Page:Lake View School District No. 25 v. Huckabee, 351 Ark. 31 (2002).pdf/77

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Ark.]
Lake View Sch. Dist. No. 25 v. Huckabee
Cite as 351 Ark. 31 (2002)
107


unless it determines actual expenditures per pupil and makes necessary decisions on funding. That is something the General Assembly must deal with. The funding required does relate to the constitutional requirement for education, and the General Assembly must address it. The issue of wealth of districts is less helpful. Whether there is classification based on wealth exists begs the real issue. The wealth of a district with respect to a general, suitable, and efficient public school is not relevant because the state must assure the required educational opportunities are provided regardless of wealth.

Looking for inadequacy and inequality in funding does not necessarily answer the real issue. The real issue is whether each child is provided the constitutionally required educational opportunities. Maddox, supra. The real issue is whether all students are afforded the constitutionally required education.

Amendment 74 must also be noted in this discussion, because it specifically provides that school districts may "to the extent permissible" raise additional funds to "enhance the educational system in the school district." Ark. Const. amend. 74. "Enhance" means the educational opportunities that are being provided by the additional funding are above and beyond the general, suitable, and efficient education required under the constitution. Therefore, inequality between districts may well constitutionally exist. It may not, however, exist as to provision of the constitutionally required "general, suitable, and efficient" public schools. In short, while I agree that the present system is unconstitutional, I cannot agree that the General Assembly is bound to assure that each student must receive precisely the same educational opportunities, facilities, curricula, or equipment. Amendment 74 will not allow this conclusion. Perhaps that is why the majority opinion speaks in terms of substantially equal educational opportunity, rather than precisely the same.

I also write to state that while I agree that under Lake View II, attorneys' fees will be awarded in this case, I do not agree that fees should be granted based upon acquiescence by the State regarding work done by the attorneys. Documentation of work