Austin American-Statesman

Kansas forced to spend more on its public schools

Court finds funding disparitie­s violate state Constituti­on.

- Byjohn Hanna andjohn Milburn

TOPEKA, KAN. — Kansas must spend more money on its public schools, the state Supreme Court ruled Friday in a decision that could jeopardize Republican Gov. Sam Brownback’s desire to make his state a tax-cutting template for the nation.

The high court ruling, which stemmed from a 2010 lawsuit filed by parents and school districts, found that funding disparitie­s between school districts violated the state Constituti­on.

The Legislatur­e must now spend more than $125 million to bridge the gap. Instead of balking, Brownback and other leaders of the state’s GOP-dominated government said they were pleased because the decision stopped short of telling legislator­s exactly how much the state must spend on its schools overall, leaving that responsibi­lity to a lower court.

“It was not an unreasonab­le decision,” Senate President Susan Wagle said. Republican leaders also believe the court left the Legislatur­e substantia­l leeway in providing ad- equate aid to poor school districts and pledged to get it done before the session adjourns in late April or early May.

Education advocates and attorneys for the parents and school districts saw the decision as a rebuke to the Republican-led state and in line with past court decisions that strongly and specifical­ly laid out how much needed to be allocated to provide adequate education for every child.

“This decision is an important one in sending a message to states across the nation that need to reform their financing systems to get their house in order,” said David Sciarra, executive director of the Newark, N.J.-based Education Law Center, which filed a brief in the Kansas case.

The case has broader implicatio­ns beyond the classroom: Kansas enacted sweeping cuts to income taxes in 2012 and 2013 championed by Brownback that have reduced the amount of available resources to comply with a court order on education funding.

Lawmakers could be forced to reconsider the income tax measures — pushed as a means to stimulate the economy and estimated to be worth nearly $3.9 billion over the next five years. Other Republican-run states have looked at such cuts, including this year in Oklahoma and Missouri.

The court ordered legislator­s Friday to boost funding on two types of aid for poor school districts by July 1.

 ??  ?? The plan of Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback might have to be altered.
The plan of Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback might have to be altered.

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