State v. Campbell County School District

2001 WY 19, 19 P.3d 518
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 2001
Docket00-120, 00-121, 00-122, 00-123
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 2001 WY 19 (State v. Campbell County School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Campbell County School District, 2001 WY 19, 19 P.3d 518 (Wyo. 2001).

Opinion

KITE, Justice.

[¶1] The school districts and the Wyoming Education Association (WEA) in these cases challenge the constitutionality of the Wyoming statutes which establish the method for financing the operation and construction of public schools. This court reluctantly concludes that, while great effort has been made by many and some improvement has been achieved, the constitutional mandate for a fair, complete, and equal education "appropriate for the times" in Wyoming has not been fully met. Although these cases were not formally consolidated, we are issuing one opinion because the legal analyses and conclusions apply similarly to the issues raised in all the cases. A single opinion will provide clarity and consistency in this court's direction to the legislative and executive branches of our state's government as those branches continue to work toward a constitutionally acceptable school financing system for Wyoming's youth.

[¶2] As will be more fully developed in the course of this opinion, we hold:

©The cost-based model approach chosen by the legislature which relies upon past statewide average expenditures is capable of supporting a constitutional school finance system.
® The funding legislation must be modified as follows, on or before July 1, 2002, in order to provide a constitutionally ade-
quate education appropriate for our . times:
The model and statute must be adjusted for inflation each biennium, with 1996-97 as the base year, utilizing the Wyoming cost-of-living index (WCLI), beginning in 2002-08, so long as a cost of education model using historic costs is relied upon for the basis of education funding. The legislature shall conduct a review of all components of the model in 2001 and every five years thereafter to assure it remains an accurate reflection of the cost of education.
Administrative and classified salaries must be adjusted to account for differences in experience, responsibility, and seniority.
Cost of maintenance and operation, including utility costs, must be determined by either development of a formula which uses enrollment measured by ADM, building square footage, and number of buildings in the district or actual costs fully reimbursed, subject to state oversight.
Pending future development of an accurate formula with which to distribute adequate funds, actual and necessary costs of educating economically disadvantaged youth and limited English speaking students shall be fully funded, subject to state oversight.
The costs of providing teachers and equipment for vocational and technical training must be included as line items in the MAP model and funded accordingly.
Any small school adjustment must be based on actual differences in costs which are not experienced by larger schools.
Any small school district adjustment must be based on documented shortfalls under the MAP model that are not equally suffered by larger districts.
Statewide average costs must be adjusted for cost-of living differences *527 using either the entire WCLI or an-other reasonable formula which includes a full housing component, including the rental of shelter costs, and a medical component to cover costs not included in the benefits portion of the salary component.
e Kindergarten Error-The legislature, on or before July 1, 2002, shall provide a one-time supplement to fully fund each school district's 1998-99 kindergarten component cost in the total aggregate amount of the $13,930,000 funding error.
e Capital Construction-The legislature must fund the facilities deemed required by the state for the delivery of the "full basket" to Wyoming students in all locations throughout the state through either a statewide tax or other revenue raising mechanisms equally imposed on all taxpayers.
e Capital Construction-All facilities must be safe and efficient. Safe and efficient facilities are those that attain a score of 90 or above for building condition, an educational suitability score and technological readiness score of 80 or above, and a score of 4 for building accessibility. The total cost of compliance is $563,099,986. The legislature must provide a plan by July 1, 2002, to remedy these deficiencies within 6 years. "Immediate need" facilities and those facilities that fall below the square footage requirements must be remedied within two years which computes to $164,415,836. Facilities that are deemed "inadequate" must be remedied within four years which computes to $231,309,380. These amounts are measured in 1998 dollars which will need to be adjusted for inflation at such time as the funding is distributed.

ISSUES

[¶3] The issues ‘raised by all the parties are summarized as follows:

1. Is the cost-based block grant model a constitutionally adequate tool?
2, Were the inputs and adjustments cost-based?
3. Do the statutes governing capital construction provide a constitutional means to achieve capital construction funding?

FACTS

[¶4] The battle over the school finance system in Wyoming has been waged since the 1970s and continues today. Our collective inability to develop a solution to this legal, social, and political problem in a constitutionally satisfactory manner stems from the complexity of the issues, the importance of the education of our children to all our citizens, and the historical dominance of local control over public education. 1 Over the years, public education has been funded primarily by local property taxes with growing state general fund appropriations and some federal funding. By the 1970s, the discrepancy in the level of funding across the state was striking. 2 Sweetwater County Planning Committee for Orgamization of School Districts v. Hinkle, 491 P.2d 1234, 12837 (Wyo. *528 1971). We recognized these inequities thirty years ago in Hinkle, which involved two school districts fighting over inclusion of the Bairoil school district in their districts in order to enhance their tax bases. Noting that such inequities were unconstitutional, this court stated:

If ad valorem taxes for school purposes were equalized throughout the state, as required by Art. 1, § 28, Wyoming Constitution, and by the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, cases such as the one being dealt with would not arise.

491 P.2d at 1286-37 (footnote omitted).

[¶5] As long ago as Hinkle, this court reluctantly made suggestions to the legislature of ways in which the constitutional problems could be addressed by a statewide financing system. Almost ten years passed without improvement.

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2001 WY 19, 19 P.3d 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-campbell-county-school-district-wyo-2001.