PUBLISH
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
TENTH CIRCUIT
v.
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT
OF EDUCATION
-------------------------------------------
NEW MEXICO STATE
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION,
Intervenor.
Petition for Review from a Decision of the
Secretary of the United States Department of Education
(Docket No. 99-81-I)
George W. Kozeliski, Gallup, New Mexico, for Petitioner, Gallup-McKinley
County Public School District No. 1.
Mark W. Smith (Stephen H. Freid with him on the brief), Office of the General
Counsel, United States Department of Education, Washington, D.C., for
Respondent.
Jonathan D. Tarnow, Special Assistant Attorney General for the State of New
Mexico (Leigh M. Manasevit, Special Assistant Attorney General for the State of
New Mexico, and Brustein & Manasevit, on the brief), Washington, D.C., for
Intervenor.
Zuni Public School District 89 (Zuni) and Gallup-McKinley County Public
School District No. 1 (Gallup-McKinley) seek review of a final decision of the
Secretary of Education which addressed whether, and to what extent, the State of
New Mexico can consider its receipt of federal Impact Aid when making its own
statewide distributions of educational funds. Both Zuni and Gallup-McKinley
filed timely petitions for review of the Secretary's decision. We exercise
jurisdiction pursuant to 20 U.S.C. § 7711(b)(1) and affirm.
I
In October 1999, Zuni filed an objection to a certification made by the
Department of Education that the State of New Mexico was equalized pursuant to
20 U.S.C. § 7709(b) and the corresponding regulations at 34 C.F.R. § 222.162.(1)
This certification allows New Mexico to offset its contributions to local
education agencies (LEAs),(2) including Zuni
and Gallup-McKinley, by a
proportion of the federal Impact Aid payments made to those LEAs. See 20
U.S.C. § 7702, 7703, 7709(d)(1)(B). In November 1999, Gallup-McKinley filed
a similar objection with the Department, alleging that New Mexico took an
inappropriate proportion of Impact Act funds into consideration when
determining state aid, in violation of 20 U.S.C. § 7709(d)(1) and 34 C.F.R. §
222.163(a).(3)
The objections of Zuni and Gallup-McKinley were consolidated for the
purposes of administrative adjudication. An administrative law judge (ALJ)
issued a decision sustaining the Department's certification and rejected all other
arguments presented by Zuni and Gallup-McKinley. Both school districts
appealed the ALJ's decision to the Secretary, who affirmed the ALJ's decision.
We will discuss as necessary any additional relevant facts throughout the course
of this opinion.(4)
II
Zuni frames its challenge on appeal as "whether the United States
Department of Education and State of New Mexico applied the mandatory
statutory formula for determining whether a state has an equalized funding
system for its schools which would entitle the state to take credit for federal
Impact Aid funding." Aplt. br. at 2. As we will detail below, the Secretary
determined the State of New Mexico was equalized under 20 U.S.C. § 7709, and
reached this decision by reference to and application of the implementing
regulations and appendix supporting the statute. See 34 C.F.R. § 222.162(a);
34
C.F.R. pt. 222, subpt. K, app. Thus, we must determine
whether the text of the statute resolves the issue, or if not, whether
the [Department's] interpretation [as evidenced by its application of
the regulatory index] is permissible in light of the deference to be
accorded to the agency under the statutory scheme. If the statute
speaks clearly to the precise question at issue, we must give effect to
the unambiguously expressed intent of Congress. If the statute is
instead silent or ambiguous with respect to the specific issue, we
must sustain the agency's interpretation if it is based on a
permissible construction of the statute.
Yellow Transp., Inc. v. Michigan, 537 U.S. 36, 45 (2002) (quoting Chevron,
U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 842-43 (1984);
Barnhart v. Walton, 535 U.S. 212, 217-18 (2002)). In so doing, it is important
for us to examine the current statute as well as its implementing regulations and
appendix, and the history accompanying each.
Impact Aid is compensatory financial assistance paid by the United States
to an LEA experiencing financial burdens because the LEA's ability to raise local
revenues has been limited as a result of the real property within its boundaries
having tax exempt status due to the property's acquisition by the federal
government, or because the LEA educates children residing on, or whose parents
are employed on federal property, including Indian lands. See 20 U.S.C.
§§
7701-7714.
Generally, states are prohibited from reducing the state aid they provide to
their LEAs if the LEAs receive Impact Aid. See 20 U.S.C. § 7709(a).
Pursuant
to 20 U.S.C. § 7709(b), however, if a state is certified by the Department as
having a program of state aid "that equalizes expenditures for free public
education among local educational agencies in the State," id., then the state is
permitted to factor in the receipt of Impact Aid funds when making its own
distributions of educational aid to its LEAs. The statute sets out a general
disparity test to determine whether a state is equalized. Under this test, LEAs are
ranked in descending order by their per-pupil expenditures or revenues. If the
LEA that is ranked highest in terms of its per-pupil expenditures or revenues
does not exceed the per-pupil revenues or expenditures of the lowest ranked LEA
by more than twenty-five percent, then the state qualifies as equalized under the
statute. 20 U.S.C. § 7709(b)(2)(A).
In making this calculation, LEAs ranked at the extremes with the highest
and lowest per-pupil expenditures are excluded. As directed by the statute, "local
educational agencies with per-pupil expenditures or revenues above the 95th
percentile or below the 5th percentile of such expenditures or revenues in the
State," 20 U.S.C. § 7709(b)(2)(B)(i), are disregarded when determining whether a
twenty-five percent disparity exists between the highest and lowest LEAs.
The exception detailed in 20 U.S.C. § 7709(b) allowing "equalized" states
to take into consideration Impact Aid when making their own distributions of
state aid first appeared in the Impact Aid laws in 1974. That statute used general
language similar to that which appears in the current statute,(5) but instead of
describing a disparity test, the 1974 statute expressly delegated to the Secretary
the power to define the term "equalize expenditures." See 20 U.S.C. §
240(d)(2)(B) (1982).
In 1976, after engaging in the process of notice and comment rulemaking,
the Secretary promulgated regulations in which it outlined the disparity test. It
directed that a state would be deemed equalized if "the disparity in the amount of
current expenditures or revenue per pupil for free public education among local
educational agencies having similar grade levels in the State is no more than 25
per centum, as determined according to the procedures set forth in Appendix A to
this subpart." 41 Fed. Reg. 26320, 26327 (June 25, 1976). Appendix A detailed
the specific method by which to make the disparity determination. First, LEAs
were ranked by expenditures or revenues per pupil, and then those LEAs which
fell "at the 95th and 5th percentiles of the total numbers of pupils in attendance in
the schools of those agencies," were eliminated. Id. at 26329. The twenty-five
percent disparity comparison was then made between the remaining highest and
lowest ranked LEAs. Id.
In the course of the 1976 notice and comment process, the Department of
Education responded in length to a question regarding whether the ninety-fifth
and fifth percentiles were to be calculated based on the total number of pupils in
the state or by school districts. It stated that
the referenced percentiles are based on number of pupils. [The
regulation] provides that in calculating the disparity standard
according to the procedures set forth in Appendix A, the districts in a
State will be ranked on the basis of current expenditures or revenue
per pupil, and that those districts which fall above the 95th and
below the 5th percentile of those agencies in terms of the number of
pupils in attendance in the schools of those agencies will be excluded
for purposes of the calculation. The percentiles will be determined
on the basis of numbers of pupils and not on the basis of numbers of
school districts. However, it appears that the proposed regulation
may not have been as clearly expressed as desired. In regard to the
question of pupils versus districts for the percentages used in
calculating the disparity standard, it is the Commissioner's view that
basing an exclusion on numbers of districts would act to apply the
disparity standard in an unfair and inconsistent manner among States.
The purpose of the exclusion is to eliminate those anomalous
characteristics of a distribution of expenditures. In States with a
small number of large districts, an exclusion based on percentage of
school districts might exclude from the measure of disparity a
substantial percentage of the pupil population in those States.
Conversely, in States with large numbers of small districts, such an
approach might exclude only an insignificant fraction of the pupil
population and would not exclude anomalous characteristics.
Id. at 26324 (emphasis added). In 1993, the 1976 regulations and the
accompanying appendix were codified with substantially the same language in the
Code of Federal Regulations. See 34 C.F.R. § 222.63 (1993), 34 C.F.R. pt.
222,
subpt. K, app. (1993).
In 1994, the statute at issue in this case was passed, repealing and replacing
20 U.S.C. § 240(d). As noted above, the replacement statute, 20 U.S.C. § 7709,
specifically details within its text the twenty-five percent disparity test, and also
includes language setting out the basic parameters of the required ninety-fifth and
fifth percentile determinations. This statutory language largely reiterates the
disparity test and percentile determinations laid out in the earlier regulations and
appendix. However, the percentile language appearing in the 1994 statute differs
slightly from that which appeared in the earlier regulations. While the former
appendix directed that the ninety-fifth and fifth percentiles should be calculated
by "the total number of pupils in attendance in the schools" to determine which
LEAs to eliminate, 34 C.F.R. pt. 222, subpt. K, app. (1993), the 1994 statute
dictates that LEAs "with per-pupil expenditures or revenues above the 95th
percentile or below the 5th percentile of such expenditures or revenues in the
State," 20 U.S.C. § 7709(b)(2)(B)(i), should be disregarded. Nothing in the
legislative history for the 1994 changes to the law gives any indication as to what
meaning, if any, should be ascribed to the language "above the 95th percentile or
below the 5th percentile of such expenditures or revenues in the State," id., when
calculating whether a state is equalized. At most, the legislative history merely
notes that the statute "prohibits a State from taking Impact Aid payments into
account in determining the amount of State aid to be paid to LEAs that receive
Impact Aid, unless that State has an equalization plan approved by the Secretary
and describes the standard which State plans must meet." H.R. No. 103-425, at
71 (1994), reprinted in 1994 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2807, 2877.
Following the passage of 20 U.S.C. § 7709, the Department enacted new
regulations to replace the 1976 regulations. The new disparity calculation
regulation closely mirrors the language of the statute:
The Secretary considers that a State aid program equalizes
expenditures if the disparity in the amount of current expenditures or
revenues per pupil for free public education among LEAs in the State
is no more than 25 percent. In determining the disparity percentage,
the Secretary disregards LEAs with per pupil expenditures or
revenues above the 95th or below the 5th percentile of those
expenditures or revenues in the State.
34 C.F.R. § 222.162(a). But the regulation goes on to state, in a fashion similar
to its predecessors, that "[t]he method for calculating the percentage disparity in a
State is in the appendix to this subpart." Id. The appendix, 34 C.F.R. pt. 222,
subpt. K, app., contains the same per-pupil expenditure percentile ranking method
as was outlined in the earlier appendices, and details the same specific
methodology for calculating the twenty-five percent disparity test. It directs as
follows:
(a) The determinations of disparity in current expenditures or
revenue per pupil are made by --
(i) Ranking all LEAs having similar grade levels within the State on
the basis of current expenditures or revenue per pupil for the second
preceding year before the year of determination;
(ii) Identifying those LEAs in each ranking that fall at the 95th and
5th percentiles of the total number of pupils in attendance in the
schools of those LEAs; and
(iii) Subtracting the lower current expenditure or revenue per pupil
figure from the higher for those agencies identified in paragraph (ii)
and dividing the difference by the lower figure.
Id. (emphasis added). The history accompanying the regulation notes that the
regulation outlines the single statutory standard for determining whether a state is
equalized and "specifies the method the Secretary will employ to measure the
statutory disparity standard. Detailed examples of the application of this method
to State funding programs are provided in the Appendix following subpart K."
60 Fed. Reg. 50774, 50777 (September 29, 1995).(6) In sum, the Department has
adhered since 1976 to a rule which dictates that when disregarding LEAs to
determine whether a state is equalized, the ninety-fifth and fifth percentiles
should be calculated by the total number of students in the state, rather than by
the number of LEAs.
With this history in place, we turn to an examination of the Department's
percentile calculation to determine whether the Department's construction is
permissible in light of the language in 20 U.S.C. § 7709 which directs that "local
educational agencies with per-pupil expenditures or revenues above the 95th
percentile or below the 5th percentile of such expenditures or revenues in the
State," should be disregarded. 20 U.S.C. § 7709(b)(2)(B)(i).
In determining whether New Mexico qualified in the year in question here
as an equalized state under 20 U.S.C. § 7709, the Department followed the
methodology provided in the appendix to 34 C.F.R. § 222.162 to decide which
LEAs fell within the ninety-fifth and fifth percentiles of "the total number of
pupils in attendance in the schools of those LEAs." 34 C.F.R. pt 222, subpt. K,
app. Applying this methodology to New Mexico, which has predominately small
LEAs among its eighty-nine public LEAs, the Department eliminated the eighteen
highest-ranked and the seven lowest-ranked LEAs before ascertaining that the
newly-top-ranked LEA received only 14.43% more state funding than the newly-bottom-ranked
LEA. The Department thus concluded that New Mexico's public
school funding is substantially equalized.
Zuni argues that this methodology directly conflicts with the statutory
language of 20 U.S.C. § 7709(b)(2)(B)(i), which it reads to require the
Department to eliminate LEAs on the basis of LEA percentiles rather than by
student population percentiles. It asserts that the statute requires one of only two
methods for determining the ninety-fifth and fifth percentiles of per-pupil
expenditures: (1) eliminate five percent of the LEAs at the top and bottom of the
ranked chart of LEAs, or (2) figure five percent of the highest and lowest actual
per-pupil expenditure figures and disregard those LEAs that are funded above
and below those numbers, respectively.(7)
Zuni asserts the total number of
students is irrelevant to determining percentiles of per-pupil expenditures and
thus conflicts with the statute. We disagree.
Where a law entrusted to an agency's administration is ambiguous, or
where Congress implicitly or explicitly left a gap in the law to be filled in by the
agency through the formulation of policy or rules, "we must accept the agency's
position so long as it reflects a permissible construction of the language in
question." Hill v. Ibarra, 954 F.2d 1516, 1523 (10th Cir. 1992) (quotation
omitted). See also Chevron, 467 U.S. at 842-43. "Such an interpretation is
given
controlling weight unless it is arbitrary, capricious, or contrary to law."
McNamar v. Apfel, 172 F.3d 764, 766 (10th Cir. 1999).
When Congress passed 20 U.S.C. § 7709 in 1994, it codified the disparity
standard essentially as it appeared in the former regulations, albeit with an
unexplained and slight alteration to the wording regarding percentile exclusions.
Compare 34 C.F.R. § 222.63 (1993) and 34 C.F.R. pt. 222, subpt.
K, app. (1993)
with 20 U.S.C. § 7709(b). While the prior statutory scheme and regulations
made
clear that the percentiles were to be calculated by total student population, the
new statutory language is not as explicit: the precise language directs the
Secretary to "disregard local educational agencies with per-pupil expenditures or
revenues above the 95th percentile of such [per pupil] expenditures in the State".
20 U.S.C. § 7709(b)(2)(B)(i) (emphasis added). We agree with the Secretary's
determination that the statute is ambiguous:
[a]lthough the impact aid statute sets forth the parameters for
calculating state public education expenditures or revenues under the
disparity test, the statute does not contain a specific implementation
of the disparity test; instead, Congress left that gap to be filled by
regulation, which has been duly promulgated at an appendix to
subpart K of 34 CFR Part 222.
Rec., vol. III, doc. 25 at 3. In other words, we do not know what calculations
Congress intended by "such [per pupil] expenditures in the State." Even Zuni
conceded in its argument before the ALJ that the statute "may be ambiguous [as]
to the precise formula that is to be used." Id., doc. 16 at 10. The statute's
ambiguity,(8) coupled with the gap left by
Congress regarding the specific means
by which to implement the disparity test, requires us, in accordance with the
well-established rule laid out in Chevron, to give deference to the Secretary's
interpretation of the statute if we deem that interpretation to be reasonable or
"based on a permissible construction of the statute." Chevron, 467 U.S. at 843.
Based on our review of the statute, the regulations and the history accompanying
both, we cannot hold that the Department's construction of the statute and the
method by which it applied the disparity test was impermissible.
The statute mandates that the expenditures or revenue for each LEA be
calculated on a per pupil basis. See 20 U.S.C. § 7709(b)(2)(B)(i). The statute
then directs that those LEAs which fall above the ninety-fifth percentile or below
the fifth percentile of "such [per-pupil] expenditures or revenues in the state"
should be disregarded for the purpose of calculating the disparity standard. Id.
Because the statute mandates that expenditures or revenues be examined on a per-
pupil basis, we conclude the Department's method of determining the ninety-fifth
and fifth percentiles based on the total student enrollment in the state is a
permissible construction. Having already ranked the LEAs in descending order
by their per-pupil expenditures, it makes sense that the cut-off points for
percentiles would also be based on total student enrollment. Such an approach
supports the basic purpose of the percentile exclusion because it eliminates in a
fair and effective manner any unusual or noncharacteristic per-pupil revenues or
expenditures that may appear at the extremes of the range of LEAs in the state.
This is especially true for the State of New Mexico, which has predominately
small LEAs, several of which rank near the top of per-pupil expenditures. See
Rec., vol. I, doc. 4, attach. 4 at 1. To base the percentile calculation on LEAs,
rather than student population, would not further the goal of eliminating this
unusual distribution of per-pupil expenditures in New Mexico. As we previously
pointed out, the Department rejected determining percentiles solely on an LEA
basis for this very reason.
[B]asing an exclusion on numbers of districts would act to apply the
disparity standard in an unfair and inconsistent manner among
States. The purpose of the exclusion is to eliminate those anomalous
characteristics of a distribution of expenditures. In States with a
small number of large districts, an exclusion based on percentage of
school districts might exclude from the measure of disparity a
substantial percentage of the pupil population in those States.
Conversely, in States with large numbers of small districts, such an
approach might exclude only an insignificant fraction of the pupil
population and would not exclude anomalous characteristics.
41 Fed. Reg. 26324 (June 25, 1976). Finally, as detailed above, the Department's
method of calculating percentiles by student population comports with the
longstanding history surrounding such calculations.
There may exist some other, and perhaps even better, way to eliminate
anomalies in school district funding in New Mexico. However, given the large
number of small LEAs in the state, the Department's disparity calculation
methodology implements the statute in a manner that will give a more consistent
result when applied to a variety of state school systems. We need not conclude
the "agency construction was the only one it permissibly could have adopted to
uphold the construction, or even the reading [we] would have reached if the
question initially had risen in a judicial proceeding." Chevron, 467 U.S. at 843
n.11. Rather, we are compelled to "sustain the agency's determination if it is
based on a permissible construction of the statute." Yellow Transp., Inc., 537
U.S. at 45 (quotation omitted). Based on our analysis above, we hold that the
Department's construction of 20 U.S.C. § 7709(b)(2)(B)(i), through its
application of the disparity calculation methodology laid out in 34 C.F.R. §
222.162(a) and its accompanying appendix, is permissible, and therefore warrants
our deference under Chevron.
III
We turn next to Gallup-McKinley's argument challenging New Mexico's
offset of contributions to LEAs. We decline to devote any substantial analysis to
the merits of Gallup-McKinley's contention because we conclude it failed to raise
this issue in a sufficient manner before the agency below.
Congress limits state offsets for federal Impact Aid funding to a
"proportion to the share that local tax revenues covered under a State equalization
program are of total local tax revenues." 20 U.S.C. § 7709(d)(1)(B). The
corresponding regulation provides, in part, that "[d]eterminations of
proportionality must be made on a case-by-case basis for each LEA affected and
not on the basis of a general rule to be applied throughout a State." 34 C.F.R. §
222.163(a). On appeal, Gallup-McKinley complains that, in violation of the
regulatory language requiring the state to determine proportionality on a "case-by-case" basis,
New Mexico applies an across-the-board standard to its school
districts. Gallup-McKinley contends it raised this specific issue during oral
arguments before the ALJ.
In the course of the proceedings below, Gallup-McKinley outlined three
different methods by which it believed the proportional Impact Aid offset should
be calculated. One of these methods was admittedly presented to the ALJ for the
first time during oral arguments. Rec., vol. III, doc. 16 at 86-87. In that
argument, Gallup-McKinley asserted a method of determining proportionality that
conflicted with New Mexico's method. It was only at the very close of oral
argument that Gallup-McKinley made the most general of references to the
regulation's "case-by-case" language. Id. at 111-12. But Gallup-McKinley did
not present any argument to the ALJ, either during the course of oral argument or
in any of its initial written submissions to the judge, to explain why the State of
New Mexico's proportionality calculation allegedly violated the "case-by-case"
language appearing in 34 C.F.R. § 222.163(a) while its suggested method did not.
The ALJ asked the parties to include in their supplemental briefs a discussion of
whether Gallup-McKinley's additional method fell within the regulations. Id. at
102.
In their supplemental briefs to the ALJ, the State of New Mexico and
Department of Education appropriately focused their arguments on whether
Gallup-McKinley's newly proffered proportionality offset method fit within the
regulations. Gallup-McKinley did the same, claiming in conclusory fashion and
without any substantial discussion, argument, or analysis, that the regulation's
"case-by-case" language was violated by New Mexico's method. It never offered
any explanation as to why its suggested proportionality formula met the "case-by-case"
requirement while New Mexico's did not, id., doc. 17 at 4, and it still
offers no such explanation in its appeal brief to us.
In its opinion, the ALJ considered Gallup-McKinley's three different
interpretations of how 20 U.S.C. § 7709(d)(1) should be applied in light of the
general proportionality issues timely and sufficiently presented to it, and rejected
each as inconsistent with the statute and its corresponding regulation. Id., doc.
21 at 8-10. It did not mention the "case-by-case" language of the regulation. In
seeking review of the ALJ's decision to the Secretary of Education, Gallup-McKinley reframed
its challenge against the State of New Mexico's
proportionality offset determination, and stated the "sole issue" on appeal was
"whether determinations of proportionality must be made on a case-by-case basis
for each LEA or if it can be based upon a general rule applied throughout the
State." Id., doc. 23 at 2. In addressing Gallup-McKinley's appeal, the Secretary
limited its analysis to the more general proportionality issues that were presented
to the ALJ, and did not devote any discussion to Gallup-McKinley's new and
undeveloped "case-by-case" argument. Id., doc. 25 at 2 n.3.
It is well established that "in the absence of exceptional circumstances, a
reviewing court will refuse to consider contentions not presented before the
administrative proceeding at the appropriate time." Micheli v. Director, OWCP,
846 F.2d 632, 635 (10th Cir. 1988) (quoting Duncanson-Harrelson Co. v.
Director, OWCP, 644 F.2d 827, 832 (9th Cir. 1981) (further quotation omitted)).
Likewise,
[v]ague, arguable references to [a] point in the [lower] court
proceedings do not . . . preserve the issue on appeal. [W]here a
litigant changes to a new theory on appeal that falls under the same
general category as an argument present at trial or presents a theory
that was discussed in a vague and ambiguous way the theory will not
be considered on appeal.
Bancamerica Commercial Corp. v. Mosher Steel of Kansas, Inc., 100 F.3d 792,
798-99 (10th Cir. 1996) (citations and quotations omitted). Hence, when a
litigant fails to raise an issue below in a timely and clear fashion and the lower
court does not address the merits of the issue, the issue is not preserved for our
review. FDIC v. Noel, 177 F.3d 911, 915 (10th Cir. 1999).
Based on our review of the record, Gallup-McKinley's passing and
conclusory references to 34 C.F.R. § 222.163(a)'s "case-by-case" language
during oral argument and in its supplemental briefs to the ALJ are, at best,
ambiguous and vague. As a result, neither the ALJ nor the Secretary addressed
the merits of this potential argument. We therefore conclude that Gallup-McKinley failed to
preserve this issue for appeal, and we decline to address it.
The petition for review is DENIED.
01-9541 Zuni Public School Dist. v. Dep't of Education
O'BRIEN, dissenting.
The federal government makes payments for the benefit of local education
agencies (LEAs) to ameliorate costs incurred in educating federally connected
children. Such children include those residing on Indian lands. 20 U.S.C. §
7703(a)(1)(C). Quite reasonably, Congress wants the impact aid payments to be
applied for the intended (and expressed) purpose, not merely used as a federal
supplement for a state's general education needs. But the matter is complicated
because some states have equalized education spending, taking money from
wealthy LEAs to meet the needs of children in less fortunate ones. In truly
equalized states the special costs of educating federally connected children are
borne system-wide, rather than by the LEAs where those children reside.
Congress recognized the complication and dealt with it quite specifically in the
statutes. That is the backdrop for and focus of this litigation.
Plaintiff school districts contend that New Mexico has not equalized
education spending and therefore cannot count impact aid for LEAs as a local
resource.(1) They are correct. Because the
majority's decision defies express
statutory language, I respectfully dissent.
The relevant statute, 20 U.S.C. § 7709, prohibits a state from counting
federal Impact Aid payments as a resource in determining the amount of state aid
to be allocated to that LEA for free public education.(2)
But there is an exception
for a state with "a program . . . that equalizes expenditures for free public
education among local educational agencies in the State." 20 U.S.C. §
7709(b)(1). A state's educational spending is equalized--
if, in the second fiscal year preceding the fiscal year for which the
determination is made, the amount of per-pupil expenditures made by,
or per-pupil revenues available to, the local educational agency in the
State with the highest such per-pupil expenditures or revenues did not
exceed the amount of such per-pupil expenditures made by, or per-pupil
revenues available to, the local educational agency in the State with
the lowest such expenditures or revenues by more than 25 percent.
20 U.S.C. § 7709(b)(2)(A) (emphasis added). In making that determination
Congress directed the Secretary to "disregard local educational agencies [LEAs]
with per-pupil expenditures or revenues above the 95th percentile or below the
5th percentile of such expenditures or revenues in the State" as part of its
equalization determination. 20 U.S.C. § 7709(b)(2)(B)(I) (emphasis added); see
also 20 U.S.C. §§ 7702, 7703 and 7709(b)(1).
These requirements are unambiguous. A percentile is a mathematical
concept not admitting of multiple interpretations; it is a simple, straightforward
method of ranking an array of values. Attached to this dissent is Exhibit A. It
lists all of the 89 New Mexico LEAs along with the per-pupil revenue for each.(3)
Analysis of that array yields a value of $3,650.40 for the 95th percentile and
$2,803.80 for the 5th percentile. Five districts are above the 95th percentile and
five districts fall below the 5th percentile; they are excluded from further
analysis. After the exclusion, Gadsden district has the lowest per-pupil revenues
($2,829.00). When those revenues are multiplied by 125% the result is
$3,536.00, an amount less than the highest non-excluded district, Maxwell--with
per-pupil revenues of $3,591.00. The 25% test is not met. New Mexico has not
equalized school funding as statutorily required, therefore federal impact aid
cannot be counted as part of the LEAs' resources.
Eschewing a plain and simple reading of the statute, the Department of
Education has adopted regulations which it and, derivatively, the State of New
Mexico used to determine whether New Mexico has an equalized educational
funding system. The regulations essentially contradict and undermine the
provisions of the statute that authorizes them, 20 U.S.C. § 7709.(4)
Rather than abide the statutory command to apply a mathematical function
to an array of numbers, the Department adopted regulations directing a complex
and mystifying formula for determining which LEA's fall into the 5th and 95th
percentiles of per-pupil expenditures. 34 C.F.R. 222.162, et. seq. The
regulations start correctly by requiring LEAs to be arrayed according to their per-pupil
expenditures (or revenues). Next, and inexplicably, they require a
calculation of 5 percent of the total number of pupils in the state. The number of
LEAs necessary to use up 5% of the state's student population at both ends of the
list are eliminated from consideration in applying the 25% formula. Then the
per-pupil expenditures of the highest and lowest remaining LEAs are used to
determine whether there is less than a 25% disparity in funding and, therefore,
"equalization." That seems quite at odds with the statute's directive to disregard
LEAs "with per-pupil expenditures or revenues above the 95th percentile or
below the 5th percentile of such expenditures or revenues in the State." I cannot
join the majority in putting the Court's imprimatur on an unwieldy scheme utterly
at odds with clear statutory language.
Review of this regulatory framework begins and ends with Chevron U.S.A.,
Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837 (1984). In
reviewing an agency's construction of a statute it administers, we must first ask
whether Congress has directly spoken on the precise question at issue. If the
statute is silent or ambiguous, the inquiry is whether the agency's interpretation is
a permissible construction of the statute. Id. at 842-43. However, when the
statute is clear and unambiguous, further "interpretation" is not only unnecessary,
it is prohibited. Id.; see also Regions Hosp. v. Shalala, 522 U.S. 448, 457
(1998). Unlike the majority, I am not convinced we need to look beyond the
statute to find the precise formula for measuring equalization.
Statutes should be read to avoid rather than beget ambiguity. Here, § 7709
instructs the Secretary to "disregard LEAs with per-pupil expenditures or
revenues above the 95th percentile or below the 5th percentile of such
expenditures or revenues in the State." The focus is upon LEAs, not upon the
number of pupils. Moreover, Congress was concerned with ranking LEAs by
expenditure (or resource) "percentiles," rather than by the number or percentage
of students. The words Congress chose are not coincidental, nor are we allowed
to indulge in presumptions, despite our own personal predilections. Conn. Nat'l
Bank v. Germain, 503 U.S. 249, 253-54 (1992) ("[C]ourts must presume that a
legislature says in a statute what it means and means in a statute what it says
there.") (citations omitted).(5)
The Department's approach not only undermines the plain language of the
statue, but also its purpose. "There is . . . no more persuasive evidence of the
purpose of a statute than the words by which the legislature undertook to give
expression to its wishes." United States v. Am. Trucking Ass'ns, 310 U.S. 534,
543 (1940). The stated purpose in providing Impact Aid is to "fulfill the Federal
responsibility to assist with the provision of educational services to federally
connected children in a manner that promotes control by local educational
agencies with little or no Federal or State involvement." 20 U.S.C. § 7701
(emphasis added). Focusing on the needs of individual LEAs rather than on the
entire state school population also flows into the understanding of § 7709, for its
focus is on examining "the amount of per-pupil expenditures made by, or per-pupil revenues
available to, the local educational agency in the State . . . ." 20
U.S.C. § 7709(b)(2)(A) (emphasis added).
In support of its conclusion that the statute is ambiguous, the majority
emphasizes 1994 events saying that Congress codified the disparity standard in
20 U.S.C. § 7709 "essentially as it appeared in the former regulations," which
allowed for the percentile calculation to be based on the total student enrollment
in the state. Majority Op. at 15. The statement might be persuasive if it were not
manifestly untrue. The entire basis for this case is the difference in language
between the 1994 statute, which by its terms does not allow for a population
based calculation, and the pre-existing regulations that expressly did. If
Congress had adopted a standard that was "essentially" the same as the pre-existing regulations,
it would not have altered the language of the statute to
require that the calculation be based on per-pupil expenditures or revenues of
"local educational agencies." While the majority may consider such a difference
an "unexplained and slight alteration," such a conclusion ignores the strong
presumption that Congress chooses its words carefully and with full knowledge
of administrative interpretations. "Congress is presumed to be aware of an
administrative . . . interpretation of a statute and to adopt that interpretation when
it re-enacts a statute without change." Lorillard v. Pons, 434 U.S. 575
(1978)
(emphasis added).(6) The fact that Congress
adopted a disparity standard different
from the clearly articulated pre-existing regulations is evidence that Congress
rejected, rather than adopted, the total student enrollment standard.
The majority observes, "There may exist some other, and perhaps even
better, way to eliminate anomalies in school district funding in New Mexico."
Maj. Op. at 18. Nevertheless it concludes the Department's construction is a
permissible one. I posit that the Department's method of handling the 5th/95th
percentile exclusion may be the superior one, but it is not the one ordained by
Congress.
1.In outlining the general parameters for
determining whether a state is
equalized, 20 U.S.C. § 7709(b)(2) provides:
(A) . . . [A] program of State aid equalizes expenditures among local
educational agencies if, in the second fiscal year preceding the fiscal
year for which the determination is made, the amount of per-pupil
expenditures made by . . . the local educational agency in the State
with the highest such per-pupil expenditures or revenues did not
exceed the amount of such per-pupil expenditures made by . . . the
local educational agency in the State with the lowest such
expenditures or revenues by more than 25 percent. (B) . . . In
making a determination under this subsection, the Secretary shall--
20 U.S.C. § 7709(b)(2). The corresponding regulation uses similar language.
The Secretary considers that a State aid program equalizes
expenditures if the disparity in the amount of current expenditures or
revenues per pupil for free public education among LEAs in the State
is no more than 25 percent. In determining the disparity percentage,
the Secretary disregards LEAs with per pupil expenditures or
revenues above the 95th or below the 5th percentile of those
expenditures or revenues in the State. The method for calculating the
percentage of disparity in a State is in the appendix to this subpart.
34 C.F.R. § 222.162(a).
2.In New Mexico, local educational agencies
(LEAs) are called school
districts.
3.Section 7709(d)(1) states: If a State has
in effect a program of State aid for free public
education in any fiscal year, which is designed to equalize
expenditures for free public education among the local educational
agencies of that State, payments under this subchapter for any fiscal
year may be taken into consideration by such State in determining the
relative (A) financial resources available to local educational
agencies in that State; and (B) financial need of such agencies for the
provision of free public education for children served by such
agency, except that a State may consider as local resources funds
received under this subchapter only in proportion to the share that
local tax revenues covered under a State equalization program are of
total local tax revenues.
20 U.S.C. § 7709(d)(1). The regulation re-articulates the statutory directive and
also indicates that "[d]eterminations of proportionality must be made on a case-by-case basis for
each LEA affected and not on the basis of a general rule to be
applied throughout a State." 34 C.F.R. § 222.163(a).
4.Due to its interest in this controversy, the
State of New Mexico was
permitted by the ALJ to intervene below. Likewise, this court granted New
Mexico's motion to intervene as a party in this case on appeal. However, we deny
New Mexico's October 30, 2003, motion to supplement the record with a
supplemental appendix adding material that was not before the administrative
agency.
5.See 20 U.S.C. § 240(d)
(1982) (repealed by Pub.L. 103-182, Title III, §
333(b), Oct. 20, 1994, 108 Stat. 3965) ("[I]f a State has in effect a program of
State aid for free public education for any fiscal year, which is designed to
equalize expenditures for free public education among the local educational
agencies of that State," Impact Aid payments may be taken into account.).
6.In 1996, after the Department's promulgation
of the Impact Aid
regulations, Congress revisited the Impact Aid laws "to make clarifying and
technical amendments with respect to the Impact Aid program and to address
problems related to Impact Aid payments which have national application." H.R.
No. 104-560, at 1 (1996), reprinted in 1996 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2894, 2894. None of
the concerns raised or amendments made in the 1996 changes to the Impact Aid
law addressed in any manner the disparity test outlined in 20 U.S.C. § 7709 or the
regulations promulgated to support it.
7.Under Zuni's first proffered method, Zuni
eliminated the top five and
bottom five LEAs and then calculated the disparity between the newly top and
bottom ranked LEAs at 26.93%. See Aplt. br. at 12, n.1. Under its second
method, Zuni calculated the disparity between the highest and lowest ranked
LEAs at 117.4%. Id. at 13, n.2.
8.This ambiguity is highlighted by Zuni's own
proffer of two different
approaches for making the disparity calculation, which result in different
outcomes. See infra note 6.
1.When impact aid is counted as part of an
LEA's local resources it reduces
the amount of state aid to the LEA.
2. 20 U.S.C. § 7709(a) General
prohibition
Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section, a State may not--
(1) consider payments under this subchapter in determining for
any fiscal year--
(A) the eligibility of a local educational agency for State
aid for free public education; or
(B) the amount of such aid; or
(2) make such aid available to local educational agencies in a
manner that results in less State aid to any local educational agency
that is eligible for such payment than such agency would receive if
such agency were not so eligible.
3. It uses the 1999-2000 data supplied by the
parties and was produced
using Microsoft's "Excel" spreadsheet program. Once the districts and per-pupil
spending were listed the program's percentile function (=PERCENTILE ([first
cell- Moscero district]:[last cell- Des Moines district],0.95) was applied to the
array and returned the numbers for the 95th percentile and 5th percentile. No
manipulation or massaging of the data was necessary.
4. The Department ignored 1994 statutory
changes, clinging instead to
contrary past practices. See Majority Op. at 11-13. It now argues, and the
majority accepts, that its historical practice of using "pupils in attendance in the
schools of those agencies" is congruent with the statutory language "per-pupil
expenditures or revenues." As Justice Scalia said in a different context, "they are
as similar as chalk and cheese." Blakely v. Washington, 124 S. Ct. 2531, 1237
(2004).
5. The subsection's title "Computation," 20
U.S.C. § 7709(b)(2), suggests
that Congress had a particular formula in mind, the one it adopted.
6. "This selectivity that Congress exhibited
in incorporating provisions and
in modifying certain FLSA practices strongly suggests that but for those changes
Congress expressly made, it intended to incorporate fully the remedies and
procedures of the FLSA". Id. at 582 (emphasis added).
ZUNI PUBLIC SCHOOL DISTRICT
NO. 89; GALLUP-MCKINLEY
COUNTY PUBLIC SCHOOL
DISTRICT NO. 1,
No. 01-9541
Ronald J. VanAmberg, of Roth, VanAmberg, Rogers, Ortiz, Fairbanks & Yepa,
LLP, Santa Fe, New Mexico, for Petitioner, Zuni Public School District No. 89.
Before SEYMOUR, HENRY and
O'BRIEN, Circuit Judges.
SEYMOUR, Circuit Judge.
Impact Aid Disparity for 1999-2000
District
Revenue/Member
1
Mosquero
$6,520.00
2
Corona
$5,791.00
3
Los Alamos
$5,611.00
4
Vaughn
$4,641.00
5
Hondo Valley
$3,690.00
1st district ABOVE 95th Percentile
6
Maxwell
$3,591.00
$3,650.40 = 95th Percentile
7
Mora
$3,530.00
8
Roy
$3,516.00
9
Logan
$3,484.00
10
Cuba
$3,404.00
11
Silver City
$3,391.00
12
Texico
$3,335.00
13
Zuni
$3,320.00
14
Springer
$3,295.00
15
Jemez Valley
$3,286.00
16
Ruidoso
$3,278.00
17
Tatum
$3,266.00
18
Penasco
$3,259.00
19
Raton
$3,249.00
20
Tularosa
$3,246.00
21
Bernalillo
$3,244.00
22
Las Vegas West
$3,241.00
23
Mesa Vista
$3,233.00
24
Hatch
$3,206.00
25
Loving
$3,204.00
26
Mountainair
$3,195.00
27
Cobre
$3,194.00
28
Melrose
$3,187.00
29
Taos
$3,164.00
30
Pojoaque
$3,155.00
31
Wagon Mound
$3,154.00
32
Carlsbad
$3,152.00
33
Clayton
$3,151.00
34
Espanola
$3,147.00
35
Jemez Mountain
$3,123.00
36
Las Vegas City
$3,122.00
37
Ft. Sumner
$3,100.00
38
Magdalena
$3,092.00
39
Jal
$3,091.00
40
Cimarron
$3,088.00
41
Reserve
$3,087.00
42
Lordsburg
$3,074.00
43
Albuquerque
$3,071.00
44
Chama
$3,065.00
45
San Jon
$3,059.00
46
Questa
$3,054.00
47
Santa Fe
$3,050.00
48
Grants
$3,035.00
49
Pecos
$3,033.00
50
Central
$3,027.00
51
Santa Rosa
$3,011.00
52
Elida
$3,006.00
53
Estancia
$3,002.00
54
Dora
$2,996.00
55
Roswell
$2,992.00
56
Clovis
$2,983.00
57
Alamogordo
$2,982.00
58
Tucumcari
$2,975.00
59
Animas
$2,975.00
60
Portales
$2,975.00
61
Las Cruces
$2,974.00
62
Socorro
$2,968.00
63
Bloomfield
$2,968.00
64
Artesia
$2,964.00
65
Lovington
$2,963.00
66
Capitan
$2,962.00
67
Rio Rancho
$2,959.00
68
Belen
$2,948.00
69
Farmington
$2,948.00
70
Truth or Cons.
$2,945.00
71
Aztec
$2,942.00
72
House
$2,936.00
73
Grady
$2,915.00
74
Deming
$2,912.00
75
Los Lunas
$2,887.00
76
Cloudcroft
$2,884.00
77
Dexter
$2,883.00
78
Carrizozo
$2,880.00
79
Moriarty
$2,870.00
80
Gallup
$2,861.00
81
Quemado
$2,858.00
82
Eunice
$2,849.00
83
Hobbs
$2,848.00
84
Gadsden
$2,829.00
$2,803.80 = 5th Percentile
85
Lake Arturn
$2,787.00
1st district below 5th Percentile
86
Dulce
$2,783.00
87
Hagerman
$2,777.00
88
Floyd
$2,725.00
89
Des Moines
$2,672.00
Total
$284,095.00
Mean
$3,192.08
Median
$3,059.00
95th Percentile
$3,650.40
5th Percentile
$2,803.80
Click footnote number to return to corresponding location in the text.
(i) disregard local educational agencies with per-pupil expenditures
or revenues above the 95th percentile or below the 5th percentile of
such expenditures or revenues in the State; and (ii) take into account
the extent to which a program of State aid reflects the additional cost
of providing free public education in particular types of local
educational agencies, such as those that are geographically isolated,
or to particular types of students, such as children with disabilities.
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