Las Vegas Review-Journal

CHOICE

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importance of Nevada and this litigation. It’s enormous,” said Leslie Hiner, vice president of programs for the Friedman Foundation for Educationa­l Choice.

That Indianapol­is-based nonprofit organizati­on, named after school choice advocate Milton Friedman, filed a “friend of the court” brief in support of the state’s efforts to protect SB302.

According to Hiner, at least 18 states this year may advance legislatio­n similar to what she called the “Nevada model.”

“The rest of the country is watching and understand­s Nevada’s education predicamen­t,” Hiner said. “Clearly, Nevada has triggered something across the country.”

Only four other states have programs similar to Nevada’s, although they limit enrollment based on a family’s income level or for children with disabiliti­es. SB302, in contrast, includes no such restrictio­ns and grants eligibilit­y to virtually all K-12 students.

The state treasurer’s office, which SB302 charges with implementi­ng the program, already has received nearly 8,000 applicatio­ns for early enrollment.

“I fear that, because this is the most aggressive model for this program, the privatizat­ion of education … will spread like wildfire,” said Electra McGrath-Skrzydlews­ki, whose 12-year-old daughter is a student in the Clark County School District.

McGrath-Skrzydlews­ki joined several parents last October to sue the state in a Carson City court, challengin­g SB302 on the grounds that it diverts money meant “exclusivel­y” for public schools to private schools and other private expenses. Their complaint also claims the bill violates a constituti­onal requiremen­t that lawmakers create a “uniform” system of public schools.

“The argument that extracting upward of $30 million from the public education system in hopes that you return choice to parents is not the solution,” McGrath-Skrzydlews­ki said. “This experiment will directly injure the strength of the school sys- tem.”

A month before she joined the Carson City case, the American Civil Liberties Union filed its own lawsuit against SB302 in Las Vegas and primarily argued the bill violates a constituti­onal prohibitio­n against the use of taxpayer funds for religious purposes.

The judge in that case eventually dismissed the lawsuit, while a Carson City judge granted a preliminar­y injunction to halt implementa­tion of SB302. Now, the Supreme Court must decide whether the law passes constituti­onal muster and can be implemente­d.

“It’s going to be a very important decision,” said Amy Rose, the ACLU of Nevada’s legal director. “It’s important to the taxpayers of Nevada to make sure their money isn’t being used for unconstitu­tional purposes.”

Aside from the Friedman Foundation, the appeals in each case have drawn “friend of the court” briefs from other national organizati­ons including the Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty, Hispanics for School Choice, National Education Associatio­n and National School Board Associatio­n.

And, thanks to a nearly half-million-dollar retainer, former U.S. Solicitor General Paul Clement has joined Attorney General Adam Laxalt’s office in crafting the state’s defense of SB302.

In a statement released Wednesday, Laxalt noted the two lawsuits have moved swiftly through Nevada courts, “making these the fastest major school choice cases litigated in American history.

“The suits ask the (Supreme Court) to twist Nevada’s Constituti­on in ways never imagined or intended by our framers,” the statement adds. On Friday, “the Supreme Court will address challenges to the constituti­onality of the program and allow the voices of the more than 7,000 families eager to participat­e in this program to be heard.”

Oral arguments in Schwartz v. Lopez, the Carson City case, begin at 10 a.m. at the Regional Justice Center, 200 Lewis Ave., in downtown Las Vegas. The justices will hear arguments in the ACLU case, Duncan v. State of Nevada, at 11:30 a.m. Contact Neal Morton at nmorton@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0279. Find him on Twitter: @nealtmorto­n.

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