Detroit Public Schools Community District v. Dept of Treasury

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 24, 2026
Docket379565
StatusPublished

This text of Detroit Public Schools Community District v. Dept of Treasury (Detroit Public Schools Community District v. Dept of Treasury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Detroit Public Schools Community District v. Dept of Treasury, (Mich. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

DETROIT PUBLIC SCHOOLS COMMUNITY FOR PUBLICATION DISTRICT and SCHOOL DISTRICT OF THE CITY June 24, 2026 OF DETROIT, 11:57 AM

Plaintiffs-Appellants,

v No. 379565 Court of Claims DEPARTMENT OF TREASURY and STATE LC No. 24-000202-MZ TREASURER,

Defendants-Appellees.

Before: KOROBKIN, P.J., and RIORDAN and MARIANI, JJ.

RIORDAN, J.

Plaintiffs, School District of the City of Detroit (DPS) and Detroit Public Schools Community District (the New District) (collectively, the School Districts), appeal by right the order of the trial court granting summary disposition to defendants, Department of Treasury and State Treasurer (collectively, the Treasury), in this dispute involving the interpretation of statutes governing the relationship between the Revised School Code, MCL 380.1 et seq., and the statute that created the New District, MCL 380.12b. Before us is the issue of whether DPS’s repayments of an emergency loan, bond debt, and revolving-fund debt may be funded by an operating tax.

In 2016, in response to a financial crisis, the New District was established to operate the public school system in Detroit while DPS remained as an entity that existed solely to collect property taxes and pay outstanding debt. This appeal concerns whether DPS may continue to collect an operating tax to repay bond debt and revolving-fund debt after it repays a separate emergency loan provided by the State.1 This requires deciding whether, and to what extent, the

1 Simply put, the emergency loan was provided by the State to DPS to cover the district’s “transitional operating costs,” see MCL 141.933(1)(b), the bond debt was issued by DPS to cover various capital improvements, see MCL 380.1351a(1), and the revolving-fund debt was provided

-1- servicing of debt, independent of the State’s emergency loan, is included within the operating costs of a school district under the relevant statutes. As a practical matter, while DPS collects the operating tax, the Treasury pays in full a separate per-pupil allowance to the New District. But, if the New District, the successor of DPS, becomes eligible to collect the operating tax instead of DPS, the Treasury no longer will be responsible to pay in full a per-pupil allowance to the New District.

The trial court determined that repayment of the emergency loan is a school-operating cost, but repayment of DPS’s bond debt and revolving-fund debt are not operating costs. Consequently, the trial court held, once the emergency loan is repaid, Michigan law does not authorize DPS to continue to levy an operating tax to repay bond debt and revolving-fund debt. For the reasons set forth, we affirm.

I. FACTS

Beginning in 2008, a series of emergency managers were appointed to manage DPS. In 2016, DPS had about $3.2 billion in outstanding debt and was suffering an operational crisis. Effective June 21, 2016, the Legislature amended the Revised School Code to establish qualifying school districts.2 MCL 380.12b(2); 2016 PA 192. If a school district was, or became, a qualifying school district, it was substantively dissolved, MCL 380.12b(1), and its assets were transferred to a community school district, MCL 380.12b(2). Under this statutory scheme, the New District was created and DPS was restructured to exist solely as an entity that collected local taxes and repaid debt. The New District and DPS have the same geographical boundaries. MCL 380.12b(2).

After the New District was created, DPS received a $150 million emergency loan from the State to assist with the costs of transitioning DPS’s operations to the New District. DPS also had issued capital-improvement bonds. The bonds were qualified bonds, which meant that the State must provide DPS with a revolving-fund loan if DPS could not fully fund payments on the bonds.3 DPS is responsible for using the revenues it receives from levying taxes to repay the emergency loan, revolving-fund debt, outstanding bonds, and other liabilities. DPS uses revenue from operating taxes to make payments on the emergency loan and revenue from debt millages to make payments on the revolving-fund debt and outstanding bonds.

Property values in the City of Detroit have increased over the last several years and, as a result, DPS has collected an increased amount of revenue. The increased revenue has allowed

by the State to DPS to cover the district’s financial shortfall in repaying its bond debt, see MCL 388.1929. 2 A qualifying school district is a school district that previously was operated as a first-class school district and has fewer than 100,000 pupils. MCL 380.5(9). 3 A revolving-fund loan is a loan made under the School Bond Qualification, Approval, and Loan Act (SBQALA), MCL 388.921 et seq., which implemented a constitutional amendment to allow the State to make loans to school districts. The Treasury refers to this implementing legislation as “the SBQLP,” presumably referring to the title of a program, but we will refer to the act itself by using the initials of the act’s official short title as stated in MCL 388.1921.

-2- DPS to repay the emergency loan on an accelerated basis. Aggressive repayment will, apparently, allow DPS to repay the emergency loan about 18 months early.

At the time of the complaint initiating this case, in addition to the emergency loan, DPS owed about $1.3 billion on outstanding bonds and had a revolving-fund debt of about $355 million. Because of DPS’s outstanding debt, the New District allegedly was unable to finance capital improvements to school facilities and equipment. If DPS was allowed to continue to use revenues from the operating tax, it would be able to pay the revolving-fund debt in about six years and the outstanding bonds in about eight years. If DPS could not use revenues from the operating tax, it would take DPS until about 2040 to repay the revolving-fund debt and outstanding bonds.

While DPS levies operating taxes, the New District is not permitted to levy operating taxes. See MCL 380.386. Instead, the State must provide the New District with an allowance. See MCL 12.262(7). As the School Districts explain, “for the period in which DPS must levy an operating tax to pay outstanding debt, the State is required to pay the New District’s full per pupil foundation allowance exclusively” from a combination of funding methods. But once DPS is no longer authorized to levy operating taxes, the New District would be authorized to do so, and the State would no longer be required to provide the per-pupil foundation allowance.

In 2020, voters within DPS’s geographical boundaries voted to allow DPS to renew the operating tax for 11 years.4 In August 2024, Chief Financial Officer Jeremy Vidito, on behalf of the School Districts, notified Kevin Smith of the Treasury that the emergency loan would be repaid early and sought guidance about how early payment would affect the operating tax collected by DPS. Smith responded that the revolving-fund debt and bond debt were not “operating debt” for which an operating tax could be levied. Smith opined that, once the operating debt, i.e., the emergency loan, was repaid, DPS would no longer have authority to levy an operating tax. The New District would then be able to levy an operating tax, and the Treasury would no longer be obligated to transfer certain funds to the New District. Smith could not answer whether DPS would be required to transfer any residual funds to the New District.

Following the initiation of this lawsuit,5 in lieu of answering the complaint, the Treasury moved for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(8).

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Bluebook (online)
Detroit Public Schools Community District v. Dept of Treasury, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/detroit-public-schools-community-district-v-dept-of-treasury-michctapp-2026.