WSPTA is an original member of The Network for Excellence in Washington Schools (NEWS). Below is a summation from NEWS of yesterday’s ruling.
The Supreme Court’s November 15, 2017 Order did three things:
- It unanimously rejected the State’s claim that the 2017 legislature satisfied the court
orders in the McCleary case. It unanimously rejected the State’s claim that lawmakers
cured their ongoing contempt of court. It unanimously rejected the State’s claim that
sanctions should be lifted. And it unanimously rejected the State’s claim that the Court
should relinquish jurisdiction and terminate the McCleary case. - It unanimously ordered the State to provide the additional $1 billion of salary funding
that the State, by its own admission, acknowledged would be required to fully fund the
State’s new salary model for the 2018-2019 school year. It unanimously ordered that this
$1 billion must be enacted by the end of the legislature’s 2018 regular session (i.e.,
March 8). And it unanimously warned that if lawmakers fail to do so, the Court will
“immediately” address the need to impose stronger sanctions – which, as lawmakers
know from prior McCleary case filings, include enforcement options such as suspending
all tax exemptions enacted by the legislature in order to pressure lawmakers to comply
with the Court’s Order. - It put the State’s new funding formulas on a short leash to let them prove themselves
constitutionally adequate in practice. Trusting the legislature’s assurance that it is
“reasonably likely” that the State’s prototypical school model formulas will amply fund
all ten components of the State’s basic education program, the Court said: “At this point,
the court is willing to allow the State’s program to operate and let experience be the judge
of whether it proves adequate.” Thus, once a school district operates under the current
State funding formulas, the McCleary decision’s “paramount duty”, “amply fund”, and
“all children” requirements will measure if those formulas prove themselves
constitutionally adequate in practice.
[The November Order’s discussion recapped that the ten components of the
State’s basic education program are: (1) pupil transportation, (2) Materials, Supplies,
and Operating Costs (MSOCs), (3) Full-Day Kindergarten, (4) K-3 class sizes of
17 students per classroom, (5) Special education, (6) Remediation (Learning Assistance
Program/LAP), (7) Transitional Bilingual Education (Transitional Bilingual
Instructional Program/TBIP/English Language Learners/ELL), (8) Highly capable
student instruction, (9) Core 24 (increasing high school graduation requirements from 20
credits of instruction to 24), and (10) Compensation sufficient to attract, recruit, and
retain competent teachers, administrators, & staff to implement the above components.]