Litigation Update: South Carolina, New Hampshire,
Alaska and Others
South Carolina plaintiffs are appealing the trial court’s
ruling, and the state has filed a cross-appeal. New
Hampshire has asked the supreme court to end the adequate
education case, which is not surprisingly opposed by
plaintiffs. The State of Alaska has filed motions that
essentially ask the trial court to reconsider its ruling.
Also, the Indiana plaintiffs have appealed the trial
courts’ dismissal of the Bonner case,
while the Pendleton plaintiffs in Oregon have
appealed the trial courts’ decision to grant the
state’s motion for summary judgment.
At the same time, the parties in Georgia, Nebraska,
and South Dakota are in the midst of discovery, preparing
for trials currently scheduled to begin in 2008. As
part of that process in Nebraska, plaintiffs have filed
a motion to submit an amended complaint.
South Carolina: “no recourse but to handle
it judicially” Abbeville Appeal
The Abbeville
v. State case was brought by 36 low-wealth,
rural districts and focused primarily in three education
resource areas in those districts: inadequate facilities;
the alleged inability to attract and retain qualified
teachers; and the lack of programs to address the needs
of their many students from poverty backgrounds. The
trial court ordered the state to fund programs from
preschool through third grade to help children overcome
the impacts of poverty on their opportunity to learn.
However, the court ruled that the facilities and teaching
in these districts were “minimally adequate.”
After the trial court’s decision, the legislature
failed in its 2007 session to provide the preschool
to third-grade programs ordered, and one plaintiff superintendent
claimed the lack of legislative action “gave us
no recourse but to handle it judicially.” Briefing
of the appeal will occur through the winter, and oral
argument is anticipated in May 2008.
New Hampshire: Londonderry Memos to Supreme
Court
Recently, the state supreme court directed the parties
to submit memoranda on the question whether the court
should remand the Londonderry
v. State case to the superior court for further
proceedings. The court has ordered the state, first
in the Claremont v. State case, and more recently
in Londonderry, to define, cost out and fund
an “adequate education” for all New Hampshire
students.
In response to the last supreme court order, the legislature
adopted a definition of an adequate education, signed
into law by the governor at the end of June. It also
established a legislative committee to study the costs
of the defined level of education and report its recommendations
to the legislature by February 1, 2008. The state contends,
in its memorandum to the court, that the legislature
should have until June 30 to work with the committee’s
recommendations and establish the costs of providing
the educational opportunities in the definition. Plaintiffs,
on the other hand, urge the court to push the legislative
and executive branches to not only cost out an adequate
education but to also develop a school funding system
that will fund it for the 2008-09 school year.
Alaska: Motions for a Hearing and Reconsideration
in Moore
The State defendant has submitted motions to the trial
court claiming that it was already in compliance with
the court’s order at the time of trial. Alternatively,
the state requests clarification of its responsibilities
of oversight and assistance vis-à-vis the local
control afforded the state’s school districts.
The trial court stayed (put on hold) its June 2007 order
for one year to give the state time to reform its system
of oversight, assistance, and accountability for school
districts where students are not receiving the constitutionally
required meaningful educational opportunity.
Prepared by Molly A. Hunter, September 14, 2007
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