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Arizona School Funding Cases Move Forward

In an eventful week for advocates on both sides of two standards-based school funding cases in Arizona, the Arizona Supreme Court cleared the way for trial in a case filed on behalf of "at-risk" students, and plaintiffs filed their appeal brief with the same court in a lawsuit filed to contest the legislature's use of funds meant for school facilities to, instead, help balance the state budget.

On September 11, 2003, the Arizona Supreme Court denied the state's request for review of a lower court decision that denied the state's motion to dismiss the "at-risk" case, Crane Elementary School District v. State. The next day, the law firm hired by the state to defend in Crane delivered voluminous papers to plaintiffs' attorneys in the case, the Arizona Center for Law in the Public Interest, including a motion for summary judgment.

The seven school-district plaintiffs in Crane Elementary allege that the State's education finance system violates the Arizona Constitution because it does not provide funding that is sufficient for the programs at-risk students need to enable them to meet the state's academic standards.

On September 15, plaintiffs in Roosevelt Elementary School District v. State, who claim the state is violating the state constitution and certain state laws, presented their Petition for Review to the state's supreme court. An intermediate appellate court ruled earlier this year in favor of the state, after a lower court had ruled in favor of plaintiffs.

The state enacted the statutes in question ("Students FIRST") in 1998, in response to the supreme court's historic decisions in Hull v. Albrecht. In Albrecht, the court ordered the state to establish standards for buildings and equipment, which must be aligned with the state's student academic standards, and develop a funding system that ensures no school district falls below those standards. In recent years, however, the state has diverted over $200 million away from the state agency set up by Students FIRST to administer the Albrecht remedy, the School Facilities Board.

 

Prepared by Molly A. Hunter, September 26, 2003