From: Mike Walker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

"The lawsuit is built upon one paragraph in the law that says no state or 
school district can be forced to spend its money on expenses the federal 
government has not covered. 'What it means is just what it says -- that you 
don't have to do anything this law requires unless you receive federal 
funds to do it,'' said NEA general counsel Bob Chanin....The lawsuit 
accuses the government of shortchanging schools by at least $27 billion, 
the difference between the amount Congress authorized and what it has spent."

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/national/AP-Education-Lawsuit.html?ex=1114660800&en=c027994215c3e22f&ei=5070

          April 20, 2005
New Lawsuit Filed Over No Child Left Behind

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Filed at 9:39 p.m. ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The nation's largest teachers union and school districts 
in three states sued the Bush administration Wednesday over the No Child 
Left Behind law, aiming to free schools from complying with any part not 
paid for by the federal government.

The lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court for eastern Michigan, is the 
first major challenge to President Bush's signature education policy. The 
outcome would apply directly to the districts in the case, but it could 
affect how the law is enforced in schools across the country.

Leading the fight is the National Education Association, a union of 2.7 
million members and a political adversary of the administration. The union 
mobilized its forces for Democrat John Kerry in the 2004 presidential race, 
and its objections to Bush's law prompted former Education Secretary Rod 
Paige to call the NEA a ''terrorist organization.''

The other plaintiffs are nine school districts in Michigan, Vermont and 
Bush's home state of Texas, plus 10 NEA chapters in those states and 
Connecticut, Illinois, Indiana, New Hampshire, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Utah. 
The NEA is paying for the lawsuit.

Bush is facing battles on other fronts, too. The Republican-led Utah 
Legislature voted Tuesday to put its educational goals ahead of the federal 
law despite the possible loss of $76 million, Connecticut is planning its 
own lawsuit, and other states are balking over money.

The law is widely considered the most significant federal education act in 
decades. It puts particular emphasis on ensuring that schools give 
attention to minorities and poor children who have long fallen behind on 
achievement.

Dennis Pollard, an attorney representing schools in Pontiac, Mich., said 
the lawsuit was strictly about funding. ''There is no intent to frustrate 
the purpose of No Child Left Behind,'' he said.

The lawsuit is built upon one paragraph in the law that says no state or 
school district can be forced to spend its money on expenses the federal 
government has not covered.

''What it means is just what it says -- that you don't have to do anything 
this law requires unless you receive federal funds to do it,'' said NEA 
general counsel Bob Chanin.

''We want the Department of Education to simply do what Congress told it to 
do. There's a promise in that law, it's unambiguous, and it's not being 
complied with.''

The lawsuit accuses the government of shortchanging schools by at least $27 
billion, the difference between the amount Congress authorized and what it 
has spent.

Education Secretary Margaret Spellings, as chief enforcer of the law, is 
the defendant. She is accused of violating the law and the spending clause 
of the U.S. Constitution.

Education Department spokeswoman Susan Aspey called the suit regrettable, 
saying the NEA should join in helping children ''instead of spending its 
time and members' money in courtrooms.''

At the White House, spokeswoman Dana Perino said Bush has overseen 
''historic levels of funding'' and a commitment to holding schools to high 
standards. States are making strong achievement gains under the law, she said.

The main education programs included in Bush's law existed before he took 
office, but they are now considered part of No Child Left Behind. During 
his presidency, spending on those programs has increased 40 percent, from 
$17.4 billion in 2001 to $24.4 billion this year.

Yet the suit, citing a series of cost studies, outlines billions of dollars 
in extra expenses to meet the law's mandates. They include the costs of 
adding testing, getting children up to grade level in reading and math, and 
ensuring teachers are highly qualified.

The plaintiffs want a judge to order that states and schools don't have to 
spend their own money to pay for the law's expenses -- and order that the 
Education Department cannot yank federal money from a state or school that 
refuses to comply based on those grounds.

''It is the cruelest illusion to give the children a promise that we never 
intended to keep,'' said Bill Mathis, superintendent of the Rutland 
Northeast Supervisory Union in Vermont, one district in the suit.

Plaintiffs include the Pontiac School District in Michigan, the Laredo 
Independent School District in Laredo, Texas; the Rutland Northeast 
Supervisory Union in Brandon, Vt.; and six of the school districts that are 
part of Rutland Northeast in south central Vermont.

Bush defended the law Wednesday at a White House ceremony honoring the 
teacher of the year. ''I love the spirit of the No Child Left Behind Act,'' 
the president said. ''I suspect the teachers love the spirit of challenging 
the soft bigotry of low expectations.''

------

AP Writer Tim Martin in Lansing, Mich., contributed to this story.

Copyright 2005 The Associated Press <http://www.ap.org/>



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