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Thursday, October 11, 2012

Charter Schools Initiative May Be Deep-Sixed by Legal Challenge

Posted by on Thu, Oct 11, 2012 at 11:17 AM

This guest post is by Hugh Spitzer, who teaches State Constitutional Law and Local Government Law at the University of Washington School of Law.

Initiative 1240 will again present voters with the chance to approve a charter school program for Washington State, a concept they have rejected three times in recent history. But regardless of the pros and cons of charter schools, this specific initiative contains basic state constitutional defects that could disappoint the initiative’s supporters and voters if the measure passes.

Initiative 1240 would allow a limited number of charter schools to be supported by distributions from the State’s Common School Fund. The charter schools would be selected through a process supervised by the State Board of Education, would be deemed “public, common schools,” and would be open to any students. At the same time, they would be operated by private nonprofit corporations that are governed by independent, self-appointed or member-appointed boards. The charter school boards would be subject to the open public meetings act and the public records law, and would be subject to certain performance standards that apply to all schools. But they would be exempt from the bulk of the curriculum and other requirements that apply to public schools generally.

The initiative obscures whether the non-profit charter school corporations would be truly public or private, and this will lead to legal uncertainty and litigation. Most important, Initiative 1240 contains defects that run afoul of at least two state constitutional provisions.

In 1909, Washington’s supreme court held that money from the Common School Fund may be sent to “common schools” but to no other schools—including other publicly-operated schools.

In that instance, the legislature had approved special public schools attached to each of the state’s teacher training colleges. The colleges would select the staff of the special schools and would govern their operation, giving teachers-in-training the opportunity to gain skills under the supervision of experienced master teachers. Pupils selected to attend special schools would bring their State Common School Fund allocations with them.

The Cheney School District objected to students and money being diverted to the teacher college that is now Eastern Washington State University, successfully challenging the training school system on the grounds that the special schools were not “common schools” as described in the Washington Constitution.

The State Supreme Court wrote that the Constitution’s drafters meant for Common School Fund money to be applied exclusively to schools that were uniform in character and controlled by local school boards and county superintendents who picked the principals and teachers. Justice Stephen Chadwick wrote that a common school must not only be open to all children but must also be “subject to and under the control of the qualified voters of the school district. The complete control of the schools is a most important feature, for it carries with it the right of the voters, through their chosen agents, to selected qualified teachers, with powers to discharge them if they are incompetent.” Justice Chadwick pointedly added that the Legislature’s calling a school a “common school” didn’t make it one.

The drafters of the charter school initiative are certainly aware of the 1909 case and have tried to accommodate certain aspects of the ruling. But the proposal is still constitutionally flawed because Common School Fund money would be diverted to schools governed by privately-selected boards rather than elected school boards, and because the charter schools would not be subject to the uniform curriculum requirements that were of great importance to the Supreme Court.

The other constitutional defect in the proposal is a provision granting the non-profit charter school corporations the right to purchase or rent school district and certain other public property at below fair market value. Unless the courts ruled that these corporations, with their privately-appointed boards, were actually governmental entities, the below-market sale or lease of public property to these charter schools would violate the State Constitution’s ban on gifts of public funds to the private sector.

The charter school concept needs more thought and legal refinement before it is ready to pass constitutional muster in Washington State. Until charter schools are subject to much stronger control by locally-elected school boards, they will be subject to a successful legal challenge.

 

Comments (14) RSS

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14
@5

Because it isn't the Supreme Court's job to vet laws. This is supposed to be an open and democratic process, not a secret decision made in some star chamber. Even if it costs more it is worth it.
Posted by House Carl on November 16, 2012 at 9:00 AM
13
I'm confused about what Charlie Mas said, conversion schools, it sounds like to me would HAVE to provide facilities rent free to charters that have taken over the existing facility (or obligated to? Right? Here's the text "... (5) A conversion charter school as part of the consideration for providing educational services under the charter contract may continue to use its existing facility without paying rent to the school district that owns the facility. The district remains responsible for major repairs and safety upgrades that may be required for the continued use of the facility as a public school. The charter school is responsible for routine maintenance of the facility including, but not limited to, cleaning, painting, gardening, and landscaping. The charter contract of a conversion charter school using existing facilities that are owned by its school district must include reasonable and customary terms regarding the use of the existing facility that are binding upon the school district. "
Posted by Balada on November 14, 2012 at 5:00 PM
12
Oh! But this was supposed to be the greatest charter law on the planet!! And the Yes crowd led such a "positive" campaign...(none of this "notwithstanding how bad the current system--which has had plenty of opportunity and billions of dollars over many years to get right--is for poor and minority children" business)
Posted by burb on November 14, 2012 at 9:27 AM
11
I would really love to see a conversion charter challenged on the rent-free use of a public school building. I would really love to see a Court tell the state that they can't offer use of a school district's property as part of their payment to the charter school sponsor.

While the charter initiative allows districts to lease school buildings to charters at below fair-market rates, it does not require it. The district can charge whatever they want.

This is the main point: the school buildings are the districts' property, not the state's, and the districts, not the state, get to control them.
Posted by Charlie Mas on October 12, 2012 at 7:31 AM
10
@7: Whatever fucks you and yours right up the ass with a wire brush is A-OK with me.
Posted by No on 1240 on October 11, 2012 at 8:06 PM
Posted by Watchwhatyouget on October 11, 2012 at 4:04 PM
8
There is also some serious question about whether the charter schools would be under the authority of the Superintendent of Public Instruction and therefore consistent with the state constitutional requirement.

The initiative tries to get around the gift nature of the rent-free use of a school building by a conversion charter by chartacterizing it as "part of the consideration for providing educational services under the charter contract" except that the charter contract is with the state, not the local district that owns the school. The state doesn't have license to give away use of the district's property.
Posted by Charlie Mas on October 11, 2012 at 3:48 PM
7
Well Hugh, you bring up good, LEGAL points. But the public policy arguments FOR charter schools are still more compelling. Of course good liberals like you will gladly challenge an initiative like this (for a hefty fee) notwithstanding how bad the current system--which has had plenty of opportunity and billions of dollars over many years to get right--is for poor and minority children.

This is the same guy that wants to overturn the Constitutional principle that income = property so he can make it easier for his fellow liberals to get an income tax on the books without a vote of the people. Another useless lawyer doing the bidding of the gov't worker unions.
Posted by voteyeson1240 on October 11, 2012 at 2:56 PM
Cato the Younger Younger 6
@5, this is more fun and costs WAY more money
Posted by Cato the Younger Younger on October 11, 2012 at 2:48 PM
5
Why can't we just bring some sanity to this state and pass a Constitutional amendment requiring the state Supreme Court to vet any/every proposed Initiative BEFORE they can be put on the ballot?

Seriously - the AGs office and Code Reviser's office already have to sign off on technical issues such as the wording that actually appears as the initiative title on the ballots, so isn't it a no-brainer that the actual content of an initiative should assessed for constitutional muster by the one institution that has absolute authority on the matter?
Posted by SuperSteve on October 11, 2012 at 2:25 PM
4
There are also a couple of other legal issues that are not related to the Constitution.

One, this initiative may violate the "one-topic" rule for initiatives in that there is not just one kind of charter but two. The second one, the conversion charter, involves the use of a petition, signed by the majority of parents OR teachers at a school. If a charter group submits that petition as part of the proposal and it gets approved, the charter takes the school, building and all.

This ability to use teachers in this way is not in any takeover law in states with charters. (Indeed, I know of NO other charter law in the country with this embedded in it.)

So imagine if you had an elementary school with 18 teachers, if just ten people sign a petition, they upend an entire school community.

No private entity should be able to take over a non-failing public school.

The second legal issue is that the new 9-member Charter Commission that would be created? ALL the members have to:

"demonstrated an understanding of and commitment to charter schooling as a strategy for strengthening public education."

So meaning, there will be no objectivity or balance to the Commission - only true believers can apply.

That would seem contrary to most democractic principles.

No on 1240, www.no1240.org
Posted by westello on October 11, 2012 at 1:48 PM
The Law Won 3
Wow, thanks Hugh. I read it twice and somehow missed spotting the ban on gifts of public funds to the private sector.
Posted by The Law Won on October 11, 2012 at 1:06 PM
2
I hope this analysis is correct, because I see no other way to keep the Gates Foundation and its collaborators from buying themselves an initiative.
Posted by N in Seattle http://peacetreefarm.org on October 11, 2012 at 11:55 AM
Theodore Gorath 1
But how do I know if this isn't the staff of The Stranger just pretending to be Hugh Spitzer?
Posted by Theodore Gorath on October 11, 2012 at 11:25 AM

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