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McCleary strikes again: Supremes demand education plan - or else!

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Berit Anderson

So, it’s come to this: Late Thursday, a very frustrated Washington State Supreme Court threatened to hold state lawmakers in contempt if they don’t move on a plan to fully fund education. Justices told the state to show up at a September 3 hearing or risk a contempt citation. Blame the contretemps on the nettlesome McCleary decision, a 2012 court mandate to upgrade the state’s public education system by, among other things, lowering student-teacher ratios in grades K-3 and raising instruction hours in grades 7-12. Upgrades, of course, cost money and let’s just say that reaching agreement on budget issues has not exactly been a legislative strong suit. Bottom line: The legislature’s failure to adequately address McCleary has them in hot water with the state’s highest court. — M.B.

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Berit Anderson

By Berit Anderson

Berit Anderson was Managing Editor at Crosscut, following tech, culture, media and politics. She founded Crosscut's Community Idea Lab. 
 
 Previously community manager of the Tribune Company’