| North
Dakota
Costing Out |
Recent Events
Historical Background
In 1994, in the school funding "equity" case,
Bismarck
Public School District No. 1 v. State, 511 N.W.2d 247,
three of the five members of the North Dakota Supreme
Court found that the state's education finance system
violated the equal protection provisions of the State
Constitution. However, because the state constitution
requires a "super majority" vote of the state
supreme court (at least four justices) to invalidate
any statutory scheme, the court did not declare the
system unconstitutional.
The Bismarck majority affirmed the holding in
State v. Rivinius that the right to education
is fundamental in North Dakota, but applied an "intermediate
level of scrutiny" test. The court also found that
the "constitutionally mandated goal of an equal
educational opportunity," recognized in Lapp
v. Reeder Public School District, was not being
achieved by the state's education finance system because
the system had a "widely disparate effect."
Although the majority's equal protection (equity) analysis
did not garner support from four justices, the Chief
Justice in his dissent, warned that "it seems inevitable"
that the aspects of the funding system causing major
disparities would eventually lead to the "conclusion
that the scheme is unconstitutional." Both dissents
also pointed out that plaintiffs had not alleged an
inadequate education or the failure to provide a "basic
level of education." Those claims were later raised
in the Williston case discussed below.
Costing
Out
The Department
of Public Instruction hired nationally known school
finance experts to prepare an "adequacy study,"
released in September
2003. The study used data for the 2001-02 school
year and concluded that funding at a level adequate
to meet state and federal mandates would have required
a 31% increase, $206 million, in that year. The North
Dakota Fact Sheet provides more detail on this study.
Williston v. State
Almost ten years after the Bismarck decision,
new plaintiffs in North Dakota filed
an adequacy and equity case, Williston Public
School District v. State. Plaintiffs relied on Bismarck
and other North Dakota Supreme Court precedent in drafting
a Complaint
that claims the education finance system violates both
the education and equal protection provisions of the
State Constitution.
The Williston plaintiffs also joined trends in
school funding lawsuits when they 1) cited the ambitious
goals of the 2001 reauthorization of the Elementary
and Secondary Education Act, known as the "No
Child Left Behind" Act (NCLB), and 2) cited
the state costing-out study to add weight to their argument
that "the State is severely under-funding education."
Recent Events
In early 2006, the Williston plaintiffs agreed
to stay the suit in exchange for the governor's commitment
to 1) increase funding by $60 million in the next biennium
and 2) create a commission that will advise the legislature
on how to make the state's funding system adequate and
equitable in accordance with the state's constitution.
The suit was stayed until the end of the 2007 legislative
session.
On May 3, 2007, a new funding formula was signed into
law, and plaintiffs dropped their suit. The new formula
was proposed by the governor’s commission, which
worked for a year to make education funding more equitable.
Once the new formula went into effect, the commission’s
focus shifted to defining adequacy, according to The
Bismarck Tribune.
Last Updated: March, 2008
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