confined to the express 5 provisions of the contract, as the industrial common law—the practices of the 6 industry and the shop—is equally part of the collective bargaining agreement 7 although not expressed in it”); Webb v. ABF Freight Sys., Inc., 155 F.3d 1230, 1243 8 (10th Cir. 1998) (“It is well-established that when interpreting the terms of a labor 9 contract, a fact-finder is entitled—and indeed, in some cases required—to look to the 10 past practices of the parties and the ‘common law of the shop’ to determine the 11 parties’ contractual obligations.” (footnote omitted)); Champion Boxed Beef Co. v. 12 Local No. 7, 24 F.3d 86, 88-89 (10th Cir. 1994) (“It is a well-recognized principle 13 that, except where expressly limited by a labor agreement, an arbitrator may consider 14 and rely upon extrinsic evidence, including negotiating and contractual history of the 15 parties, evidence of past practices, and the common law of the shop, when 16 interpreting ambiguous provisions.”). Because the School District neither claims nor 17 presents any evidence of ambiguity in the CBA, these cases are inapplicable. 18 {75} Further, we conclude that the evidence supports the finding of the hearing 19 officer that the School District failed to prove that the Union waived its right to 55 1 bargain the transportation stipends. See Ortiz v. Shaw, 2008-NMCA-136, ¶ 19, 145 2 N.M. 58, 193 P.3d 605 (“Waiver is the intentional relinquishment of a known right.” 3 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)); Magnolia Mountain Ltd. P’ship v. 4 Ski Rio Partners, Ltd., 2006-NMCA-027, ¶ 29, 139 N.M. 288, 131 P.3d 675 (“Waiver 5 by acquiescence arises when a person knows he is entitled to enforce a right and 6 neglects to do so for such a length of time that under the facts of the case the other 7 party may fairly infer that he has waived or abandoned such right.” (internal quotation 8 marks and citation omitted)); McCurry v. McCurry, 1994-NMCA-047, ¶ 8, 117 N.M. 9 564, 874 P.2d 25 (holding that the party asserting waiver as a defense bears the 10 burden to prove the waiver). 11 {76} Finally, we agree with the observation made by the district court that it was not 12 arbitrary or capricious for the PELRB to consider differences between paying salaried 13 certified academic employees (white collar) for extracurricular activities such as 14 sponsoring student clubs outside working hours and paying stipends to hourly paid 15 maintenance and transportation employees (blue collar) for bargaining unit work that 16 would otherwise require overtime, in concluding that the Union did not waive its 17 right to bargaining over changes in duties and pay for the transportation employees. 18 D. RESULT 19 {77} Having reviewed the administrative record and the School District’s arguments, 56 1 we conclude that the PELRB did not err, nor did the district court err in affirming the 2 PELRB decision. 3 V. CONCLUSION 4 {78} In the APS Appeal, the order of the district court issuing a permanent writ of 5 mandamus to APS is affirmed. 6 {79} In the School District Appeal, the memorandum opinion and order of the 7 district court affirming the PELRB decision is affirmed. 8 {80} IT IS SO ORDERED. 9 _______________________________ 10 MICHAEL E. VIGIL, Judge 11 WE CONCUR: 12 ______________________________________ 13 JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge 14 ______________________________________ 15 JAMES J. WECHSLER, Judge Pro Tempore 57