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Office of the Chancellor / Public Affairs
Friday, January 23, 2004
 

CNN/AP 1-23-04

Court takes charge in Arkansas schools case

 

LITTLE ROCK, Arkansas (AP) --Expressing impatience with the Legislature's failure to improve education, the Arkansas Supreme Court said it would appoint someone to bring the state's school system up to constitutional standards.

The order came after a lawyer for the state acknowledged during a hearing that lawmakers missed a court-imposed January 1 deadline for coming up with ways to improve schools. The state pleaded for more time, but the justices said they were ready to act.

"We gave the state 14 months to implement a new system and that wasn't complied with," Justice Robert Brown said on Thursday. "It's really not even close, is it?"

The court did not say when it would appoint a special master, or how long the master would have to analyze the school system. The Legislature can continue its attempts to address the issue, but the court will decide whether they are adequate.

In November 2002, the high court said Arkansas didn't spend enough money on education and distributed funds unevenly. It ordered changes in the $1.8 billion system and gave the state until January 1, 2004, to put them in place.

Legislators failed to reach an agreement last year, divided largely by Gov. Mike Huckabee's plan to merge the smallest 100 or so districts to make schools more efficient.

Legislators have met in special session since December 8, but the new year arrived with no significant changes in the way Arkansas educates about 450,000 students in 308 districts.

The court case stems from a lawsuit filed in 1992 by the Lake View School District, but the state's education system also was declared unconstitutional in 1983.