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Arizona Judge Orders State to Return Money Diverted from
School Facilities
On October 17, 2002, Judge Edward Burke of Maricopa County
Superior Court in Arizona ruled
that state legislators had illegally used $90 million
earmarked for school facilities funding to balance the
budget. He gave the legislature until June 30, 2003
to return the money. The state, which already has a
$500 million deficit, is expected to appeal, and Governor
Jane Dee Hull said that the current facilities formula
is "inflated."
In response to Roosevelt Elementary School District No.
66 v. Bishop (1994), in which the Arizona Supreme
Court ruled that the state's school finance formula
did not provide enough money for the facilities and
equipment needed to enable students to reach high standards,
Arizona created a new facilities
funding system and formula. That system was designed
to provide schools with sufficient facilities funding
every year, but, Judge Burke ruled, the state violated
its own new formula. Instead of the $128 million for
facilities that the formula required, the state legislature
authorized only $30 million for school repairs. Burke
thus declared the $90 million diversion unconstitutional.
Acknowledging the state's budget shortfall, Judge Burke
nonetheless said that the state constitution mandates
"a general and uniform" system of schools, and that
facilities cuts have a disproportionate effect on smaller,
rural school districts.
Tim Hogan at the Arizona
Center for Law in the Public Interest, attorney for the
plaintiff school districts, said that if the money is not
returned, he will ask the judge to block distribution of state
aid to schools, which would effectively close them down. This
is the only way, he claims, for the court to enforce its decision.
Administrators in Tucson, Mesa, and Tempe are challenging
the state's claim that they have enough money even without
the diverted $90 million. While the state is providing funds
through one-shot appropriations for major problems, the repairing
and upgrading of roofing, fire alarms, and lighting, sprinkler,
and air-conditioning systems is being delayed. This means
that more money will have to be spent in the long run, as
equipment that could be repaired breaks and must be replaced
at a higher cost.
Prepared October 29, 2002
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