Ruth Mitchell petitions for review of action by the Leon County School Board adopting, on April 1, 1975, a staff reorganization plan which among other things discontinued several county-level positions in the Pupil Personnel Services Department and consolidated their functions. Among the positions terminated was supervisor of guidance and testing, in which Dr. Mitchell held a continuing contract at $19,435.29 per year. Another aspect of this matter was decided in School Board of Leon County v. Mitchell, 346 So.2d 562 (Fla. 1st DCA 1977). Dr. Mitchell contends the Board’s action was arbitrary and not justified by its ostensible purpose of economy; that the Board’s action constituted rulemaking1 in which the Board failed to comply with the APA requirement, since repealed, that a copy of proposed rules be filed with the Division of Administrative Hearings, Department of Administration (DOAH), 21 days before the intended action;2 and that the Board erred in failing to afford Dr. Mitchell, as one whose substantial interests were to be determined, a Section 120.57(1) hearing.
The school code provided:
“(e) Each person to whom a continuing contract has been issued as provided herein shall be entitled to continue in his position or in a similar position in the district at the salary schedule authorized by the school board without the necessity for annual nomination or reappointment until such time as the position is discontinued, the person resigns or his contractual status is changed as prescribed below.
“(g) Any person who has previously earned continuing contract status as a
*807supervisor or principal in the school district shall be continued in that status until such time as the position is discontinued, the person resigns, or his contractual status is changed by mutual agreement or as prescribed below.” Section 231.36(3), Florida Statutes (Supp.1974) (emphasis added).
There has been no showing that the Board acted arbitrarily, with impermissible motives, or otherwise in violation of the school code or Dr. Mitchell’s contract by discontinuing the county position of supervisor of guidance and testing as part of reorganization for economy.3 While the Board could not lawfully discontinue that position merely to evade Dr. Mitchell’s tenured claim on it, and the stated economic justification for the action would be suspect if the position’s former functions were assigned without others to a new position or divided between two new positions carrying more aggregated salary, those conditions do not appear here. The former functions of the supervisor of guidance and testing were divided and assigned to the new positions of coordinator of career guidance and counseling and coordinator of research and evaluation, which also absorbed functions of other discontinued positions. The reorganization was part of the Board’s response to an anticipated reduction of revenue during the school year 1975-76 by three to five million dollars. While Dr. Mitchell’s counsel asserted before the Board that “we feel [the reorganization plan] to be a subterfuge,” no particulars were stated or substantiated.
Assuming without deciding that the entire reorganization plan, including elements not here mentioned, was of such general and pervasive applicability in the system’s organization to constitute a rule, the Board’s failure to file a copy of the proposed reorganization plan with DOAH, as then required by the APA, was neither fatal to the action nor prejudicial to Dr. Mitchell. Rule challenge proceedings were not self-starting under former Section 120.-54(3), nor are they now. Sections 120.54(4), .56, Florida Statutes (Supp.1976). Dr. Mitchell did not attempt to challenge the intended action by proceedings under the statute relied on, and the Board’s failure to prefile with DOAH did not impair “the fairness of the proceedings or the correctness of the action.”4 It is not shown the Board acted without adequate notice to affected persons, Section 120.54(1). Dr. Mitchell was present and her protest was heard when the Board acted.
Dr. Mitchell made no request to the Board for a Section 120.57(1) trial of factual issues. Neither did she offer to demonstrate factual issues such as the superintendent’s ulterior purpose to replace a supervisor by another with the same function at a lesser salary, or his desire to rid the system of one whose political or union activity he found offensive, to cite two hypothetical examples. Even now, urging that we exercise a reviewing court’s prerogative to order a hearing when “the validity of the action depends upon disputed facts,”5 Dr. Mitchell has made no substantial showing that there are material disputed facts. One whose substantial interests are to be affected by agency action, and who conceives a Section 120.57(1) hearing is necessary to protect those interests, must in rule-making proceedings “affirmatively [demonstrate] to the agency that the proceeding does not provide adequate opportunity to protect those interests,”6 make at least a colorable showing that “the proceeding in*808volves a disputed issue of material fact”7 and, when agency rules so provide, request a hearing. Section 120.57(l)(b)l, Florida Statutes (Supp.1976).8
The prayer of the petition for review and accompanying motion for a “fact-finding proceeding” are DENIED.
BOYER, C. J., and McCORD, J., concur.'