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THE LEGAL BEAT: Courts and Choice
By Josh Dunn and Martha Derthick
Testing the constitutionality of charters and vouchers
Teacher unions and allied opponents of school
choice persist in searching for support in state constitutions,
with mixed results. In Florida they won a victory early in 2006
when that state’s supreme court struck down a voucher program
on the grounds that the constitutional command of a “uniform
… system of free public schools”
prohibited any alternative. A challenge to charter schools in Ohio
went the other way in October, when a
four-member majority of the supreme court ruled that the
state’s charter law, enacted in 1997, did not violate the
constitution’s decree that the General Assembly “secure
a thorough and efficient system of common schools throughout the
state.”
We surmise that the different outcomes turned
less on differences in constitutional language than on political
differences between the courts. Florida’s court has a
Democratic majority, whereas Ohio’s contained only one
Democrat—a lame duck who protested that the charter law
produces “a hodgepodge of uncommon schools financed by the
state.” One Ohio Republican wrote separately in dissent, and
another dissented on procedural grounds, objecting that the trial
judge had erred in bifurcating the suit into constitutional issues
and others that alleged statutory violations in particular schools.
The court decided only the constitutional questions.
Popularity may also have buttressed
Ohio’s charter program. Ohio has more than 300 charter
schools, with 72,000 students. Five of the biggest
cities—Cleveland, Cincinnati, Dayton, Toledo, and
Youngstown—have charter enrollments of 16 to 28 percent of
the student population, putting them among the top ranks of the
country’s charter-school cities. The
voucher program that was invalidated in Florida
enrolled barely 700 students. A second voucher
program—Florida’s McKay program for disabled
students—is less vulnerable to attack because it is much bigger
(17,000 students).
Rather than proceed with the second half of
the suit, which rested on claims that charter schools had failed to
comply with statutes and sponsorship contracts, their opponents
withdrew it in December and instead appealed for regulatory help
from a newly-elected Democratic governor and a legislature whose
Republican majority had been reduced.
Litigation will continue nonetheless, because
Ohio'
the charter school law increases local districts’ reliance on
the local property tax, which increases inequalities in school
funding, which leads to violation of the equal protection clause of
the Fourteenth Amendment. This argument is a modified reprise of
the argument in the state.
State aid in Ohio depends on enrollments. Any
student who is schooled elsewhere—at home, in a private
school, in a charter school—“deprives” the local
district of aid, but with charter enrollment the aid follows the
student to the charter school. Plaintiffs claimed that this
particular diversion of funds deprives school districts, poor urban
ones especially, of the ability to provide a “thorough and
efficient educational system.” Though rejected by the
majority, this argument resonated with a liberal Republican on the
court, Paul Pfeifer. While conceding that the Ohio constitution
does not prohibit charter schools, he cited the court’s
previous rulings in DeRolph v. State, Ohio’s adequacy lawsuit, holding that the
constitution does prohibit “excessive reliance on locally
raised funds to finance public schools.”
In Ohio, the long-running DeRolph suit is
closed to further litigation, and in their federal suit, the unions
will be going headlong against San Antonio School District v. Rodriguez (1973), in which the Supreme Court declined to
invalidate educational inequalities resulting from reliance on the
local property tax. Thus, the unions face the challenge of
overturning more than 30 years of settled precedent before courts
that are increasingly hesitant to tackle large-scale institutional
reform.
Nonetheless, finding some way to overturn Rodriguez is
a gleam in the collective eye of all those litigants who want to
use courts both to increase school spending and to equalize it
within states and even nationally. This is a liberal project for
the long run, nurtured in state-level adequacy lawsuits and law
school seminars. Project proponents can take comfort in the way
Judge Pfeifer cast his dissent.
Josh Dunn is professor at the University of
Colorado–Colorado Springs. Martha Derthick is professor
emeritus at the University of Virginia.
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