Republican justices on North Carolina鈥檚 highest court signaled on Thursday that they鈥檙e open to revising a court order made less than two years ago requiring that the state spend billions more dollars on K-12 schools.
It鈥檚 the latest twist in a three-decade-old attempt by North Carolina school districts to compel the state to invest more funding to minimize education inequities in the state鈥檚 public schools. And it鈥檚 an example of how public schools can win a victory in court, only to face fresh complications in the quest for more resources.
Democrats controlled the seven-member court in November 2022 when it to help address persistent inequities. The ruling stemmed from a 1994 lawsuit accusing the state of failing to provide a 鈥渟ound, basic education鈥 for all students, as North Carolina鈥檚 constitution guarantees.
But Republican lawmakers who control both chambers of the state legislature refused, arguing the court lacked the authority to make such an order and direct lawmakers to appropriate more funding. They appealed the ruling, and the state supreme court, now with a Republican majority, agreed to hear the case again.
Attorneys for those lawmakers pressed that case during an 85-minute , while education advocacy groups .
Matthew Tilley, an attorney representing Republican leaders in the state鈥檚 two legislative chambers, argued that the court does not have the authority to order a statewide financial remedy for schools based on claims primarily centered around one district. The case of Leandro v. State of North Carolina was originally filed on behalf of five districts, and much of the case drew on evidence from the Hoke County district, which the case鈥檚 namesake attended.
鈥淭he case is about whether the trial court, when presented with only district-specific claims, had jurisdiction to issue sweeping statewide orders that required a comprehensive remedial plan 鈥 for all 115 districts in the state, effectively removing those districts from the democratic process,鈥 Tilley said.
Judges spent most of the hearing grilling lawyers for both sides on technical and legal questions, including whether districts should be held liable for low-quality education rather than the state, and whether an order for additional funding statewide would preclude students from raising further concerns in court about the state of their schools in the future.
鈥淚鈥檓 just concerned that there are students who are out there saying, 鈥榃ait a minute, that鈥檚 not fair that the government is deciding this for me. I never got to come to court and say, here鈥檚 how you fix my school,鈥欌 said Justice Richard Dietz, a Republican.
Judge Trey Allen, a Republican, also zeroed in on the absence of current K-12 students as plaintiffs in the case. 鈥淒oesn鈥檛 that mean we have no parties left in the case who are entitled to relief?鈥 he asked.
Justices appear to be looking for ways to undermine the 2022 ruling from the North Carolina supreme court, if not outright overturn it, an expert in education law told reporters after Thursday鈥檚 hearing on the three-decade-old Leandro case.
The court may demand a new trial with current students demonstrating harms they鈥檙e experiencing in a wide swath of the state鈥檚 public schools, rather than allowing the current set of school district plaintiffs to remain at the center of the case, said David Hinojosa, director of the Educational Opportunities Project at the Lawyers鈥 Committee for Civil Rights Under Law.
Alternatively, justices could nix the original ruling altogether. But 鈥渢hat seemed the death knell that not many justices were willing to sign off on today during the argument,鈥 said Hinojosa, who鈥檚 currently representing the Charlotte-Mecklenburg NAACP chapter in the Leandro case.
The court鈥檚 rehearing of the case is unusual and controversial
The partisan balance of the North Carolina Supreme Court shifted in November 2022, when . Four months later, the court announced it would .
The decision angered advocates who believe it was already a settled issue.
鈥淭here鈥檚 an attempt to overcomplicate things to distract from the simple fact that our constitution says you have to fund decent schools, but not only has the legislature not done it, they don鈥檛 even have an alternative plan to maybe do so in the future,鈥 said Kris Nordstrom, senior policy analyst with the Education & Law Project at the nonprofit North Carolina Justice Center.
News of Thursday鈥檚 hearing also prompted calls for Justice Phil Berger Jr., to because his father, Phil Berger, serves as president of the state senate. The court .
In the meantime, the court has already reversed several other decisions from the era when Democrats held the majority, including and .
Advocates for maintaining the ruling said during Thursday鈥檚 hearing that asserting the court can鈥檛 order payments when they鈥檙e justified would set a dangerous precedent.
鈥淚t really is quite dangerous for our legal system that the state could say, 鈥榃e鈥檙e not going to pay just compensation for taking your private property, we鈥檙e not going to refund an unconstitutional tax,鈥欌 said Ryan Park, the state鈥檚 solicitor general, representing the Democrat-led executive branch. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think anyone wants to live in that system.鈥
State lawsuits over school funding are long and winding
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 1973 that local funding disparities between school districts do not violate the U.S. Constitution. In the half-century since, lawsuits like the Leandro case have challenged nearly every state to adhere to their individual constitutions, .
Many of those cases鈥攊n states like New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Kentucky, and Washington鈥攈ave resulted in court mandates for increasing funding, and other school finance reforms.
School funding has been a contested legal issue in North Carolina since 1994, when high school student Robb Leandro served as the lead plaintiff on a lawsuit alleging the state was falling short of its constitutional duty to provide an equal education to all students. Leandro was in 9th grade at the time; .
Since then, the case has followed a winding path through the courts, with that the state owes significantly more money to K-12 schools.
North Carolina isn鈥檛 the only state currently grappling with legal obligations around school funding:
- The New Hampshire supreme court over a 2023 judicial order to increase state aid for school districts by more than double. The judge who issued the order declined this week to revisit it.
- Kansas鈥 supreme sourt this month in that state. Some public education supporters worry that correcting future funding inequities will be more difficult without the mechanism of an existing lawsuit to help hold the state accountable.
- The Wyoming Education Association, the statewide teachers鈥 union, will over its lawsuit alleging the state is underfunding public schools.