From Deseret News archives:

Vouchers courtbound?

Published: Saturday, May 26, 2007 12:16 a.m. MDT
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In a move to clear up school voucher confusion as swiftly as possible, opponents want to send the crux of the voucher issue straight to the Utah Supreme Court.

Friday Rep. Sheryl Allen, R-Bountiful, submitted a "request for agency action" asking the State School Board to issue an emergency order that would declare the voucher amendment law, HB174, invalid and unable to stand on its own apart from the original voucher bill, HB148. The latter is the target of the referendum vote scheduled for November.

HB174, an amendment bill that made some minor changes to the original voucher law, also passed, and many say it's now law.

But critics say the bill is fragmented and missing critical sections, and the state board has yet to implement the amendment law.

In what was described as a "quasi-judicial process" by the board, the order requested by Allen would send the matter directly to the Supreme Court. Voucher supporters would have 30 days to appeal the order, and the process would automatically be before the high court. The board will consider Allen's request in a special meeting Tuesday.

"This is the first, best and last hope to get the Supreme Court to rule before the November vote," said Janet Jenson, attorney for both Allen and the anti-voucher group Utahns for Public Schools.

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Thursday, voucher supporters filed suit challenging the ballot language that would be used for the referendum vote because, they say, it would mislead voters into believing they could vote the voucher law down when there already is one in place.

Leaders in that lawsuit said they opted to go that route instead of suing the state board for failing to implement a program under HB174 because it side-stepped months of going through the trial courts and appeals.

But Jenson said that approach only addresses the ballot language and fails to get to the real issue: whether HB174 can be treated as a stand-alone bill.

According to Jenson, Utah's Administrative Procedure Act allows the state board to issue an emergency order that would go directly to the Supreme Court.

"We assume that order will be appealed and the appeal goes straight to the Supreme Court — it puts us on the freeway, removes all the stop signs, and it's the fastest, most absolutely certain way to get this issue to the Supreme Court in time to resolve it before the November election," Jenson said.

"No one else can act or has acted. The governor won't call a special session, the Legislature will not go into special session, and the other lawsuit is challenging the 100 words on the ballot title (which is) tangential to the real issue," she said.

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