Chicago Sun-Times

JUDGEWON’THEARCPSLA­WSUIT ARGUMENTSU­NTILATLEAS­TAUG.

- BYLAURENFI­TZPATRICK Education Reporter Email: lfitzpatri­ck@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ bylaurenfi­tz

A Cook County judge apparently disagrees with Chicago Public Schools’ continued requests for urgency in the second take of the district’s civil rights lawsuit against Gov. Bruce Rauner.

Judge Franklin U. Valderrama won’t hear arguments on the state’s request to have the lawsuit dismissed until at least August, well after the start of CPS’ new fiscal year and the June 30 due date for a $ 721 million teacher pension payment. That’s according to the schedule he set Friday at a hearing on CPS’ amended complaint that seeks a greater share of state funding.

“CPS continues to request the fastest decision possible because the state’s racial discrimina­tion against Chicago students must be ended so that they get the funding they deserve,” district spokeswoma­n Emily Bittner said in an email. “We are gratified that the judge set the matter for status at the earliest date available.”

CPS CEO Forrest Claypool sued Rauner in February, alleging that Illinois’ school funding including teacher pension contributi­ons discrimina­tes against Chicago schoolchil­dren, who are on the whole less wealthy and less white than kids in the rest of the state. Claypool has included state contributi­ons to teacher pensions as part of education funding when accusing Rauner of spending less on CPS students than their counterpar­ts elsewhere in Illinois.

Government lawyers who represent Rauner have argued that CPS actually gets more per student when pension contributi­ons are excluded — and the state says they should be since Chicago teachers rely on a pension fund that’s separate from the rest of the state.

CPS’ amended complaint, quietly filed after Valderrama dismissed the original lawsuit, is seeking “damages in an amount sufficient to compensate CPS for the state’s discrimina­tory funding.”

 ??  ?? Forrest Claypool
Forrest Claypool

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