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THE LEGAL BEAT: No Lawsuit Left Behind
By Michael Heise
Chief Justice Roberts, the schoolmaster?
From the perspective of newspaper headlines, judicial
activity on the education front was uncharacteristically unspectacular last year. Unlike blockbuster cases in the
recent past, ranging from publicly funded vouchers (Zelman v. Simmons-Harris, 2002) to
affirmative action (Grutter v. Bollinger and Gratz v. Bollinger, 2003) and religion (Locke v. Davey, 2004), the
Supreme Court last term said little of significance about education.
Below the high court, however, was a veritable
ant farm of judicial activity concerning our schools. This legal
trench warfare involves critical issues that may give Chief Justice
John Roberts plenty to do for years to come. Most of the action
centered on the unsexy but significant question of the allocation
of authority in education policymaking. A growing number of nasty
fights between and among federal, state, and local officials about
how to manage education resources emerged, and include two notable
cases: Pontiac v. Spellings and Connecticut v.
Spellings.
These cases, and much other intergovernmental
jockeying, derive from resentment generated by No Child Left Behind
(NCLB). The historic law dramatically increased the federal
government’s influence in K–12 education policy, and
hostility toward the law has been percolating for some time. The
transition from hostility to federal education policy to formal
litigation should surprise no one.
What was not anticipated, however, was the
federal law’s influence on litigation concerning the adequacy
of school financing. Thus the National Education Association and
the several public-school districts in Michigan that sued the
Department of Education last April in Pontiac
v. Spellings, asserted that NCLB is an
unfunded mandate and, for relief, sought the ability to use federal
education funds as they saw fit. Similarly, last August the state
of Connecticut sued the federal government (Connecticut v. Spellings) on
the grounds of unfunded mandate and for perceived
“inflexibility” regarding the state’s numerous
NCLB waiver applications.
Though both lawsuits will probably fail in
the courts (see “NEA Sues over NCLB,” legal beat, Fall 2005),
they are already having a political effect on the way that
education funds are obtained and distributed. And they may already
be more effective in diluting NCLB requirements than an army of
Capitol Hill lobbyists has been. In an effort to buy some political peace, or perhaps in response to the
litigation, Education Secretary Margaret Spellings recently announced
additional “flexibility” and a
“common-sense” approach for states’ regulatory
compliance with NCLB. It is too early to tell whether the DOE’s
modified approach will fuel even more state foot dragging, but the
winds of compromise are blowing.
It will also be worth watching how NCLB
affects other litigation concerning school finance. Although state
and local district feuds over school funding persist, these
disagreements are increasingly cast in a way to implicate the 2002
federal law. The Supreme Court’s Rodriguez decision in 1973 may have insulated the
federal government from any direct constitutional liability flowing
from per-pupil spending gaps within a state, but many
school-finance activists view NCLB as creating a federal statutory
avenue for helping to transform failure in the classroom into
success in the courtroom. Any legal success, however, comes out of
state coffers, not the U.S. Treasury. The dynamic of a federal
law’s generating increased financial exposure for state
lawmakers helps explain why some states, such as Louisiana,
Colorado, and Connecticut, are lowering student achievement
standards —and taking proactive measures in court.
Viewed in isolation, these issues—NCLB
litigation, the U.S. Department of Education’s tinkering with
NCLB compliance, and school-finance litigation—may not
suggest anything out of the ordinary. Viewed collectively, however,
the thread that binds all three is NCLB and, more important, how
the act restructures K–12 education federalism. Fights over
K–12 policymaking now loom even larger on the horizon and
increasingly threaten to exacerbate an already litigious education
culture. Roberts, long thought to be a states’ rights
advocate, may be forced to rethink such matters.
Michael Heise is professor of law, Cornell
Law School.
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