The Long-Awaited Connecticut School Finance Decision
Wednesday, March 24, 2010 at 4:37PM
Scott Bauries in Finance, Legal Framework, Scott Bauries, Student-Rights

I'll have more to say on this later, but for those of you who remember that the Connecticut Supreme Court heard oral arguments in the state's school finance adequacy case nearly two years ago, the court issued its decision Monday. 

In Connecticut Coalition for Justice in Education Funding, Inc. v. Rell, the court ruled that the issue of whether education funding legislation in Connecticut makes "suitable provision" for education is justiciable.  The Connecticut Constitution's Education Clause provides, "There shall always be free public elementary and secondary schools in the state.  The general assembly shall implement this principle by appropriate legislation."  Conn. Const. art. 8, sec. 1.  

The court first determined that the terms "elementary," "secondary," and "schools" are "ambiguous."  Slip. Op. at 20.  Then, the court held that the word "appropriate" explicitly called for judicial involvement.  Next, extending, by negative implication, the dissenting opinion of one of the justices in the Horton equity case, the court held that the education clause, despite its minimalistic terms, contains "substantive content."  Slip. Op. at 22.  Then, based on the testimony of the "principal draftsman" of the education clause that he introduced the provision to signify the importance of education in the state, the court held that, despite the failure of this draftsman to include terms of quality in the text, his own personal opinions about education should "inform our construction."  Slip. Op. at 28. 

Next, after reviewing the decisions of selected sister states and several public policy considerations, the court held that the constitutional text above, along with all of these considerations, guaranteed the children of Connecticut with an education "suitable to give them the opportunity to be responsible citizens"; that such an education should "prepare students to progress to higher education institutions, or to obtain productive employment"; and that such an education includes four "essential features" (borrowed verbatim from the first Campaign decision in New York): (1) minimally adequate physical facilities; (2) minimally adequate instrumentalities of learning; (3) minimally adequate teaching and curricular offerings; and (4) sufficient personnel adequately trained to teach the subjects.  Slip. Op. at 36-37. 

Finally, the court made two defendant-friendly holdings that could limit the reach of its opinion on remand.  First, adopting again the reasoning of the Campaign I court in New York (reasoning which the Campaign II court arguably repudiated), the Connecticut court held that the plaintiffs would have to establish a causal link between any established inadequacies and legislative action.  Second, in footnote 59 on the opinion, the court adopted a form of a "rational basis" test as a way of determinining constitutionality on remand: Speaking of the legislature and education board, the court stated: "So long as those authorities prescribe and implement a program of instruction rationally calculated to enforce the constitutional right to a minimally adequate education as set forth herein, then the judiciary should stay its hand." 

The opinion is long and somewhat convoluted, but it is not as earth-shattering as it may appear on first glance.  I see this as potentially one more state (after Texas, Indiana, Missouri, Oregon, and Colorado recently) which has held the education clause justiciable, but has imposed a very lenient standard of review.  Considering the language regarding the causal link (nearly impossible to establish) and the footnote calling for rational basis review, this case may prove to be expensive and fruitless on remand. 

Article originally appeared on The Edjurist - Information on School and Educational Law (http://edjurist.com/).
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