Litigation Update: Arizona, Arkansas, and Idaho
In the past month, an Arizona appellate court upheld
a lower court’s dismissal of a challenge to the
state’s school funding system, and the Arkansas
Supreme Court extended its jurisdiction over the Lake
View school funding case for an additional six
months. The Arizona plaintiffs will appeal. In a third
case, a recent trial court judgment in Idaho added to
the confusion surrounding the state’s long-running
facilities funding case, ISEEO v. State.
Summary Judgment in Arizona Will Be Appealed
A divided Arizona Court of Appeals ruled in November
that the state defendants were entitled to summary judgment
in Crane
Elementary School District v. State, where
plaintiffs claimed that the school financing system
deprived low-income, “at-risk” students
of their constitutional right to a “meaningful
opportunity... to receive a basic education.”
The court’s ruling upholds the system against
plaintiffs’ claims.
In the lawsuit, plaintiffs argued that the significantly
lower scores of at-risk students on the AIMS test –
Arizona’s high school exit exam – indicated
a violation of those students’ constitutional
right to an adequate education. According to Arizona
Lawyers for the Public Interest attorney Tim Hogan,
who filed the lawsuit in 2001, low-income students at
the eighth-grade level have a passing rate on the exam
less than half that of their higher-income peers. Plaintiffs
asked the court to (1) rule that the state’s school
finance system was illegally arbitrary because it was
unrelated to the actual costs of educating students,
(2) order the state to adopt standards of “adequate
school operation” and determine the costs meeting
those standards, and (3) to remand for trial on whether
the state was providing the resources necessary “to
provide at-risk students a meaningful opportunity to
achieve the state’s academic standards.”
The trial court in the case dismissed it as non-justiciable
in November 2003. The appellate court reversed the trial
court’s decision on justiciability but still ruled
against the plaintiffs. The opinion of the appellate
court, written by Judge Philip Hall, stated that since
the state is entitled to “a strong presumption
that [the finance system] is constitutional,”
the court could not order the state to undertake the
cost-based approach to school funding requested by the
plaintiffs.
In addition, the court dismissed plaintiffs’
claims based on AIMS data and granted the state summary
judgment. The constitutionality of the finance system,
the court ruled, is based on whether it provides “a
meaningful opportunity for all students to receive a
basic education,” not on the “attain[ment
of] a particular achievement level.” Drawing on
the 1994 school facilities financing case Roosevelt
Elementary School District v. Bishop, the court
ruled that the language in the constitution (saying
that the state must provide for the “establishment
and maintenance of a general and uniform public school
system”) only requires that the state “provide
sufficient funds to educate children on substantially
equal terms.” Interpreting this as meaning that
the legislature is not required to “overcome disparities
that it had no role in creating,” the court ruled
that disparities in test scores alone could not provide
sufficient evidence of disparities in educational opportunity
and dismissed the plaintiffs’ claims.
Judge Donn Kessler dissented, writing that since the
state has set the AIMS test as the standard of an “adequate
education,” it is constitutionally required to
provide “sufficient programs and funding to give
‘at-risk’ students an equal opportunity
to pass the AIMS test.” Even though the state
may not have created the disparities between the test
scores of low-income and higher-income children, it
is still required to give all students enough resources
and funding so as to have an equal opportunity to pass
the exam. The AIMS test data, Judge Kessler argued,
is “sufficient evidence” to preclude summary
judgment and to require a trial on whether the disparities
in test scores are causally linked to the state’s
funding system. Plaintiffs plan to appeal to the Arizona
Supreme Court.
Extension of Jurisdiction in Arkansas
On December 1, the Arkansas Supreme Court decided to
extend for six months its jurisdiction in Lake View
School District v. Huckabee, saying that the court
“[has] not been provided with the necessary information
to make an informed decision.” The court had originally
set December 1, 2006 as the deadline for state compliance
with its December 2005
ruling that the legislature was in violation of
the state constitution and had to increase funding for
public schools.
In April 2006, the state legislature met in special
session to approve more than $132 million in additional
education funding. In November, attorneys for the plaintiff
school districts filed a motion asking the to court
retain jurisdiction of the case until it can rule on
whether the legislature’s actions have addressed
the issues raised in the 2005 ruling. Though the court
said it had no desire to “monitor” the actions
of the legislature, it nonetheless ruled that “nothing
has been provided…concerning the action taken
or how that action addressed this court’s constitutional
concerns,” and agreed to keep the case open. The
court ordered the state to provide documents and reports
regarding the updated school funding system within 30
days, reappointed the two Special Masters in the case
to review the information, and said it would rule in
six months on whether the state was in constitutional
compliance.
In his dissent, Chief Justice Jim Hannah argued, “the
expectation [of documents and reports] expressed in
the majority opinion will likely come as quite a surprise
to the State Defendants.” According to the Arkansas
News Bureau, state Attorney General Mike Beebe agreed,
claiming that the court had not previously requested
any of the information for which it was now asking.
In addition, Governor Mike Huckabee harshly criticized
the decision to retain jurisdiction, accusing the justices
of “usurping the constitutionally stated limitations
and separations of powers.”
Plaintiffs’ attorneys were pleased with the ruling.
David Matthews, attorney for the Rogers School District,
told the Arkansas News Bureau that the ruling was “not
a reflection on the Legislature or the governor; it’s
simply a recognition that there are facts that need
to be gathered before the court’s going to know
whether or not their commitment – their order
– has been met.”
Confusion in Idaho
On November 30, Idaho Fourth District Judge Deborah
Bail ruled that she has no jurisdiction over the state’s
long-running case challenging the constitutionality
of the state’s system of funding school facilities.
Judge Bail’s ruling is the latest in a series
of events that have many lawyers in the state confused
as to the status of the lawsuit.
In December 2005, the Idaho Supreme Court ruled in
its fifth decision in
ISEEO v. State that the “the current
[school] funding system is simply not sufficient to
carry out the Legislature’s duty under the constitution.”
Leaving the details of how to remedy the constitutional
violation to the Legislature, the Court said it “will
retain jurisdiction to consider future legislative efforts
to comply with the constitutional mandate.”
The Legislature responded in the spring by passing
a $25 million increase in school facilities spending,
a measure criticized by the plaintiffs as inadequate.
One week later, the Idaho Supreme Court Clerk informed
attorneys for both sides that the case was closed and
had been since January 2006. Robert Huntley, lead attorney
for the plaintiffs, told the Idaho Statesman
that he wanted the Supreme Court to send the case back
to Judge Bail, in order to let her decide if the new
law had remedied the constitutional violations. Simply
closing the case, Huntley said, is “an abdication
of responsibility” and “a cop-out to avoid
confrontation with the legislature.” Huntley claims
the court is violating the state constitution’s
guarantee to “a speedy remedy” as well as
the U.S. Constitution’s guarantee of due process.
Judge Bail allowed a hearing on the issue in October,
but she said in her November 30 ruling that while she
is puzzled by the Supreme Court’s ambiguity, the
Supreme Court still has jurisdiction over the case.
Also pending in Idaho is a lawsuit regarding whether
Judge Bail had the authority to appoint a “special
master” in ISEEO v. State and to charge
the state for the cost of the special master’s
review of school facilities. The case was argued before
the Idaho Supreme Court on September 8, and, according
to Education Week, the court has indicated
that its decision in this case may clarify the situation.
Prepared by Matthew Samberg, December 12, 2006
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