State schools chief sues seven districts over funding

  • The Associated Press
  • Wednesday, July 20, 2016 12:01am
  • News
Randy Dorn

Randy Dorn

The Associated Press

OLYMPIA — State Superintendent of Public Instruction Randy Dorn is suing seven of Washington’s largest school districts, saying they are illegally using local property tax levies to supplement employee salaries that should by paid out of the state budget.

The News Tribune reported the state of Washington is a defendant in the suit filed Tuesday by Dorn, who is not seeking re-election this fall.

The school districts named in the suit include Seattle, Spokane, Vancouver, Bellevue, Tacoma, Everett and Puyallup.

Dorn said he filed the lawsuit out of frustration that the Legislature isn’t doing more to comply with court orders to fully fund public schools.

In the McCleary case, the state Supreme Court ruled four years ago Washington state was failing to meet its obligation to fully fund basic education, and must correct funding problems by 2018.

The state is currently in contempt and facing mounting sanctions over lawmakers’ failure to come up with a plan to meet the 2018 funding deadline.

Local school districts raising local levies to cover salary costs “enables the Legislature to evade its duty to amply fund education,” according to the court filing.

Dorn said he hopes his lawsuit, which was filed in King County Superior Court, will result in a clear order that all districts must stop using local tax dollars to cover the state’s educational responsibilities by Jan. 1.

Last week, the Washington Supreme Court ordered the state to court Sept. 7 to lay out its progress and address how much it’s expected to cost to fulfill its constitutional requirement to properly fund basic education.

The justices first ruled in 2012 that lawmakers were not meeting their constitutional responsibility to fully pay for basic education.

The court found the state in contempt in 2014.

Last August, the court ordered $100,000 a day in sanctions — to ultimately be used for education spending — for the state’s lack of progress.

The money was supposed to be put into a dedicated education account, but lawmakers did not allocate that money when writing a supplemental budget earlier this year.

There is enough money in reserves to cover the amount of the sanctions, which is currently more than $33 million, according to the Office of Financial Management.

Since the 2012 ruling, lawmakers have spent more than $2 billion to address issues raised in the lawsuit.

State officials have estimated that the costs related to that court mandate are at least another $3 billion.

A bipartisan legislative task force that has been charged with defining the actual likely costs anticipated to meet the funding requirements has been meeting throughout the summer.

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