WILL Sues DPI For Embargoed ESSA Documents
Documents would shine light on whether DPI is illegally implementing ESSA
The News: Last week, WILL sued the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction (DPI), the state education agency, in Dane County Circuit Court to obtain documents that would help determine whether DPI is illegally implementing the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA).
Upon receiving the complaint, Judge Richard Niess immediately ordered the DPI to “release the records” or appear before the Judge on February 26 at 2:00 PM in the Dane County Courthouse to explain their failure to do so.
Since last August, DPI has refused to turn over these documents to WILL, even though they have been provided the same documents to school district superintendents under an illegal embargo.
ESSA Background: The Every Student Succeeds Act is the new federal law on K-12 education, replacing No Child Left Behind. ESSA gives states more power – in exchange for federal funds – to set education policy. To comply with ESSA, Wisconsin must implement its state plan, which includes creating a new accountability system and federal report card.
In Wisconsin, state agencies cannot implement policies without going through the regulatory process, which includes a legislative check. Agencies cannot promulgate regulations without having explicit authority from the state legislature. Two years ago, WILL warned DPI and then-Superintendent Evers that they cannot unilaterally implement portions of the ESSA state plan without additional laws.
The Lawsuit: Last August, WILL attorneys filed an open records request to ensure that DPI is not breaking state law by unilaterally implementing ESSA. WILL asked for communications between DPI and school districts regarding the Every Student Succeeds Act, among other documents. After repeated follow-ups by WILL, DPI responded on November 13, 2018 partially denying the request. WILL promptly amended its request by narrowing the search parameters. To this date, DPI has refused to comply with the request.
State law establishes a “presumption of complete public access to government records” and gives the public the “right to inspect any record”, subject to exemptions that do not apply here. The Attorney General of Wisconsin has recommended that ten working days are a reasonable response time for an open records request. A 2017 report found that DPI’s average response time for a request was 8.9 business days. WILL’s original request was made over 5 months ago and it has been over 2 months since the request was narrowed.
Quotes: “For months, DPI has illegally delayed turning over important records about ESSA. To make matters worse, they have no problem sharing these records with school district superintendents and instructing districts to keep them from the public. Their attempt to hide how they are implementing federal law without proper legal authority should give parents and taxpayers alike cause for concern.” said Tom Kamenick, Deputy Counsel and open government expert at WILL.
“The Every Student Succeeds Act is a comprehensive federal law that imposes a number of requirements on states to make decisions on K-12 policy issues, and DPI has known for months that they lack authority to implement it,” said Libby Sobic, WILL Director of Education Policy. “Despite this, DPI has moved forward unilaterally and attempting to avoid the legislature and regulatory process.”
Go Even Deeper:
- 2/8/19: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel – Conservative group sues Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction for records
- 2/7/19: WILL v. DPI petition for writ of mandamus
- 1/17/18: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel – DeVos approves Wisconsin ESSA plan that Walker rejected
- 5/21/17: Fox6 – Wisconsin prepares education plan under lawsuit threat
- 2/7/17: WILL & WMC letter to Superintendent Evers, warning him of the failure to follow the state administrative procedures act
NOTE: This press release was submitted to Urban Milwaukee and was not written by an Urban Milwaukee writer. While it is believed to be reliable, Urban Milwaukee does not guarantee its accuracy or completeness.
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Apr 7th, 2023 by Wisconsin Institute for Law & LibertyLawsuit is a part of WILL’s Preserving Democracy Project