California Visit by Michael Rebell to Discuss Litigation
and the National Adequacy Movement
In February of 2005, the Campaign
for Fiscal Equity’s Executive Director and
Counsel, Michael Rebell, visited California for productive
meetings with two powerful groups involved with national
and statewide educational concerns.
Rebell’s first meeting was organized by the California
School Boards Association in light of the current
political crisis over education funding in the state.
The dramatic cuts in education funding that the governor
recently announced has led the School Boards Association,
in conjunction with the California
Teacher’s Association, and a number of other
advocacy groups, to consider various options for public
engagement and litigation as solutions to the crisis.
Rebell was called on to relate his experience litigating
and conducting public engagement in New York as well
as the knowledge ACCESS has gained regarding litigation
and public engagement nationwide, and to reflect upon
the potential relevance of that knowledge to California.
The second meeting Rebell attended was organized by
faculty members at the University
of California at Berkeley’s School of Law.
These faculty members are embarking on a project entitled
“Rethinking Rodriguez,” which hopes
to reconsider San Antonio School District v. Rodriguez
in the context of the equity and adequacy lawsuits that
have transpired in subsequent decades. Rodriguez was
the 1973 school funding equity lawsuit, in which the
U.S. Supreme Court held that there was no federal constitutional
responsibility to provide adequate and equitable education,
sending all subsequent school funding litigations into
state courts. The group will bring in a number of academics,
primarily from California, to address many of the topics
relevant to the National Education Adequacy Movement.
Rebell updated the group on New York’s adequacy
lawsuit, Campaign for Fiscal Equity v. State,
and also outlined the goals and challenges of the national
movement. Such collaboration sets a hopeful precedent
for continued involvement of academic and legal experts
in the National Movement.
Rebell’s trip was part of the ongoing effort
by CFE, and its national ACCESS Network, to reach out
to advocates and litigators in other states considering
adequacy lawsuits and related efforts. This endeavor
has most recently taken Rebell to Massachusetts and
Georgia, in addition to California.
Prepared by Nelly Ward, February 28, 2005 |