Litigation Update: North Dakota, Wyoming, Kentucky,
Alaska, Other States
North Dakota Parties Agree to Stay Suit
The nine North Dakota school districts that filed an
adequacy lawsuit against the state reached an agreement
with North Dakota Governor John Hoeven to stay the suit
in exchange for increased school funding and an improved
plan for funding schools statewide. The agreement, in
Williston Public School District No. 1 v. State,
also creates a North Dakota Commission on Education
Improvement, which will advise the legislature on how
to make the state’s funding system both adequate
and equitable under the constitution. The lawsuit will
be stayed until the close of the next (2007) legislative
session; if by that time the legislature has approved
recommendations of the Commission on Education Improvement
and appropriated $60 million in new education funds
for the immediately subsequent biennium, plaintiffs
expect to withdraw the suit..
As reported in local papers, many are optimistic that
the agreement will be an impetus for both sides to move
towards an improved funding system without a drawn-out
court battle. A cost study commissioned by the plaintiffs
was released in 2003; it is unclear whether it will
be consulted by the Commission on Education Improvement.
Wyoming Compliance Decision
A Wyoming judge has issued a ruling that declares some
elements of the state’s school funding system
unconstitutional. This ruling is the latest in a lawsuit
in which more plaintiffs have joined and now include
a majority of the state’s school districts, the
Wyoming Education Association, and the Wyoming School
Boards Association. The Wyoming legislature has responded
diligently to previous rulings in the state’s
long-running adequacy lawsuit, Campbell County School
District v. State, and has just completed a mandated
cost-study to revisit the state’s funding system.
The latest compliance proceeding challenges components
of that funding system and requests improved educational
programming, including the notable demand for a state-funded
preschool program. As reported in the Casper Star-Tribune,
though both sides expect the decision to be appealed
to the Wyoming Supreme Court, they are also optimistic
that the state can use this most recent ruling as a
blueprint for addressing some of the plaintiffs’
concerns in the 2006 legislative session.
Kentucky Motions for Summary Judgment, Delays
Both parties have met the deadlines for submission
of summary judgment motions in Kentucky’s adequacy
lawsuit, Young v. Williams. The case was filed
in 2003 as two separate lawsuits, which were consolidated
by the court in 2004. After defendants missed two deadlines
for discovery of expert witnesses, and lead defendants
David Williams and Jody Richards, the Senate President
and Speaker of the House, refused to give depositions,
the parties appeared before the court in October 2005.
Expressing frustration with the slow pace of discovery,
the judge set strict deadlines for parties’ summary
judgment motions. The final defendants’ brief
in support of their cross-motion for summary judgment
is due on Friday, March 3; oral argument has not yet
been scheduled.
The slow progress has proved difficult for the Council
for Better Education, a plaintiff organization representing
many school districts across the state. As the state
drags its feet in complying with court directives, the
Council’s limited budget has been stretched thin.
Alaska Defendant Denied Second Motion to Dismiss
On November 30, 2005, the Alaska Superior Court issued
an order in the state’s school funding lawsuit,
Moore v. State, denying the defendant state’s
second motion to dismiss. The state had argued that
the court lacked jurisdiction over the state because
of its sovereign immunity, that the plaintiffs failed
to name all rightful defendants, and that several of
the plaintiffs lack standing to bring the case. The
court rejected the state’s first two arguments
in their entirety, but granted that the school districts
named as plaintiffs lacked standing under their due
process claim. However, the court then cited rulings
by courts in other states that districts do have standing
under the Education Clauses of state constitutions,
and allowed the district plaintiffs to maintain that
claim.
Facilities Compliance Proceedings in New Jersey;
Legislative Activity in Arkansas, Texas, Montana; Missouri
Amended Complaint Filed
The New Jersey Department of Education
has issued a cost estimate of $5.3 billion for the more
than 96 facilities construction projects required under
an earlier court ruling in the long-running
Abbot v. Burke case. The court recently
ordered the Department to develop that estimate after
the State Schools Construction Program ran out of money
before they had completed construction in the state’s
urban Abbott districts. Responsibility now
lies with the legislature and governor to determine
a system for funding the stalled projects.
Legislatures in Arkansas and Texas are waiting to hear
from various funding and legislative committees before
making changes to their states’ school funding
systems, which have both been rejected by their state
supreme courts. In Montana the governor has asked plaintiffs
to discontinue the state’s adequacy lawsuit, arguing
that historic increases to education funding were made
last year; plaintiffs plan to file a status motion with
the court this spring and, if necessary, ask the court
to review the constitutionality of funding after the
next (2007) legislative session.
The Committee for Educational Equality has filed a
Second Amended Petition in Missouri’s school funding
lawsuit, Committee for Educational Equality v. State.
The amended petition amounts to a confirmation of the
plaintiffs’ commitment to the lawsuit after the
legislature and governor modified the school funding
system during 2005. Plaintiffs hope the litigation will
continue to exert pressure on lawmakers as they move
through the 2006 legislative session.
Prepared by Nelly Ward, March 1, 2006
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