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A Federal Right to Education: Necessary Change to the Foundations of America鈥檚 Education System, or No Lawyer Left Behind?

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Washington, D.C.

There isn鈥檛 currently a federal right to education. The Supreme Court made that much clear in the 1970s. But should there be?

For one side of the debate Thursday at the American Enterprise Institute, guaranteeing a federal right to education is the only way to fix the sinking ship of inequitable American education. For opponents, it鈥檚 a 鈥渦topian abstraction鈥 that will inevitably result in increased federal meddling in local decisions.

The crux of the debate was the Supreme Court鈥檚 1973 decision in San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez. Justices decided, 5-4, that there is no fundamental constitutional right to education, and that the system of funding schools through property taxes did not violate the Constitution鈥檚 Equal Protection clause, even if it resulted in inequitable funding.

The Supreme Court鈥檚 decision to leave it to 鈥渢he laboratory of the states鈥 to find a better way to ensure that all children receive an equitable education has largely been ineffective, said Kimberly Robinson, a professor at the University of Richmond School of Law.

State courts have often been unwilling to step in, or to enforce consequences when legislatures don鈥檛 follow their rulings. And only the federal government can ensure greater equity between the states, where even larger gaps exist than those between districts in the same state, she said.

鈥淲e are, in education reform, tinkering at the margins of education opportunity,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not going to get to our ultimate destination 鈥 unless we change the very foundation upon which our education system is built.鈥

Derek Black, a professor at the University of South Carolina Law School, argued that public education has always been 鈥渂ound up in the very idea鈥 of American democracy, from laws establishing new states after the Revolution to requirements for Southern states to be readmitted to the union after the Civil War.

鈥淲e can debate and play with the various different ways we want to interpret the Constitution,鈥 but America has been 鈥渁 story where education has always been understood to be the foundation of our democratic and constitutional commitments,鈥 he said.

Ilya Shapiro of the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank, said pursuing a federal right to education would be akin to discussing a 鈥渦topian abstraction鈥 because no such thing exists in the Constitution. Guaranteeing one could open a 鈥淧andora鈥檚 box鈥 to offer all sorts of arguably more essential rights, like shelter or food, he said.

Such a right would open the floodgates for lawyers to endlessly litigate the details of what exactly it entails.

鈥淚f we make this a right to an education or a right to a certain level of funding 鈥 then this really is a lawyer full employment act,鈥 he said.

Earl Maltz, a professor at Rutgers Law School, said the federal government鈥檚 increased involvement could inappropriately clamp down on the 鈥渄ifferent values鈥 in education across the country. Micromanagement from Washington and reams of litigation won鈥檛 necessarily produce better outcomes, he said.

The specifics of such a right would be up for debate but would certainly include guarantees of equitable funding, including additional support for high-needs students, and requirements for well-qualified teachers, Robinson said.

A federal judge last year alleging that poor schools in Detroit deprived students of their right to literacy. is working its way through the courts arguing that substandard education denies students a right to fully participate in American democracy.

But what America is doing now isn鈥檛 working, she said.

鈥淩ight now, what we provide is the more privileged segments of our society get an excellent education and everyone else sort of gets the remnants of state and local budgets,鈥 Robinson said.

Ultimately, Congress could step in today and address many of the current funding inequities, even without a codified federal right to education, Black said.

鈥淐ongress is complicit in its failure to spend to address our national interest [in resolving educational inequities], and it has been complicit for quite some time in that respect,鈥 he said.

At the end of the formal debate, more people supported the proponents鈥 position that there should be a federal right to education 鈥 64 percent versus the 30 who backed the opposition 鈥 but the opposition won over more of the audience during the course of the debate and so were declared the winners.

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