This
morning, a historic lawsuit was filed against the state of California
declaring that the current education finance system is broken and unconstitutional. As a result, students are being denied the opportunity to master the educational programs the state requires.
Maya Robles-Wong v. the State of California was filed in Alameda by the
California State PTA, the California School Boards Association and the
Association of California School Administrators. Plaintiffs include nine school
districts, as well as individual students and their families. Plaintiff Maya
Robles-Wong is a 16-year-old 11th-grader at Alameda High School.
"We must have a school finance system that allows schools to deliver a high-quality education for all children - in good times and in tough times," said Jo A.S. Loss, president of California State PTA.
About the lawsuit
California's constitution requires a school system that prepares students to become informed citizens and productive members of society. The state has set clear requirements for what schools must teach and what students must learn. The state has an obligation to provide the resources necessary to meet the required standards, but the state has failed to do so.
This lawsuit
seeks to remedy the broken school finance
system by (1) declaring that it is unconstitutional and (2) requiring
state
lawmakers to uphold their constitutional duty to design and implement a
school
finance system that provides all students equal access to the required
educational program.
The lawsuit declares that the "unsound, unstable and insufficient school finance system is neither aligned with required educational programs nor with student needs."
Filing this
lawsuit was a last resort for California State PTA and the other plaintiffs. The Governor and
lawmakers have known for some time that the current school finance
system is
harming students, and they have done nothing to remedy the crisis.
For more information on the lawsuit and to read the complete
complaint, please visit www.fixschoolfinance.org.
We recognize the need to keep our membership informed as the case progresses.
Important note
The Board of Directors and Board of Managers weighed this decision to participate in the lawsuit very carefully. The unprecedented step of initiating legal action is necessary given the serious deficiencies of the current school funding system, and the utter lack of meaningful action taken by the Legislature and Governor to address it.
All of the legal representation for California State PTA's involvement in this
case will be provided at no cost to our association. A number of prominent law
firms and legal experts are involved in the case, some volunteering their
time. Absolutely no member dues or any
other of our revenues will be spent on legal costs for this case.