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Trial could change school funds

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Friday, July 29, 2011 11:40 PM
Keefauver

DENVER — The most powerful person in Colorado is not Gov. John Hickenlooper, CEO of the state.

It’s not Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, who controls millions of acres of public lands.

For the next five weeks, anyway, the honor goes to Denver District Judge Sheila Rappaport.

Starting Monday, Rappaport will oversee a five-week trial in a case called Lobato v. Colorado. The outcome will affect every student, teacher, homeowner and taxpayer in Colorado.

Rappaport’s power comes from the importance of the question she will have to decide: Does Colorado’s school finance system break the state’s own constitution?

If she rules that it does, she will tell the Legislature to craft a system that better fits Colorado’s needs. What happens then is anyone’s guess, but state leaders are worried they could have to devote another $2 billion — nearly the entire state budget — to schools.

“No money for prisons. No money for federal matches for health care. No money for higher education, and you go down the list. The ramifications of that, I can’t even comprehend,” Hickenlooper said.

So-called “education adequacy” lawsuits have been filed in 45 states, and the plaintiffs have succeeded more than half the time, according to the National Access Network, which supports the lawsuits.



No money for paper



Two Cortez teachers will testify for the plaintiffs.

Matt Keefauver, a fourth-grade teacher at Kemper Elementary School, has seen resources dwindle in his 15 years in the district.

“It seemed like we were always able to get things like basic supplies. That’s really changed in the last three to five years,” said Keefauver, who also serves on the Cortez City Council.

The district now asks parents to supply a ream of copy paper, he said.

The dearth of paper also strikes Justine Bayles, an eighth-grade science teacher and high school basketball coach.

School administration is very frugal, Bayles said.

“They don’t throw anything away. Any memo or copies or anything that you’re going to get from our front office is done on the back side of scrap paper,” Bayles said. “When it comes down to paper, it’s getting comical at this point.”

Bayles said she is buying more supplies with her own money, and she is worried that athletic programs and other extracurricular activities that give students adult mentors will be cut.

Montezuma-Cortez School District Re-1 is the only Four Corners district to join the suit, but if the plaintiffs succeed, every district in the state will share in the judgment.



Targeting TABOR



For school advocates, the trial will let out two decades of building frustration over shrinking budgets and increasing mandates from the Legislature.

The lawsuit began six years ago in the San Luis Valley, when a group of school districts and parents, led by Center Public Schools parent Anthony Lobato, had had enough of budget cuts in their low-income part of the state.

The Legislature has imposed higher academic standards, statewide tests and graduation requirements on school districts, but it has never devised a funding system that’s rationally related to the schools’ needs, plaintiffs say.

“School districts are left to meet 21st century educational standards with 1980s funding, and it cannot be done,” plaintiffs’ lawyer Alexander Halpern wrote in his trial brief.

Their case hinges on the state constitution’s education clause, which requires a “thorough and uniform” education for every Colorado child.

The lawsuit targets two constitutional amendments as culprits: the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights, which requires voter approval for tax increases, and the Gallagher Amendment, which keeps residential property taxes low.

Plaintiffs say TABOR and Gallagher “must yield to the substantive rights guaranteed by the Education Clause.”

If the courts agree, they could either order an override of TABOR or cripple the state budget to force a popular vote on it, said Attorney General John Suthers.



Early wins for plaintiffs



The plaintiffs have won a string of legal victories already.

Most importantly, in 2009 the state Supreme Court decided in a 4-3 ruling that the courts can get involved in school funding. Three justices dissented, saying it’s a political question best left to the governor and Legislature.

This month, Rappaport issued several orders that narrowed the case in the plaintiffs’ favor, blocking the attorney general’s wishes that the court give “deference” to the Legislature and consider the role of TABOR in limiting budgets.

The rulings leave state lawyers to argue that money does not guarantee a quality education.

“Just pouring money into the schools doesn’t produce a better quality product,” Suthers said. “It’s where you spend the money, not how much money you spend.”

However Rappaport rules, lawyers expect appeals to go all the way to the state Supreme Court.



Reach Joe Hanel at joeh@cortezjournal.com.

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