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Lawyers for school districts, legislators in court; justices re-hearing 19-year-old case
Posted: 09.18.2012 at 1:28 PM Updated: 09.18.2012 at 2:45 PM
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The state Supreme Court could finally decide whether South Carolina's public schools provide all of its children the opportunity to succeed.  / MGN
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COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) -- South Carolina's Supreme Court justices say they recognize that students in poor, rural districts aren't succeeding but question whether they can force legislative action.

The justices re-heard arguments Tuesday on a 19-year-old case that pits struggling districts against lawmakers.

The high court is asked to decide whether South Carolina schools provide all students access to a "minimally adequate education." That's the constitutional standard the court set in 1999.

State's attorney Bobby Stepp told the justices their interpretation set a very low bar that's hard to flunk.

Chief Justice Jean Toal repeatedly asked the district attorneys for specific suggestions for a court order. She suggested forced consolidation as a possibility. She says the plaintiff districts are too small and spend too much money on administration.

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