MacOmb Intermediate School District v. State of Michigan

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 10, 2026
Docket378748
StatusPublished

This text of MacOmb Intermediate School District v. State of Michigan (MacOmb Intermediate School District v. State of Michigan) 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
MacOmb Intermediate School District v. State of Michigan, (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

MACOMB INTERMEDIATE SCHOOL DISTRICT, FOR PUBLICATION ALGONAC COMMUNITY SCHOOLS, BAY April 10, 2026 ARENAC ISD, BIRCH RUN AREA SCHOOLS, 1:39 PM EASTERN UPPER PENINSULA INTERMEDIATE SCHOOL DISTRICT, GARDEN CITY PUBLIC SCHOOLS, GENESEE INTERMEDIATE SCHOOL DISTRICT, GRATIOT-ISABELLA RESD, HURON INTERMEDIATE SCHOOL DISTRICT, HURON VALLEY SCHOOLS, INGHAM INTERMEDIATE SCHOOL DISTRICT, KALAMAZOO RESA, KENT INTERMEDIATE SCHOOL DISTRICT, LAKEVIEW PUBLIC SCHOOLS, LINCOLN PARK PUBLIC SCHOOLS, LIVONIA PUBLIC SCHOOLS, MARQUETTE-ALGER RESA, MARQUETTE AREA PUBLIC SCHOOLS, MIDLAND COUNTY ESA, MONROE COUNTY INTERMEDIATE SCHOOL DISTRICT, MONROE PUBLIC SCHOOLS, NORTHWEST EDUCATION SERVICES, OAKLAND SCHOOLS, ROMEO COMMUNITY SCHOOLS, ROMULUS COMMUNITY SCHOOLS, ROSEVILLE COMMUNITY SCHOOLS, SAGINAW INTERMEDIATE SCHOOL DISTRICT, ST. CLAIR COUNTY RESA, TRAVERSE CITY AREA PUBLIC SCHOOLS, TRENTON PUBLIC SCHOOLS, UTICA COMMUNITY SCHOOLS, VAN BUREN PUBLIC SCHOOLS, WARREN CONSOLIDATED SCHOOLS, WAYNE RESA, WOODHAVEN-BROWNSTOWN SCHOOL DISTRICT, MICHAEL BAYER, JOHN BERNIA, MARK BLASZKOWSKI, ANDREW BRODIE, JOSEPH CANDELA, DAVEDA COLBERT, TERRY DANGERFIELD, MICHAEL DEVAULT, DANIEL DOMBROWSKI, SHELLY DUCHARME, BENJAMIN EDMONDSON, DEREK FISHER, MARK GREATHEAD, KENNETH GUTMAN, SCOTT HARDY, PAUL HUNGERFORD, PETER

-1- KUDLAK, TARA MAGER, ROBBYN MARTIN, DEDRICK MARTIN, DIANE MARTINDALE, ANGIE MCARTHUR, JASON MELLEMA, DOUGLAS MENTZER, STEPHEN MCNEW, ROBERT MONROE, GREGORY NYEN, ANDREA OQUIST, KARL PAULSON, TODD ROBINSON, PAUL SALAH, JOHN SEARLES, ZACK SEDGEWICK, ANDREW SHAW, BRENDA TENNISWOOD, and JOHN VAN WAGONER II,

Plaintiffs-Appellants

v No. 378748 Court of Claims STATE OF MICHIGAN, MICHIGAN LC No. 25-000175-MZ DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, and STATE SUPERINTENDENT FOR PUBLIC INSTRUCTION,

Defendants-Appellees.

Before: KOROBKIN, P.J., and YOUNG and BAZZI, JJ.

YOUNG, J.

Plaintiffs, consisting of a consortium of schools and school officials, appeal as of right the December 17, 2025 order of Court of Claims that granted summary disposition in favor of defendants, the State of Michigan (the State), the Michigan Department of Education (the MDE), and the State Superintendent for Public Instruction (the SPI). Plaintiffs challenge the constitutionality of an amendment to the State School Aid Act of 1979 (the SSAA), MCL 388.1601 et seq., that conditions a school’s receipt of funds that were earmarked for “school safety and mental health,” MCL 388.1631aa(1), on the school’s agreeing to waive “any privilege” and comply with a “comprehensive investigation” “in the event of a mass casualty event.” MCL 388.1631aa(9). Because the amendment does not violate the Michigan Constitution, we affirm the order of the Court of Claims.

I. BACKGROUND AND LEGAL HISTORY

The statute at issue, MCL 388.1631aa, was originally enacted by 2022 PA 144, which allocated certain funds “only to provide payments to districts to improve student mental health,” including several examples of what that might entail. MCL 388.1631aa(1), as enacted by 2022 PA 144. The only conditions were that the “districts must apply for funding under this section in a form and manner prescribed by the department” and include some documentation of how it would use the funds, and the districts must coordinate “to avoid duplication of services and to

-2- streamline delivery of mental health services to students.” MCL 388.1631aa(4) and (5), as enacted by 2022 PA 144.

The statute was then amended twice, in the year that followed its enactment, to expand the kinds of schools that can receive funds and to add activities to “improve student safety” to the kinds of services for which the funds could be used. MCL 388.1631aa(1), as amended by 2023 PA 103. Specifically, the first amendment stated that schools could “opt in and agree to receive funding under this section,” removed language indicating that the allowable expenditures list was not exhaustive and expanded that list of allowable expenditures. MCL 388.1631aa(1) and (2), as amended by 2024 PA 120. This first amendment also required schools to provide a financial expense report. MCL 388.1631aa(3), as amended by 2024 PA 120. The second amendment that year added a prohibition against using money for support staff and required the MDE to use the schools’ expense reports to prepare further reports. MCL 388.1631aa(1) and (4), as amended by 2024 PA 148.

The parties stipulated to the following additional facts:

3. On March 18, 2025, Senate Bill 166 (“SB 166”) was introduced in the Michigan Senate. SB 166 was an appropriations bill for the SSAA budget for Fiscal Year 2025–26.

4. As introduced, SB 166 (S-1) did not contain the language that would later become Section 31aa(9) of the SSAA, MCL 388.1631aa(9) (“Section 31aa(9)”), which contains the statutory clause at issue in this case.

5. The language at issue contained in Section 31aa(9) first appeared in a substitute version of the bill, SB 166 (S-3), which was reported from the Senate Appropriations Committee and passed by the full Senate on May 14, 2025.

6. On that same day, SB 166 (S-3) was transmitted to the Michigan House of Representatives.

7. On October 1, 2025, the start of the state’s Fiscal Year 2025-26, the Michigan House of Representatives adopted and passed its own substitute version of the bill, designated SB 166 (H-5).

8. On October 3, 2025, a joint Conference Committee issued its “First Conference Report on Senate Bill 166,” containing the final, operative language of Section 31aa(9).

9. On that same day, both chambers moved to adopt the Conference Report without further amendment and the final version of the bill was passed.

10. The Governor signed SB 166 into law on October 7, 2025, where it was designated as Public Act 15 of 2025, and Section 31aa of 2025 PA 15 was codified as MCL 388.1631aa.

-3- 11. Plaintiff Schools are eligible to receive funding under Section 31aa(3) of the SSAA, MCL 388.1631aa(3) (“Section 31aa(3)”) provided they meet all conditions required for funding.

12. Section 31aa(1) appropriates funds for school safety and student mental health programs for Fiscal Year 2025-26 and Section 31aa(3) requires MDE to make payments by December 31, 2025 to Schools that opt in and agree to receive funding that is conditioned on certain requirements set forth in Section 31aa, including without limitation Section 31aa(9) of the SSAA.

* * *

14. All Section 31aa funding is conditioned on an agreement to “waive any privilege . . . in the event of a mass casualty event.” MCL 388.1631aa(9).

16. At issue in this case is Plaintiffs’ allegation that the condition in Section 31aa(9) to receive a portion of Section 31aa(1) funds, i.e., that Schools “must affirmatively agree to waive any privilege that may otherwise protect information from disclosure in the event of a mass casualty event[,]” MCL 388.1631aa(9), violates several provisions of the state and federal constitutions.

17. As part of the Section 31aa(3) opt-in process, applicant Schools must agree to the conditions set forth in Section 31aa(9), including the agreement “to waive any privilege,” as a prerequisite for receiving Section 31aa(3) funds.

Following commencement of this action, the parties stipulated to give the schools until December 4, 2025 to opt in to receive Section 31aa funding, and they gave the schools until December 30, 2025 to rescind their opt-in.1

In relevant part, the current version of MCL 388.1631aa, as amended by 2025 PA 15, is excerpted below. This Court adds emphasis to the portion that hereinafter this Court refers to as “the privilege waiver.”

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Bluebook (online)
MacOmb Intermediate School District v. State of Michigan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macomb-intermediate-school-district-v-state-of-michigan-michctapp-2026.