• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Schools
  • Government/Politics
  • Food/Restaurant
  • Arts/Entertainment/Media
  • History
  • Health and Fitness
  • Sports
  • Kobe At Lower Merion
  • 21st Century On The Main Line

This Is Lower Merion And Narberth

Serving the Main Line Community

  • Ardmore
  • Bala Cynwyd
  • Belmont Hills
  • Bryn Mawr
  • Gladwyne
  • Haverford
  • Merion
  • Narberth
  • Penn Valley
  • Penn Wynne
  • Rosemont
  • Villanova
  • Wynnewood

Judge Rules That Court Can Hear Some Evidence Of Racial Impact In Upcoming PA School Funding Trial

by Gerry August 19, 2021

On July 29, Commonwealth Court Judge Renée Cohn Jubelirer cleared the way for plaintiffs in the upcoming trial of an important Pennsylvania school funding case to provide evidence about the massive racial achievement gaps in Pennsylvania public schools.

The lawsuit, which was first filed in 2014 by six of the state’s poorest school districts, is expected to begin on October 12. The suit argues that the current method of school funding in Pennsylvania violates the state constitution which says, ” the General Assembly must “provide a thorough and efficient system of public education to serve the needs of the Commonwealth.” 

According to the Public Interest Law Center, which is part of the plaintiffs’ legal team, “The state has adopted an irrational and inequitable system of funding public education that does not provide the resources students need to meet state standards and discriminates against students based on where they live and the wealth of their local communities.”

 

Senate And House GOP Leaders Filed Motion To Not Allow Evidence Of Racial Impact

 

On July 7, attorneys representing House Speaker Bryan Cutler and Senate President Jake Corman argued before Commonwealth Court Judge Renée Cohn Jubilirer that because the plaintiffs in the case are not alleging intentional racial discrimination, evidence of racial discrimination is irrelevant.

Judge Jubilirer, for the most part, didn’t buy it.

Judge Jubilirer, a Republican, wrote in her conclusion –

Based upon the foregoing, the Court denies the Motions in Limine filed by Speaker Cutler and Senator Corman to the extent they seek to preclude Petitioners from presenting evidence of the disproportionate impact on racial and/or ethnic minorities, such as spending or achievement gaps. However, at trial, Respondents may object to specific evidence they believe goes beyond the allowable purposes set forth herein. Because Petitioners have not demonstrated the relevance of the challenged “background evidence,” the Court grants the Motions in Limine in part.

Property Rich Lower Merion

Calling attention to disparities in funding between wealthy school districts and poor ones, the original lawsuit mentions Lower Merion School District 18 times.

Filed Under: Schools

Primary Sidebar

Sports

Family Learning To Luge

Want to Try Luge? From Lower Merion, It Starts With a Drive to Lake Placid

I was watching the Luge on NBC over the weekend. I thought it was boring, especially when juxtaposed against the more dramatic events, like curling.  The color commentator kept explaining how each “slider” was doing something slightly better or worse than the others, but to my untrained eye, they all looked the same: feet first, […]

Arts and Entertainment

These Garments Have Been Politically Maligned

Most non-Arabs who wear the keffiyeh do not intend it to be Anti-Semitic in any way. They wear it as an expression of sympathy for Palestinian civilians, support for human rights, concern about war, or identification with a broader cause of national identity and self-determination. In their minds, it is directed toward Palestinians, not against […]

What Does My Fountain Pen Have In Common With The Former Lord & Taylor In Bala Cynwyd?

Both come out of the work of Raymond Loewy and his design firm. Raymond Loewy (1893–1986) helped define what modern America looked like in the mid-20th century. Through his design firm, he worked across an unusually wide range of industries—transportation, consumer products, branding, and architecture—often simultaneously. No one in history is more closely associated with […]

January 16-18: The Philly Pen Show — A Delightfully Analog Experience

f you’re looking for a break from screens, alerts, and endless scrolling, the Philly Pen Show might be the cure—at least temporarily. It’s an unapologetically analog event: pens, paper, ink, and the people who still care deeply about them. Whether you’re a serious collector, someone who misses the feel of writing by hand, or just […]

More Posts from this Category

© 2019–2026