State's Motion Denied in Georgia
Preparing the way for a trial that is scheduled to
being on October 21, 2008, Superior Court Judge Elizabeth
E. Long dismissed defendants’ motion for summary
judgment in a decision issued on August 11, 2008. A
motion for summary judgment can be granted only if the
defendants had shown that there is no genuine issue
of material fact to be tried and that the undisputed
facts, viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiffs,
warrant summary judgment as a matter of law.
Defendants had cited as their prime authority the Georgia
Supreme Court’s 1981 ruling in McDaniel v.
Thomas, 285 S.E.2d 156; in that case, the Court
had granted a motion for summary judgment. Judge Long
noted, however, that unlike plaintiffs in McDaniel,
plaintiffs in the present case have raised a host of
factual issues concerning deficiencies in the educational
opportunities available to Georgia’s students
and the state’s low high school graduation rates
and low scores on national and state academic performance
tests.
Implicit in the court’s decision is the fact
that Georgia’s adoption of state academic standards,
as well as the requirements of the federal No Child
Left Behind Act, have now provided the court with specific
“manageable standards” for determining whether
the adequacy requirements of the state constitution
have been met. Significant in this regard is that fact
that the Georgia defendants could not cite any court
anywhere in the country that has granted a motion for
summary judgment in an adequacy case since the initiation
of the national standards-based reform movement in 1989.
At trial, plaintiffs will have to present evidence
to support their allegations that the basic educational
opportunities offered to Georgia’s students deny
many of them an adequate education and that the lack
of an adequate education stems from factors that are
the State’s responsibility.
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