Pulaski County Special School District v. Russell R. Racop - FOIA Disclosure
Summary
Arkansas Court of Appeals affirmed that the Pulaski County Special School District must disclose personnel records (suspension records of certified employees) under the Arkansas Freedom of Information Act. The court rejected the District's argument that suspensions were not "final" until presented to the school board, holding that suspensions reach "final administrative resolution" when issued by the superintendent.
What changed
The Arkansas Court of Appeals affirmed the circuit court's order requiring the Pulaski County Special School District to disclose personnel records related to certified employee suspensions under the Arkansas Freedom of Information Act. The District argued that suspensions were not "final" because they had not been presented to the school board, but the court held that suspensions reach "final administrative resolution" when issued by the superintendent.
For public schools and government agencies in Arkansas, this ruling establishes that suspension records must be disclosed upon issuance of the suspension decision, not delayed pending board review. Districts must update FOIA response procedures and train staff on this clarified standard to ensure compliance with disclosure obligations.
What to do next
- Update FOIA response procedures to disclose suspension records upon issuance without awaiting school board review
- Train staff on the "final administrative resolution" standard for personnel actions under Arkansas FOIA
- Review pending FOIA requests for personnel records to ensure compliance with this ruling
Archived snapshot
Apr 8, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Jump To
Support FLP
CourtListener is a project of Free
Law Project, a federally-recognized 501(c)(3) non-profit. Members help support our work and get special access to features.
Please become a member today.
April 8, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note
Pulaski County Special School District; Charles McNulty, in His Official Capacity as Superintendent of the Pulaski County Special School District and Custodian of Certain Records; And Valerie Bailey, in Her Official Capacity as Public Information Specialist v. Russell R. Racop
Court of Appeals of Arkansas
- Citations: 2026 Ark. App. 220
Docket Number: Unknown
Combined Opinion
Cite as 2026 Ark. App. 220
ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
DIVISION II
No. CV-25-53
PULASKI COUNTY SPECIAL SCHOOL Opinion Delivered April 8, 2026
DISTRICT; CHARLES MCNULTY, IN
APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI
HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS
COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT,
SUPERINTENDENT OF THE PULASKI
SEVENTEENTH DIVISION
COUNTY SPECIAL SCHOOL
[NO. 60CV-24-4563]
DISTRICT AND CUSTODIAN OF
CERTAIN RECORDS; AND VALERIE
BAILEY, IN HER OFFICIAL CAPACITY HONORABLE MACKIE M. PIERCE,
AS PUBLIC INFORMATION JUDGE
SPECIALIST
APPELLANTS
V.
RUSSELL R. RACOP AFFIRMED
APPELLEE
ROBERT J. GLADWIN, Judge
Appellants, Pulaski County Special School District; Charles McNulty, in his official
capacity as superintendent and custodian of certain records; and Valerie Bailey, in her official
capacity as public information specialist (collectively, the “District”), appeal from the circuit
court’s order requiring disclosure of certain personnel records pursuant to the Arkansas
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), Arkansas Code Annotated sections 25-19-101 to -112
(Repl. 2024). The circuit court concluded that the suspensions referenced in appellee Russell
R. Racop’s request had reached a “final administrative resolution” within the meaning of
Arkansas Code Annotated section 25-19-105(c)(1). The District argues that the suspensions
were not final because the matters had not been presented to the District’s school board. We
affirm.
Racop submitted a FOIA request seeking certain personnel records related to certified
employees who had been suspended with or without pay. The request referenced an email
sent by the District identifying multiple certified employees who had received suspensions.
The District denied the request, asserting that the requested records constituted employee-
evaluation or job-performance records that were exempt from disclosure because the
disciplinary matters had not reached a final administrative resolution.
Racop appealed the denial to the circuit court. Following a hearing, the circuit court
found that the employees referenced in Racop’s request had no remaining administrative
appeals available within the District’s policies and procedures and that the suspensions had
therefore reached a final administrative resolution under the FOIA. The court ordered the
requested records produced subject to the statutory redactions permitted by section 25-19-
105(b) pursuant to its order filed on October 2, 2024.
The District filed a motion for findings of fact and conclusions of law on October 9,
which was deemed denied due to lack of action by the circuit court. The District filed its
timely notice of appeal on October 29, and this appeal followed.
The FOIA was enacted to ensure that public business is performed in an open and
public manner. See Ark. Code Ann. § 25-19-102. Accordingly, the act is liberally construed
in favor of disclosure, and exemptions are narrowly construed. See Ark. State Police v. Wren,
2
2016 Ark. 188, 491 S.W.3d 124; Pulaski Cnty. v. Ark. Democrat-Gazette, Inc., 370 Ark. 435,
260 S.W.3d 718 (2007); Young v. Rice, 308 Ark. 593, 826 S.W.2d 252 (1992). Issues of
statutory interpretation are reviewed de novo. See Ark. Dep’t of Corr. v. Shults, 2017 Ark. 300,
529 S.W.3d 628. Although we defer to the circuit court’s factual findings unless they are
clearly erroneous, we review de novo the ultimate question of whether records must be
disclosed under the FOIA. See Myers v. Fecher, 2021 Ark. 230, 638 S.W.3d 495.
Under section 25-19-105(c)(1), employee-evaluation or job-performance records are
subject to disclosure only when three conditions are met: (1) there has been a final
administrative resolution of a suspension or termination proceeding; (2) the records formed
a basis for the decision to suspend or terminate the employee; and (3) there is a compelling
public interest in disclosure. The dispute in this case concerns the first requirement—whether
the suspensions identified in Racop’s request had reached a “final administrative
resolution.”
The District argues that a disciplinary matter cannot reach a final administrative
resolution until the matter is presented to the District’s school board. Because the
suspensions at issue were not reviewed by the board, the District contends that the
disciplinary proceedings remained incomplete.
We agree with the circuit court’s finding that the FOIA does not support such a rigid
interpretation. The statute requires only that there be a “final administrative resolution” of
a suspension or termination proceeding; it does not require that the matter proceed to the
highest governing authority of the public entity before the resolution becomes final.
3
Arkansas appellate courts have explained that a final administrative resolution occurs
when the disciplinary decision has been made and the employing entity’s internal
administrative process has been completed. See Hyman v. Sadler, 2018 Ark. App. 82, 539
S.W.3d 642; Thomas v. Hall, 2012 Ark. 66, 399 S.W.3d 387; Stilley v. McBride, 332 Ark. 306,
965 S.W.2d 125 (1998).
Here, the circuit court found that the suspensions referenced in Racop’s FOIA
request had reached the end of the District’s disciplinary process and that no additional
administrative review remained available within the District. That finding is supported by
the record. Although the circuit court acknowledged that it is a vague area of the law and
that the statute is not clear on that particular provision, it analogized the disciplinary process
to the appellate process within the court system in making its decision. Specifically, the
circuit court referenced that the District’s policy provides the levels of appeal: from the
principal’s decision to the superintendent, from there to the school board, and finally from
there to the circuit court. The policy provides a window of time within which such a decision
may be appealed from one level to the next, similar to a circuit court order being appealed
to this court or the Arkansas Supreme Court.
The circuit court pointed out that if no appeal is taken within the applicable time
limit, and no further internal administrative review remains available, the disciplinary matter
has reached a final administrative resolution for purposes of the FOIA. There is no language
in the statute requiring the possibility of additional discretionary review by a governing body
in order for the resolution to be final. Any exemption from disclosure is to be narrowly
4
construed, and the keeper of the requested records has the burden of proving the records
are exempt from disclosure. See Ark. Dep’t of Com. v. Legal Aid of Ark., 2022 Ark. 130, 645
S.W.3d 9.
The District also argues that the available administrative remedies had not been
exhausted because the disciplinary matters were not presented to the school board. The
exhaustion doctrine requires only that available administrative remedies be pursued before
resorting to the courts. When no additional administrative remedies remain available within
the agency or governmental entity, exhaustion has occurred. Because the circuit court
determined that the suspensions had reached the end of the District’s administrative process
and that no further review was available, logic dictates that the available administrative
remedies had been exhausted.
The District relies primarily on Davis v. Van Buren School District, 2019 Ark. App. 157,
572 S.W.3d 545, but we hold that Davis does not control under these particular facts. In
Davis, we held that the requested records were exempt from disclosure because the employee
had voluntarily resigned during the employer’s investigation before any disciplinary decision
had been reached. Id. The employee’s resignation ended the disciplinary process before the
employer could reach a final administrative resolution. Id.
The circumstances in this case are materially different. The employees whose records
are at issue did not resign during an ongoing investigation. Instead, disciplinary action in
the form of suspension was imposed through the District’s administrative process. The
circuit court found that those suspensions had reached the end of the District’s disciplinary
5
policy and procedures and that no further administrative review remained available. Thus,
unlike the proceedings in Davis, the disciplinary proceedings here were completed rather
than prematurely terminated by the employee’s resignation. Because the suspensions reached
the end of the District’s administrative process, the statutory requirement of a final
administrative resolution was satisfied.
In light of the FOIA’s strong presumption in favor of disclosure and the narrow
construction given to its exemptions, we hold that the circuit court correctly concluded that
the suspensions in question had reached a final administrative resolution and that any
available administrative remedies had been exhausted. Accordingly, the circuit court did not
err in ordering the District to produce the requested records subject to the redactions
permitted by the FOIA.
Affirmed.
VIRDEN and THYER, JJ., agree.
Bequette, Billingsley & Kees, P.A., by: Jay Bequette and W. Cody Kees, for appellants.
Russell Racop, pro se appellee.
6
Named provisions
Related changes
Get daily alerts for Arkansas Court of Appeals
Daily digest delivered to your inbox.
Free. Unsubscribe anytime.
About this page
Every important government, regulator, and court update from around the world. One place. Real-time. Free. Our mission
Source document text, dates, docket IDs, and authority are extracted directly from Arkansas Ct. App..
The summary, classification, recommended actions, deadlines, and penalty information are AI-generated from the original text and may contain errors. Always verify against the source document.
Classification
Who this affects
Taxonomy
Browse Categories
Get alerts for this source
We'll email you when Arkansas Court of Appeals publishes new changes.
Subscribed!
Optional. Filters your digest to exactly the updates that matter to you.