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    You are at:Home»State News»Kansas Supreme Court Declares School Funding Adequate

    Kansas Supreme Court Declares School Funding Adequate

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    By KMAN Staff on June 14, 2019 State News
    Justices listen to arguments during a school funding hearing before the Kansas Supreme Court in Topeka, Kan., Tuesday, May 22, 2018. (AP Photo/Orlin Wagner, Pool)
    Justices listen to arguments during a school funding hearing before the Kansas Supreme Court in Topeka, Kan., Tuesday, May 22, 2018. (AP Photo/Orlin Wagner, Pool)

    TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) The Kansas Supreme Court has approved an increase in spending on public schools that the Democratic governor pushed through the Republican-controlled Legislature.

    But the high court declined in its ruling Friday to close the protracted education funding lawsuit that prompted the decision.

    The court declared the new money is sufficient under the Kansas Constitution but said it was keeping the underlying lawsuit open to ensure that the state keeps its funding promises.

    Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly had hoped the Supreme Court would end the lawsuit. Four local school districts sued in 2010.

    The districts’ attorneys argued the new law would not provide enough new money after the 2019-20 school year. Education funding tops $4 billion a year.

    —

    Kelly and another top Democrat are cheering the decision approving the new law.

    The high court ruled Friday that with the new law, the state is adequately funding education. The new law was championed by Kelly and boosts the state’s spending on schools by roughly $90 million year.

    Kelly called it “a great day for Kansas and for our kids.” Kansas House Minority Leader Tom Sawyer of Wichita called the law “a critical accomplishment.”

    The court declined to close the education funding lawsuit that prompted the ruling. The justices said they want to make sure that the state keeps its promises. Kelly said she intends to make sure that the Legislature provide adequate funding in the future.

    An attorney representing four local public school districts in Kansas is promising to continue monitoring the state’s education funding in the wake of a state Supreme Court ruling.

    Attorney Alan Rupe said he is disappointed in the result.

    But Rupe said it’s a “huge victory” that the Supreme Court declined to end the lawsuit so that the justices can ensure that the state keeps its funding promises. Rupe said the districts will go back to the Supreme Court if they feel the state is not meeting its commitments.

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