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Texas Sues Feds Over $830 Million In Education Aid

APRIL CASTRO   09/23/10 08:36 PM ET   AP

Texas Sues Education

AUSTIN, Texas — Texas officials filed a lawsuit Thursday against the U.S. Department of Education, seeking to overturn the federal agency's rejection of the state's application for more than $830 million in aid that has been tied up in political wrangling.

A state-specific provision inserted into a federal law by a Democratic Texas congressman requires that Republican Gov. Rick Perry promise Texas will maintain certain education spending levels through 2013 in order to get the funds. Perry has called the requirement unconstitutional because the Texas Constitution prohibits him from committing future state spending.

Texas applied for the money anyway, but was rejected because its application included a caveat saying the state would not violate its own constitution. Federal officials urged the state to reapply without the caveat.

President Barack Obama last month signed a $26 billion jobs bill intended to protected 300,000 teachers and other nonfederal government workers from layoffs. Perry said Texas is the only state whose funds application was rejected.

"Texas taxpayers are footing the bill for the education jobs fund, and Texas' hardworking teachers deserve their share of that money," Perry said. "Had the Congressional majority chosen to work for Texas schoolchildren and teachers, instead of playing partisan politics, this money could already be on its way to our school districts."

Attorney General Greg Abbott filed the lawsuit with the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on behalf of Perry, Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst, House Speaker Joe Straus and Texas Education Commissioner Robert Scott.

The Texas-specific amendment was added to the legislation by U.S. Rep. Lloyd Doggett, an Austin Democrat, who said the measure was an effort to prevent the state from using the federal money to divert state education dollars to other parts of the budget.

Doggett and other Democrats say the provision isn't unconstitutional and Perry should simply agree to the terms.

The Texas constitution says no "appropriation of money be made for a longer term than two years."

"With $830 million in funding for Texas schools tied up by congressional discrimination, we are taking legal action to secure Education Jobs Funds for Texas children," Abbott said. "The Doggett amendment singles out Texas for discriminatory treatment and requires Texas to make assurances that were not required of any other state."

The U.S. Department of Education still hopes to get the money to Texas schools, Sandra Abrevaya, a spokeswoman for Education Secretary Arne Duncan, said Thursday.

"Filing a lawsuit is not the most productive way to resolve this right now," Abrevaya said. "We are eager to get this money working for school children and stand ready to work with the state to make that happen."

Perry and Scott had sought written confirmation from the U.S. Department of Education that the money still would be available next summer, when the state budget has been signed into law and the governor could make assurances that spending on education met the requirements.

Perry's office said in a statement that federal education officials were "unwilling or unable" to provide such assurances.

Democrats in Congress said they put forth the law provision, which also would bypass state lawmakers and send the federal aid directly to school districts, because of the way Texas handled federal stimulus dollars last year. Texas lawmakers used $3.2 billion in federal stimulus money to replace state money and ended the legislative session with billions in the state's Rainy Day Fund, Doggett said.

Perry, who has built a re-election campaign around fighting Washington, said Thursday in Dallas that "this isn't a fight that I sought."

"Making promises today about state funding in 2012 and 2013 would violate our state constitution, which I swore to uphold," he said.

Perry's Democratic challenger, Bill White, quickly released a statement criticizing Perry's "political circus."

"We need a governor who's putting Texas students above his own political interests," White said.

At a meeting of the State Board of Education, Scott told board members the lawsuit had been filed to assert "the federal government is outside their legal authority to single out a state and require them to violate their constitution to simply receive our taxpayer money back."

"That's wonderful news," said board member Cynthia Dunbar, R-Richmond. "Thank you."

___

Associated Press Writers Jamie Stengle in Dallas and Jay Root in Austin contributed to this report.

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AUSTIN, Texas — Texas officials filed a lawsuit Thursday against the U.S. Department of Education, seeking to overturn the federal agency's rejection of the state's application for more than $83...
AUSTIN, Texas — Texas officials filed a lawsuit Thursday against the U.S. Department of Education, seeking to overturn the federal agency's rejection of the state's application for more than $83...
Filed by Jeff Muskus  | 
 
 
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janie@atthelake
Keep Austin Weird
06:21 PM on 09/26/2010
I've been so "unfanned" I've lost count, But Texans wake up http://www.kvue.com/news/Texas-school-officials-gather-to-discuss-lack-of-funds-103818069.html

Tricky Ricky......fault.
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MarsAmbassador
Per angusta ad augusta
01:49 PM on 09/26/2010
Federal tax dollars = national set of standards regarding education

The travesty that is the Texas Board of Education should make ALL federal fund allocation to Texas invalid. In fact, I demand a refund on any education funds they've ever got. They have clearly been misappropriated.
01:14 AM on 09/26/2010
Suck that federal teat Ricky!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Nel Pineda
12:07 AM on 09/26/2010
This like saying "I am against your baking skills but I surely want more cookie."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Nel Pineda
12:04 AM on 09/26/2010
And this coming from a state who's elected officials are preaching for abolishment of department of Education?
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janie@atthelake
Keep Austin Weird
09:52 AM on 09/26/2010
Ummmm Perry is already underminding education in texas---from this mornings Austin American Statesman
http://www.statesman.com/news/texas-politics/schools-could-lose-millions-in-state-funding-937601.html
bethel1974
My shield=knowledge
10:46 PM on 09/25/2010
Texas has not seceded yet. I thought they were gone already. Oh, well back to sleep, wake me in another 200 years.

Signed:
Rip Van Winkle.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Amy Rollins
10:43 PM on 09/25/2010
I don't live in or near Texas, but from what I've been reading/observing, it appears to be one hot mess of a mess and has been for quite some time.
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NavyMom44
08:31 PM on 09/25/2010
Hmm, I see tricky ricky can come out of hiding to tout his same guvmint taking over crap but can't be bothered to debate Bill White on the real issues of Texas.

I did not hear ole slick rick state Texas needs that money to cover his budget deficit only washington is trying to run TX, the same lines he used during the primaries but does NOT work in the general election.

Btw Gov. Goodhair also failed to mention the previous funds sent to Texas for education was used for his budget shortfall NOT towards the education of our children.
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thinkingwomanmillstone
great, green, globs of greasy grimey GOPerspeak.
08:23 PM on 09/25/2010
Is this the same Texas that wants to secede from the Union because of reckless Washington spending and too much interference in state's business? Yea, I thought so. They need the money to buy all those revisionist textbooks their state school board is recommending. Chapter 1 in the history books is all about the glorious victory of the Texans at the Alamo.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mabinog
My micro-bio is a desolate wasteland
05:42 PM on 09/25/2010
not a teabagger on this thread decrying this heinous act of socialism......
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hatmadder
nothing is more real than nothing
03:19 PM on 09/25/2010
Texas GOPers are just betting on the future...dismantling the public education system and building prisons instead...it's their long-term jobs program.
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Martha Fair
Professional RepubliBilly Factchecker
08:55 PM on 09/25/2010
They don't call it TexAss for nothing!
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hotbarb2614
proud military mother
01:25 PM on 09/25/2010
Gov. Perry went to the same college as Palin, they got a degree in stupidity.
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juhar
03:12 PM on 09/25/2010
fanned and favorite.

Perry has already threatened to secede from the Union, now is a good time.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
thinkingwomanmillstone
great, green, globs of greasy grimey GOPerspeak.
08:20 PM on 09/25/2010
they minored in hypocrisy.
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hotbarb2614
proud military mother
01:21 PM on 09/25/2010
WOW Perry and the Board of Education want to rewrite history to suit them and want money from the federal government to do it, Now that takes GALL.
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janie@atthelake
Keep Austin Weird
02:58 PM on 09/25/2010
No..this does. How does using federal hurricane relief dollars to re-build a mansion sound to ya? Some money , perry's people say --(want to bet on it) will go back.
This is gall and in your face teabagging at its best.
http://www.statesman.com/news/texas-politics/2-years-later-work-on-governors-mansion-to-936292.html
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juhar
03:16 PM on 09/25/2010
How low can they go.

Fanned and Favorite.
07:11 PM on 09/25/2010
Good stuff. I'm going to borrow it. Fanned.
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paleoimage
I'm happy to live in a fact based world
12:56 PM on 09/25/2010
You want to teach revisionist history and creationism in the classroom, Ricky? Not with my Federal tax dollars!
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murphysgirl
I prefer coffee, not tea..
12:44 PM on 09/25/2010
Waht a minute, Tea Party Rick Perry who hinted at leaving the Union now has his hands out for federal funds? I thought conservatives were all about smaller government and abolishing the Dept of Education?
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08:09 AM on 09/26/2010
Perry has been known to ask for Federal Aid before the hurricanes actually hit the Texas coast