The Special Role of the Courts in
the Education Adequacy Movement
“How does an education advocate persuade a state
Supreme Court to get into the Education Business?”
was one of the questions
candidly confronted by Hon. John. M. Greaney, Justice
of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, at the
2008 Quality Education Conference.
Justice Greaney established his reputation as a firm
supporter of students’ constitutional right to
an adequate education by signing on to the majority
opinion in McDuffy v. Secretary of the Executive
Office of Education (1995) and then again with
his strong dissent in Hancock v. Driscoll (2005)
– two landmark adequacy cases in Massachusetts.
Justice Greaney insisted that the courts have a unique
and special duty to ensure equal educational opportunity
for all children, lamenting that despite much progress
since McDuffy, in his own state of Massachusetts,
this “unequivocal State constitutional command”
has not yet been met fully.
Insisting that governors, departments of education,
and Legislatures do care about education, Justice Greaney
urged advocates and voters to make adequate educational
opportunity a critical issue in the national election.
He warned against a “citizen apathy” that
would curtail educational reform.
Justice Greaney then spoke about the importance of
court involvement in the adequacy movement. The courts,
said Greaney, should and do care about education, and
they should get involved “if there is a constitutional
clause that leads the state to believe it is their obligation
to provide an opportunity for education.” He insisted
that the courts have special skills because they have
judicial independence, meaning that they cannot be influenced
by biases or interest groups, and they have good “truth
finding mechanisms” to provide verdicts.
During the last segment of his speech,
Justice Greaney spoke of the importance of court involvement
during the remedy stage, after students’ basic
constitutional rights are clarified. He outlined an
approach he envisioned for Hancock had the
case been resolved differently, with direction to implement
a remedy. He pointed out the importance of collaboration
between all interested parties, costing out studies,
and periodic progress reports during the remedy stage,
cementing the importance of the court’s role in
education.
Justice Greaney concluded his speech by reporting that
like his favorite country singer, Johnny Cash, he wears
black “for the kids pushed out of school house
doors.”
Prepared by Marcela Briceno, July 14, 2008
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