Posted by silentpadna on 6/1/2011 4:10:00 PM (view original):
Posted by antonsirius on 6/1/2011 11:33:00 AM (view original):
This is the Georgia case? That's an interesting interpretation of what happened.
Going by memory here, but the law that was referenced in the majority's opinion forms the basis...but the problem is what the original law was intended for. Many believe that context matters. I'm new enough to Georgia to not know the history real well, but on a personal level, sending my kids to the new charter school would certainly be (or have been, depending on what happens) a better option than their current one. That said, the schools here are actually better than where we came from.
It's a weird decision to read as an outsider... the majority claimed that the counties and school boards have ultimate authority over general education in the state (a "county rights" argument, if you will) which the state government kind of tacitly conceded when they tried to argue the charter fit the definition of a "special" school, which used to be reserved for vocational schools, schools for kids with special needs etc.
But then the main dissent basically calls the majority liars in so many words, and says there have always been parallel education systems administered by the state, and the charter schools were no different. I haven't been able to tell at all who's right and who's wrong on it.
My "interesting" comment was mainly directed at the your suggestion that the majority opinion was essentially rooted in a segregationist law though. I hadn't seen that anywhere before.