Education reform laws allowed to go forward

A Baton Rouge judge refused Tuesday to put the brakes on two new education revamp laws pushed by Gov. Bobby Jindal that deal with school vouchers and the state’s public school financing formula.

The Louisiana Federation of Teachers, the Louisiana Association of Educators and the Louisiana School Boards Association contend in separate but consolidated lawsuits that Act 2, or the so-called voucher bill, and Senate Concurrent Resolution 99, which is the Minimum Foundation Program resolution, are unconstitutional.

State District Judge Tim Kelley, who did not pass judgment Tuesday on the legality of Act 2 or SCR 99, said at the conclusion of the court hearing that he will rule on the constitutionality of both measures at a future trial to be held on an expedited basis.

The purpose of the hearing was to consider the plaintiffs’ request for an order temporarily halting implementation of both measures approved during the recently concluded legislative session.

Kelley rejected the request because Commissioner of Administration Paul Rainwater and state Education Superintendent John White certified in affidavits that the enjoining of Act 2 and SCR 99 would create a $3.4 billion deficit in the Louisiana Department of Education budget.

Once those certifications were made, Kelley said, Louisiana law prevented him from issuing an order that would cause a state agency to go into deficit.

A memorandum filed in the case by the state quotes Louisiana Revised Statute 13:4062, which says, “No court shall have jurisdiction to issue … any temporary restraining order, preliminary injunction, or permanent injunction against any state department, board or agency … in any suit involving the expenditure of public funds … to compel the expenditure of state funds when the director of such department, board or agency, or the governor shall certify that the expenditure of such funds would have the effect of creating a deficit in the funds of said agency … .”

The memorandum adds that the state 1st Circuit Court of Appeal in Baton Rouge previously ruled in other cases that the expenditure of state funds “is a matter reserved to the legislative branch.”

Kelley said he is not prohibited from deciding on the legality of Act 2 and SCR 99.

“I’m still going to determine this,” he said.

LFT President Steve Monaghan attended the hearing and said afterward the union may appeal the judge’s decision, depending on how quickly a trial is scheduled.

“We expected all along it would be a longer journey than the morning,” Monaghan said. “It’s simply the beginning of the case.”

Former Jindal executive counsel Jimmy Faircloth, who is representing the state as a private attorney, said the LFT and the other plaintiffs have the right to appeal Kelley’s ruling, but added, “The law is real clear.” He said the judge followed the law.

The LFT, LAE and LSBA object to the use of the state’s public school financing formula to pay for tuition for some students to attend private and parochial schools.

Two statewide organizations — the Black Alliance for Educational Options and the Alliance for School Choice — and two New Orleans parents intervened in the suits in defense of the state. The Virginia-based Institute for Justice is representing the groups and parents.

“Today’s decision is a significant victory for kids trapped in inadequate public schools in Louisiana,” Institute for Justice attorney Bill Maurer said after the hearing. “For students receiving an inadequate education in public schools, the decision means that they do not have to wait to have a chance at a quality education.”

Inside the courtroom, Faircloth argued it is “unavoidable and factually inescapable” that blocking Act 2 and SCR 99 would result in a deficit in the state Education Department budget in terms of loss of funding for pre-existing programs and new programs.

“There’s no way that not spending money can cause a deficit,” LAE attorney Brian Blackwell countered. “When you don’t fund something, you can’t have a deficit. There’s no deficit if you can’t spend.”

Blackwell and LSBA attorney Robert Hammonds both questioned the accuracy of Rainwater’s and White’s affidavits.

Kelley noted that if the affidavits are false, the issue of perjury would come into play.

“It’s just indisputable,” Faircloth said after the hearing when asked about the claims made in the affidavits.

Public school aid in Louisiana goes through a formula called the Minimum Foundation Program.

This year, it provides $3.4 billion in basic state aid for school operations and about 700,000 students statewide.

Act 2 would, among other things, expand eligibility for some students in low-performing public schools to obtain state-financed vouchers to attend private and parochial schools.

The three lawsuits also challenge how the MFP was approved June 4, the last day of the nearly three-month session. Most bills require 53 votes, a majority of the 105-member House. But House Speaker Chuck Kleckley, R-Lake Charles, ruled that, as a resolution, it required only a majority of those in the chamber and voting. SCR 99 passed the House 51-49.

The suits contend the measure failed to win a majority of the House as required by the state constitution.


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Comments (28)


1) Comment by Noel Hammatt - 13/07/2012

The Black Alliance for Educational Choice or BAEO is a fully funded "Astro-Turf" organization whose strings are being pulled by the Billionaire's Club. Nice shirts and signs.... money can buy a lot these days.... Isn't it amazing that BAEO was nowhere to be found when there were calls for accountability for private and parochial schools.... when there were calls for actually providing parents and the public with information about just how well students in these private and parochial schools are doing... and wasn't it amazing that BAEO was totally silent when there were calls for allowing parents to choose to have their RSD schools returned to the local school districts... or to not be taken over by the RSD? Interesting.... Follow the money!!!!

2) Comment by Noel Hammatt - 13/07/2012

Thanks twinkle1cat and Teach Veritas... for your compliments, and for your research and for standing up for truth! Amazing how a myth-filled video or some self-serving and myth-leading press releases can trump overwhelming data and research in the minds of those who are ideologically pure, and factually myth-informed.

3) Comment by twinkie1cat - 11/07/2012

Being stupid: How are the charters going to be compared to the real schools if they don't have to follow the same rules?

4) Comment by twinkie1cat - 11/07/2012

Teach Veritas sounds like teacherguy, very knowledgeable and statistically oriented. He does good work. If he is Noel Hammett, more power to him because he was one of the better EBR Board members.

5) Comment by twinkie1cat - 11/07/2012

Being Stupid: You are once again living up to your name! So glad you picked it. The "union bosses" are not paid by the schools. They are paid by the teachers who voluntarily give up a portion of their meager salaries to be represented by the unions. Without them, teachers could be fired for refusing to have sex with the principal, ok! I know this because a substitute at a school where I worked had to put up with the principal's roaming hands because she was just a sub. However, when the same principal pulled out his boy part on a tenured teacher, she reported him.

6) Comment by twinkie1cat - 11/07/2012

Let the destruction of education in Louisiana begin as we bow down to the dominion of King Bobby and the end of constitutional law. Watch BAEO. This group is dangerous. Look at all the New Orleans folks they brought up to BR. Their head guy is not a teacher. He speaks and dresses like an up and coming politician. And he admits openly that the charter schools "are not for everybody" . Yeah, uh huh. I thought they were public schools which are for everybody. But that is what he said at a meeting last month organized by Metro Councilwoman Ronnie Edwards. Asked him myself! And now ladies and gentlemen, we will have kids going to so-called Christian schools paid for with taxpayer money that use curricula that says that the KU KLUX KLAN WAS A GROUP THAT WORKED WITH ELECTED OFFICIALS TO IMPROVE MORALITY AND THAT THEY PUNISHED MEN WHO BEAT THEIR WIVES. OH, AND THE EARTH WAS CREATED 4000 YEARS AGO. This is already taught in some "christian schools" in Louisiana. The curricula that dispense these kinds of facts and more are Accelerated Christian Education, ABEKA Book, and some others produced by Bob Jones University. So I guess our children will really be ready for LSU after they are taught that by desperate housewives with high school educations.

7) Comment by TeachVeritas - 11/07/2012

WOW! I take it as a compliment to be compared to Noel Hammatt, so thank you, Being_Stupid. Interesting how statistics are labeled meaningless whenever they solidly refute the bellowing of another. Education is empowering, Being_Stupid. In fact, I urge you to try some rather than engaging in sophmoric name calling, e.g. "Union Thugs."

8) Comment by Being_Stupid - 11/07/2012

@TeachVeritas = Noel Hammatt. After reading that long winded comment of meaningless statistics, percentages, and useless research, sounds a lot like a response that Noel Hammat (former EBR School Board Micro Manager) would make during a pointless EBR School Board Meeting. Is your real name Noel Hammatt? Just curious. Thanks.

9) Comment by Being_Stupid - 11/07/2012

The Taxpayers outnumber the Union Thugs.

10) Comment by TeachVeritas - 11/07/2012

In an effort to inform I gave a lengthy response to nimby?'s post. In the interest of brevity let me say this: See comment by ex-louisianian for a succinct explanation of why some schools perform badly. Research and data back his statement; see louisianaschoolsdotnet for the numbers and/or pull academic white papers and research from ERIC (Education Research Information Center) to learn more.

11) Comment by TeachVeritas - 11/07/2012

nimby?, See below in case you're interested in facts and research. If you're not interested in such data then, at minimum, please be aware that your "mixture...social/economic backgrounds" statement regarding BRHS is factually inaccurate in comparison to other EBR high schools. The at-risk population, meaning low income or impoverished, within EBR high schools for the 2011-12 school year was as follows: Glen Oaks 85% Istrouma 85% Northeast 83% Belaire 76% Scotlandville 78% Broadmoor 76% Tara 75% McKinley 70% Woodlawn 63% The average at risk popuation is 77% for the nine above-listed EBR high schools. Would you be surprised to learn the BRMHS at-risk percentage was 36% for the 2011-12 school year? Would you also be surprised to learn that academic research, conducted amongst respected and astute educational research experts for more than 30+ years, has long-ago established a correlation between high at-risk populations and low academic performance? Given my own extensive review of data regarding SPS (school performance scores) and at-risk populations, I did not take the time to pull the SPS of each of the above-named high schools. Instead, I assume the data will bear out what research proves: the higher the concentration of at-risk students in a school or district, the lower the SPS and, therefore, the nine EBR high schools listed above will have, at best, a "C" grade. What, nimby?, is your solution to schools and districts that have 70+% at-risk populations? If it's "choice," what happens when the schools chosen won't accept the students choosing them? And why shouldn't "chosen" schools be required to have and be tested on the same standards as public schools? Finally, before you assume that charters and "choice" are the great panacea to the ills of public education, take a look at the data revealed on the LDOE website, louisianaschoolsdotnet. Notice that the few charter schools that do equal or better than public schools also happen to have lower than average at-risk populations. And no, Jindal and White won't point that out. Poverty is the problem in education. That, and willful ignorance of data and purposefully misleading the public as our politicians are doing.

12) Comment by Get Real - 11/07/2012

Appeal to the 1st COA...half of the judges are running for the Supreme Court this is good way for teachers to see who to vote for the Supreme Court.....the old way for voting because of the (R) is killing you all.

13) Comment by nimby? - 11/07/2012

ex-louisianian , BRHS has a mixture of races , social/economic backgrounds who seem to be doing well . suggested problem ; lack of motivation , poor work ethics , your solution ?

14) Comment by ex-louisianian - 11/07/2012

I know that some of these posts are just a parody of the collective dimness on display in this site, but it bears mentioning that "C" and "D" schools are strongly correlated with the number of students eligible for free and reduced meal plans. The schools ranked "F" are reform schools and juvenile detention centers. Vouchers will do nothing at all to remedy either since school grades reflect economic and not academic criteria.

15) Comment by Being_Stupid - 11/07/2012

If a Private School performs at a D & F Level on the standardized tests, then that school will go out of business. The Parents and Students will pull their vouchers and go elsewhere to a school that does perform well. That is the magic of Capitalism. I will not be forced to send my kids to the D&F Government Micromanaged Public School mandated to me and my children by the Government Micromanagers.

16) Comment by Being_Stupid - 11/07/2012

@spqr - if these educators are so professional, then why are these Government Micromanaged Schools performing at a D & F Level?

17) Comment by spqr - 11/07/2012

And I want my money going to professional educators in public schools who are degreed, certified, trained, and observed on a daily basis whose students are standardized tested. NOT a private school having no proof of the above, and, in fact, is excused from much of it due to Jindal corruption.

18) Comment by Being_Stupid - 11/07/2012

I want my tax money to go to the CONSUMERS of EDUCATION (Parents & Students), not these Communist Socialist Teacher Union Bosses and their D & F Government Micromanaged Failing Public Schools. It is about educating our kids, not giving money and power to these Union Bosses, Democrat Party Elites, School Board Goonies and Their Overpaid Government Bureaucrats.

19) Comment by warreni - 11/07/2012

@LawyerDan65: In a technical sense, I'm sure it can be argued that any bill that is enrolled during a legislative session is a statute. Whether that enrollment was accomplished legally is one of the questions these suits will (hopefully) resolve. I don't really see this as much of a victory for the administration because the judge was literally following the (somewhat goofy) law in this case; whether the certifications by the administration officials were legitimate is another question entirely.

20) Comment by Warp7 - 10/07/2012

Interesting that the Judge is the husband of a former Jindal appointee! Looks like Little Jindal has pulled quick one on the citizens of the state. Like one commenter stated, how do you create a deficit on money not spent! Did the judge get advice from Rainwaters' predecessor? The Judge has too close of a connection to the Jindal administration and should rescuse himself from the case. Same old Louisiana Politics.

21) Comment by squiggly - 10/07/2012

Did Rainwater and White just lie to a judge? Boy have they just put a noose around their necks! And if Kelley is in cahoots with these clowns, he's put one around his neck as well.

22) Comment by Iamhopeful2 - 10/07/2012

Wow. It gets better - although I'm suret here's no connection - Angele was hired by Arken Construction who got the contract for Lacassine Syrup Mill. Remember that controversy? "The Lacassine mill predates Strain’s tenure at the state Department of Agriculture and Forestry. His predecessor, Bob Odom, built the facility by using the agency’s $12 million annual cut from slot machine revenue to back the borrowing. State officials approved the Lacassine mill but balked at backing a $135 million syrup plant in Bunkie amid concerns the facility would fail. Strain said it is in the state’s best interest for the Lacassine project to succeed. Otherwise, the state will be on the hook for $60 million. “Am I at all concerned? We’re going to monitor the situation very closely,” Strain said."

23) Comment by Iamhopeful2 - 10/07/2012

So I googled it myself and the first thing that popped up calls for more in-depth research. http://www.nola.com/politics/index.ssf/2010/07/baton_rouge_company_will_emplo.html "Gov. Bobby Jindal's chief budget adviser (Angele Davis) is going to work for a Baton Rouge contractor that had a role in former U.S. Rep. William Jefferson's bribery scandal."

24) Comment by Iamhopeful2 - 10/07/2012

Conglo - You are right - Judge Kelly IS MARRIED TO Angele Davis. Give it a google. So why wouldn't he recuse hmself? Who on Jindal's side knew that this conflict of interest existed. But then it is par for the course with King Jindal on the throne.

25) Comment by LawyerDan65 - 10/07/2012

The ruling was that the law prohibits an injuntion of SCR 99 (MFP resolution) because there can't be an injunction of a statute or a law when there is a certification that the injunction would create a deficit...does that now mean that SCR is a "statute or law"...because if so, SCR 99 only got 51 votes in the House and statutes and laws require 53....hmmmmmm

26) Comment by conglo - 10/07/2012

Is anyone surprised that JudgeTim Kelly, aka “Mr. Angelé Davis” (Jindal’s former commissioner of administration), would so rule?

27) Comment by timesright - 10/07/2012

Unfortunate, but the fight for what is right will go on.

28) Comment by Iamhopeful2 - 10/07/2012

Educators remain positive in our efforts to ensure that our state provides the best possible public education for ALL the children in Louisiana, in accordance with the state constitution which stipulates equitable funding for all public schools. The budget deficit ploy is a catch-22. The trial will show that it is the state's responsbility to fund a public education system that is ACCOUNTABLE and controlled by the taxpayers and voters of this state NOT a governor whose political ambitions and ego trump the will of the people.