Home Langhorne-Levittown Times Commonwealth Court dismisses lawsuit over mask mandate

Commonwealth Court dismisses lawsuit over mask mandate

Nine parents from Pennsbury and other districts argued that school boards don’t have the authority to mandate masks

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The Commonwealth Court recently dismissed a lawsuit filed against the Pennsylvania Secretary of Education and five school districts, including Pennsbury, over mask mandates.

Nine parents of school-aged children sued Pennsbury and other school districts in Allegheny County, Monroe County, the Lehigh Valley and Pittsburgh, as well as Pennsylvania Secretary of Education Noe Ortega, arguing that local school districts have no authority to require students and visitors to wear masks during a pandemic and that Ortega was wrong to advise them as such.

It started with a November 2021 email sent to school districts throughout Pennsylvania. Ortega wrote, in part, “school entities still possess the authority and are encouraged to require masks in their facilities as recommended by [the] CDC,” as noted in the 19-page ruling.

Plaintiffs contended that Ortega “erred by advising the school district respondents that they could enact masking policies” and that school districts “lack the authority to implement mandates,” according to the ruling.

In her conclusion, Commonwealth Court Judge Christine Fizzano Cannon wrote that Ortega’s advice “was not an order, directive, requirement or mandate” and said the petition for review was “moot” since schools no longer require masks.

Rudolph Clarke, LLC partner Peter Amuso and attorney Samantha Newell represented Pennsbury School District in the matter.

“Through the school code, our legislature has granted local school boards broad power to protect students based on local conditions,” said Amuso. “We were proud to protect those broad powers for Pennsbury and our other school district clients, and for all school districts across the commonwealth. We continue to be ready to assist our clients facing these complex safety issues.”

In addition to representing Pennsbury, Amuso coordinated the efforts of the attorneys representing the Secretary of Education, as well as the other school districts, along with attorneys from the Pennsylvania School Boards Association, who filed a brief supporting the districts’ position.

On Oct. 11, Amuso argued in front of the Commonwealth Court that school districts do have the authority under Section 510 of the Public School Code to require masks.

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