Montana judge upholds suit over Native education requirement
Source: Associated Press
Montana judge upholds suit over Native education requirement
By HALLIE GOLDEN
April 4, 2023
A judge in Montana refused to dismiss a lawsuit Tuesday brought by Native American tribes, parents and students against state education leaders that alleges the states unique constitutional requirement to teach students about Native American history and culture has not been upheld.
Its shocking to me that we are this many decades down the road, with this many court challenges, this many legislative enactments
that this is where we sit here today in 2023, said Judge Amy Eddy, who explained she would provide the specific rationale for her ruling in about a month.
The hearing came 50 years after the states constitution that embedded this educational requirement took effect. Other states, including Connecticut, Washington, Oregon, California and North Dakota, have committed in recent years to boosting these types of educational requirements, but Montana remains the only one that includes it in its constitution.
Deputy Attorney General Thane Johnson, representing the defendants, which includes the Montana Office of Public Instruction and the Montana Board of Public Education, argued that not only is the constitutional clause aside from funding aspirational, but its not up to the state to enforce these content standards.
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Read more: https://apnews.com/article/montana-native-american-education-lawsuit-4f68d367ef558c11a55c541c6101190e