'Serrano’ shock waves expected coast to coast formula also failed to take into account the “municipal overburden" faced by urban areas, which have large welfare expenses and other unusually high costs. The decision, expected this year, will be especially difficult because the issue in New York state’s severe budget crisis is not how to redistribute adequate school funding, but how to equalize in the midst of sharp cutbacks. Equal protection is not the only legal strategy pursued by school tax reform­ ers. Richard Kohn of SFRP is currently working on a West Virginia suit filed under what is called a “thorough-and- efficient" clause in the state constitution. This legal theory comes from a 1976 New Jersey decision, Robinson v. Cahill, in which the state Supreme Court shun­ ned the equal protection approach, but relied on other language in the state constitution requiring “a thorough and efficient" system of schools. Most state constitutions have similar language instructing legislators to pro­ vide schooling for children, and legislat ors have simply delegated this respons­ ibility to local school districts. The New Jersey Court decided that if impoverish ed local districts couldn't do a good job because of a meager tax base, the responsibility fell back on the state. This line of reasoning has potentially far reaching implications. The Robinson court emphasized that “thorough and efficient" education should prepare a student “for his role as a citizen and a competitor in the labor market." In other words, the student is entitled to a relevant education as well as an equal one. Suits based on this interpretation, where successful, could enforce account­ ability to the courts on quality of educa­ tion as well as equality. SAN FRANCISCO. CA. (PNS) - If you pay property taxes or have children in school, some big changes may in store far you. The California Supreme Court has just declared that state's school financing system, which relies primarily on local property taxes, unconstitutional because it discriminates against those in poor districts. And that, according to many lawyers involved, may trigger a chain reaction mandating new forms of educa tion funding in state after states. The Serrano decision in California “will give support to a lot of litigation activities in a lot of states," says Allen Odden, who monitors school tax court cases for the Education Commission of the States in Denver. “We’re elated by Serrano," says Rich­ ard Kohn, an attorney with the Washing ton based Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, whose School Finance Reform Project (SFRP) helps attorneys throughout the nation with suits to force school financing reform. In the wake of the California Supreme Court's first decision on Serrano in 1971 - which ruled on principle but threw the factual issues back to the trial court - similar suits were filed in more than 20 states, and 18 states passed laws at least partially equalizing education funds for rich and poor districts. Now reformers hope the late 1976 decision of the California court - whose legal opinions are taken very seriously by other states - will spur another band wagon and convince the 12 state courts Serrano to reach similar conclusions. If you live in a poor district, that would mean an influx of money for your children's schools. And if you live in a rich Tax Revolt Stirs Seattle Suit district - even if the schools are wracked In Seattle a third type of school case with problems, as are many in highly has been developed in direct response to industrial inner city areas judged “weal a revolt against local property taxes. thy" by property tax standards - educa In 1974 the Washington Supreme tion funds would probably level off or Court rejected an equal protection chal­ drop. lenge to a state-wide school funding The redistribution could come in any number of ways: direct transfers from rich to poor districts; at least partial substitution of state income, sales or other taxes for local property taxes; or simply higher state taxes used to bring poor district up to an acceptable level. The battles are now in state courts because the U.S. Supreme Court has already ruled, in 1978, that property tax school financing does not violate the federal Constitution since education is not one of the fundamental rights guar­ anteed all citizens. The recent Serrano decision, however, held that education is guaranteed under the California constitution's equal pro­ tection provisions The original suit was brought by the father of John Serrano, a student in a poor Los Angeles school district. He objected to a system in which the California legislature distributes equal amounts of state aid to each district on the basis of average daily attendance, but then permits prosperous districts to raise additional education funds through local property taxes. This, the California court ruled, short­ changes the child who lives in a poor district. Other Cases Pending Now that the Burger Supreme Court has clearly indicated it does not consider education a fundamental right - a deci­ sion in keeping with its trend of contract­ ing the scope of equal protection under the U.S. Constitution - tax reform advocates are hoping the states will follow California's lead in filling the breach. Cases based on state equal protection clauses are already pending in New York, Connecticut and Georgia. The New York suit has a unique twist. After several low tax base suburban towns challenged the state education aid as unfair to poor communities, three big cities - New York, Rochester and Buffalo - intervened. They charged that the system, but suggested in the opinion that it would intervene if it could be shown that taxpayers in a particular school district refused to vote the tax money necessary to provide an adequate educa tion for the youngsters living there. Washington state provices a fair a mount of money to Seattle under an equalization plan, but inflation recently forced the city to ask for a tax override. Local taxpayers balked at the measure in three successive elections. So the city filed a suit contending that because local voters had refused to fund a decent educational system, the state was obliged to come up with extra funds. Seattle proposed the state average in per-pupil expenditures as a standard; if a school district could not meet the aver­ age, it argued, the state was not meeting its constitutional mandate. Though this approach does not fit in with the Serrano or Robinson line of argument, SFRB's Kohn hopes it will become an important new basis for suits. A similar case is already underway in Cincinnati. Despite the fact that some suits are bound to lose, reformers like Kohn agree that the threat of a decision is sometimes enough to force legislative reform of education financing. And they are heart­ ened by a federal program to encourage such state action. According to the U.S. Office of Educa­ tion, 23 states have accepted federal grants of up to $1 million each to study the feasibility of changing their school finance systems. Another six were a- warded funds to cover previous research costs after passing equalization laws, and Office of Education spokesmen hope all remaining states will be studying the question by the end of the year. “Like any reform movement, it will take a long time," says David Long of the Lawyer's Committee for Civil Rights Un­ der Law. “But the legitimacy of inequities in education financing has been under­ mined.” Copyright PNS 1977 March of Dimes WALKATHON I > BV ' M Ft iB< BOB NELSON Home 267-4050 Interested in a present market value update on your home? Call Cal Taran or Bob Nelson. No obl.gafion. Just ask for Cal or Bob. Still serving the community AS THE HOME FOLKS FOR f. G. Stassens, Inc. Realtors Hollywood Office 288-8871 DR JEFFREY BRADY Says: "D o Not Put O ff Needed Dental C art Enjoy Dental Health Now and Im prove Your Appearance are carving out precise legal definitions of the sovereign rights granted Indian tribes by the U.S. government-rights that until now have been defined only by a small body of Supreme Court interpre­ tations, largely in the early 1800's. Major victories in this legal offensive- including one that may turn more than half the state of Maine over to two small tribes - are beginning to reverberate. Among the most important have been: •the Maine case, in which the U.S.. as “trustee" of the Passamoquoddy tribe, is suing Maine to enforce a 1975 federal appeals court decision voiding non-Indian ownership of more than half of Maine on grounds that its 1796 sale to the state was never approved by Congress; •a 1974 federal district court decision in Washington state, upheld in 1975 and baaed on a series of 1854 and 1856 treaties, awarding half of that state's massive fishing catch to 600 Indian fishermen; •and a landmark 1972 precedent that Indians have a right to affirmative relief-not just cash awards-for illegal damages inflicted upon them. The decision in a district court in Washing­ ton. D.C., specifically ordered the restor­ Exclusive Oregon Appearance! NATALIE COLE In concert “The Best Rising Star of the Year" Thursday, February 3 • 8 p.m. ______ Portland Civic Auditorium______ Reserve Seal Tickets $6.50, $7 50 and $8 50 at The Ticket R ace at Lipman's, Portland Civic Auditonum, Stevens and Son and the usual ticket outlets A Benefit Concert for the National Psoriasis Foundation KEX1190 for details Presented by AMA Arts Management Associates Listen to ation of a lake on Paiute land that had access to lawyers until recently. been virtually emptied by a dam and A law requiring the U.S. Justice irrigation project. Department to represent tribes has long Lawyers at the first “national Indian been on the books, but court interpreta­ law firm,” the Colorado-based Native tions have given Justice discretion over American Rights Fund (N A R F), believe which tribal complaints should be pros the Indian legal offensive is now at a ecuted.* crucial turning point. W ith major land And power to decide which tribal restoration precedents already under complaints would be prosecuted by the their belts, they think further victories in Justice Department-and to okay or deny the next decade could firmly establish th e -r all contracts between tribes and lawyers-. tribes as economically secure and politic­ rested with the Secretary of the Interior, ally independent peoples. who oversees the B IA . “Since the But equally likely, they fear, is a (Interior) Secretary was usually the backlash: an assult in Congress unleashed object of the suit," says A rth u r Lazarus, by the shock of decisions like that in an attorney with the largest private firm Maine, altering at one blow the laws on in Indian law, “it wasn’t very easy to get which the Indian victories are based. a contract approved.” Already the Washington fishing rights' Finally, most Indian tribes were-and decision has led to considerable violence still are-poor. in the region and a campaign to impeach The situation began to change in 1966, the federal judge who ruled on the case. when the federal Legal Services Program The major question now, says Reid (LSP) was set up as part of the W ar on Chambers, a N A R F founder, “is how Poverty. Though only 52 lawyers were much of the gains we’re going to win funded, reaching just 15 percent of the judicially can be held politically in the Indian population, tribes began to get long term.” independent, low-cost, quality counsel Congress has dramatically changed and win major decisions for the first time. Indian legal status in the past, as when it Less obvious but equally important, passed a series of laws "terminating" a the neglect of Indian rights was revealed dozen tribes between 1952 and 1970. And to a generation of non Indian lawyers, federal courts have ruled that such many of whom are bringing important legislative action is beyond their jurisdic­ suits today. tion. By 1970, attorneys at the nation's One likely but unwelcome compromise, largest Indian LSP, California Indian srys Sam Deloria, director of the Ameri­ Legal Services (CILS), realized that can Indian Law Center at the University Indian law could not be left to develop on of New Mexico, is legal action mandating its own. Someone had to spot and win a trade-off of rights for money. the key cases that would extend or " If you have a right to something and collapse the foundation of legal precedent they're strong enough to take it." he says, supporting tribal independence and pow­ “the legal system may say, ’he can have er over reservation land, water, minerals it, but he's got to pay you for it,’ and feel and other resources. that justice has been done. With $1.2 million from the Ford Found­ “This misses the point that you have at ation-Ford's second largest legal grant stake an endangered species. We want ever-C ILS lawyers founded the Native the specific relief which helps us to American Rights Fund in Boulder, Colo. preserve our reservation. Our greatest Since then, with Ford support continuing, fear right now is the legal system is just N A R F has represented almost 1,500 not sophisticated enough to accomodate clients and grown from three to 19 this special problem." law yers-12 of them Indians and five of those women. W H Y T H E COURTS A N D W H Y NOW? Meanwhile legal education for Indians “The courts,” according to Tom has blossomed to provide a steadily Tureen, the N A R F lawyer behind the growing supply of Indian attorneys. Passamoquoddy case in Maine, “have A fter the University of New Mexico's treated Indians more fairly than any (U NM ) Dean Thomas Christopher and other non-Indian institution or govern­ Prof. Frederick Hart took their 1966 ment.” findings on Indian lawyers to the federal Bost most Indian lawyers believe the Office of Economic Opportunity, the government’s administrative instrument government agreed to fund a legal for handling Indian affairs, the Bureau of .scholarship program at U N M for Indians. Indian Affairs (B IA ), rather than protect­ Robert Bennett, an Indian lawyer just ing tribal rights and resources has consis retiring as Lyndon Johnson’s Indian tently violated them. Commissioner, became director. “On the reservation you’ve got a Bennett set up an American Indian bureaucrat telling you you can't do this Law Center to meet the mushrooming and you can’t do that, always standing demand for legal research and assistance. behind a regulation," says N A R F Direct The Center in turn began an Indian Law or Tom Fredericks. “I t was that the Training Program for tribal judges, pros­ whole regulation system that Indians are ecutors and court clerks. in-which had more to do with my decision But the scholarship program, which to go into law than anything else." includes six-to-eight week summer ses­ So the courts have quickly become a sions to give college students preparation central arena for the Indian movement. for law school, is the center's major But why now, rather than years ago effort. "We have students in about 40 when the problems first developed? Why schools," says Sam Deloria, brought in by in Maine hus a 1796 violation of a 1790 law Bennett in 1971 to head the center. “We've produced about 150 Indian taken 180 years to come to trial? lawyers since the program started and The answer, according to Indian attor almost all of them are working in Indian neys, is that few Indians had significant affairs." “A tense of humor it e tente of proportion." CALTORAN Home 289 0939 LISTING INFORMATION Indian attorneys seek justice BANGOR. M A IN E (PNS) When two faculty members at the University of New Mexico Law School took an informal survey of Indian lawyers in the U.S. 10 years ago. they found there were fewer than three dozen-though proportional representation for the Indian population called for 1.000. I Today the three dozen have grown to at least 150. a figure almost matched by an equally swelling number of non-In­ dians practicing "Indian law." Though still well below 1,000, this new and aggressive Indian bar has mounted a legal offensive whose outcome, many believe, will determine whether the nation’s 350 tribes survive as separate peoples. Generations of federal neglect and lack of legal advocates have left the Indian America's poorest minority. As of the last census, four of every 10 Indians lived below the federal poverty level; infant mortality was 40 percent higher than the American average; and life expentancy was seven years less for Indians than for whites. Now, for the first time, Indian lawyers. « Come In At Your Convenience Open Saturday Morning • No Appointment Needed • Complete Cooperation On All Dental Insurance Plans • j Complete Dental Services Union or Company Dental Insurance Coverage Accepted On Your Needed Dentistry Park Free - Any Park ‘n °hop Lot HOURS: Weekdays 8:30 a.ni. to 5 p.m. Sat., 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. DR. JEFFREY BRADY, DENTIST SEMLER BUILDING S.W. 3rd & Morrison St. Portland. Oregon Take Elevator to 2nd Floor 3rd isl. Entrance Phone: 228-7545 Minority Contractors To Earn More During 1977 Dr. Thomas Boothe will show how minority contractors will get bigger and more profitable contracts in 1977. All minority contractors are invited to be present Thursday , January 27, 1977 7:30 P.M. Coast Janitorial Bldg. 7th A Alberta Procurement assistance provided by Metropolitan Economic Development Corporation Kehil Gabrwt i