OPINION AND ORDER
Before the court is defendants’ motion to dismiss pursuant, to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. For reasons stated below, the motion is granted.
FACTS
On September 23, 1992, after classes let out at roughly 3:05 p.m., plaintiff Kurt Wiemerslage (“Wiemerslage”), a high school freshman, exited Maine Township High School South and for a short period of time stood with a friend in an area immediately adjacent to. the school that is commonly referred to as the Hamlin Gate Area, an entrance and exit area located near the fieldhouse on the east side of the school’s campus. Wiemerslage stood on the public sidewalk, outside of the school property, and waited as two other students joined him. The group congregated for a brief time, discussing their immediate plans, when defendant Officer Thomas Swoboda (“Swoboda”) approached them.
Swoboda, a security officer retained by defendant Maine Township High School Distinct 207, had observed the four students on the public way. The officer, after taking their names and other information, reported this activity to the school’s superintendent, indicating that the students were loitering near a garage located halfway between Hamlin Avenue and Home Avenue. He cited them for violating the school’s disciplinary rule against loitering in the Hamlin Gate Area.
The Maine Township High School District 207’s manual outlining disciplinary procedures states, “Students are not permitted in off-limits areas at any time. The designation of these areas will be presented to students by the school administration.” In August, 1992, defendant principal Thomas J. Cachur (“principal Cachur”) sent a letter to parents which stated that “the Hamlin Gate area continues to be designated as an off-limits area.” The letter continued, ‘While students can use this area to enter or leave the school campus before and after school, loitering is not permitted in this area. A three-day sus *139 pension will be given to any student who is present in this area.” The Hamlin Gate Area was placed off limits to students because community members in the area had complained about students’ lack of respect for their property and disregard for traffic safety regulations.
The next day, defendant Judy Bovenmyer (“dean'Bovenmyer”), the Dean of Students at the high school,' advised Wiemerslage that he was observed in violation of the loitering rule. Dean Bovenmyer informed Wiemerslage that he was to be suspended from school for three days foi loitering in the Hamlin Gate Area and advised his parents of the incident, the discussion, and the suspension. Wiemerslage’s parents later met with dean Bovenmyer to review the matter after receiving the notification letter from her. A second informal hearing was also conducted, this time with principal Cachur. Following the second hearing, Wiemerslage’s father requested a formal hearing into the suspension and in October 1992 a formal hearing was conducted. After the formal hearing, Wiemerslage’s parents were notified that the Board of Education of Maine Township High School District 207 let the suspension stand.
Wiemerslage filed a single count complaint alleging that the defendants violated his rights to free speech and assembly under the first amendment, applicable through the fourteenth amendment, and also that the school’s loitering rule violates due process under the fourteenth amendment. Wiemerslage claims in conclusory fashion that the defendants’ aforementioned acts violated his right to exercise freedom of speech and assembly, and that defendants collectively acted with the intent of depriving Wiemerslage of these first amendment rights. Further, Wiemerslage maintains the disciplinary rule impermissibly controls the non-academic actions of school students on a public way beyond the boundaries of school property, is unconstitutionally vague on its face and as applied to his conduct, and fails to provide any procedural guidelines assuring prompt judicial review of a suspension.
DISCUSSION
On a motion to dismiss, the court accepts all well-pleaded factual allegations as true, as well as all reasonable inferences drawn from those allegations.
Mid America Title Co. v. Kirk,
Federal judicial intervention in the day to day operations of public schools is highly undesirable and requires significant restraint. Federal courts must not “intervene in the resolution of conflicts which arise in the daily operation of school systems and which do not directly and sharply implicate basic constitutional values.”
Epperson v. Arkansas,
The primary challenge Wiemerslage mounts against the disciplinary rule disallowing loitering in the Hamlin Gate Area is that of vagueness. The vagueness doctrine guarantees that legal prohibitions will be clearly defined.
Grayned v. City of Rockford,
The court recognizes the potential vagueness of the word “loitering” and also the failure of the disciplinary rule to provide a definition that would cast the word in narrow terms.
1
Notwithstanding these concerns, vagueness considerations do not apply equally in all situations; the degree of clarity required of an enactment depends on the nature of the enactment.
Village of Hoffman Estates v. Flipside Hoffman Estates, Inc.,
The disciplinary rule prohibiting loitering in the Hamlin Gate Area gives parents and students a clear and specific explanation of the prohibited conduct. The August 1992 letter makes it plain that students may pass through this area to and from school but may not pause to congregate. At a minimum, *141 “loiter” means “to delay ... with aimless idle stops and pauses” and “to remain in an area for no obvious reason.” Webster’s Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary 703 (1986). It also is defined as “to linger aimlessly or as if aimlessly in or about a place,” “to move in a slow, idle manner; make purposeless stops in the course of a[n] ... errand,” “to waste time and “to pass (time) in an idle or aimless manner....” Webster’s Encyclopedic Unabridged Dictionary of the English Language 843 (1989). These simple dictionary definitions of loitering are sufficiently clear to place an average student on notice of what conduct is prohibited.
. Moreover, like the ordinance in
Grayned,
the high school’s loitering rule is written specifically for the school context where the prohibited conduct is easily measured against the normal activities of the school.
Grayned,
Wiemerslage attacks the use of the phrase “Hamlin Gate Area.” Although conceding that it is common knowledge within the school population that the Hamlin Gate is the particular fence gate that is situated adjacent to the public street known as “Hamlin Avenue,” Wiemerslage questions whether the area coyered' by the disciplinary rule extends to the fence-gate proper or for some distance. beyond the fence away from the school property. The court does not find the term troubling. “Condemned to the use of words, we can never expect mathematical certainty from our language.”
Id.
at 110,
The concern that the loitering rule places unfettered discretion in the hands of school officials is tenuous. School officials are afforded broad discretion in enforcement of school codes because of the important interests and responsibilities affiliated with school administration.
Pico,
The court now turns to Wiemerslage’s procedural due ' process challenge: that the loitering- disciplinary rule fails to provide for judicial review. The complaint reveals that Wiemerslage and his parents received formal notice of the charges and obtained two informal hearings and one formal hearing into the matter. The formal hearing allowed for the presence of an attorney. Wiemerslage has received more process than was due a three-day suspension.
Linwood,
To impose in each such case even truncated trial-type procedures might well overwhelm administrative facilities in many places and, by diverting resources, cost more than it would save in educational effectiveness. Moreover, further formalizing the suspension process and escalating its formality and adversary nature may not only make it too costly as a regular disciplinary tool but also destroy its effectiveness as part of the teaching process.
Goss,
Turning to Wiemerslage’s free speech and assembly challenge, the court can summarily dispose of the issue. Wiemerslage does not' allege the loitering rule is specifically aimed at regulating the content of speech nor does he successfully- allege that the rule was enforced in his case to suppress a particular message he was attempting to promulgate. The complaint reveals that Wiemerslage and his friends were not assembled to protest, demonstrate, march, parade, or rally, but were instead speaking of upcoming recreation. The court recognizes that “personal intercommunication among the students” may enjoy limited protection.
Tinker,
Rather than a work of painstaking particularity, the language of the loitering disciplinary rule is indeed flexible and broad. But flexibility and reasonable breadth are acceptable as long as it is clear what the rule as a whole prohibits.
See Grayned,
CONCLUSION
The court grants the defendants’ motion to dismiss pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) for the reasons discussed above.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Various courts have had, on numerous occasions, the opportunity to address vagueness and overbreadth concerns of anti-loitering and similar statutes and ordinances.
See, e.g., Kolender,
