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California Supreme Court ruling a victory for teachers unions

The California Supreme Court was divided 4-3 in its decision to let the state’s teacher tenure law stand.
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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — In a victory for teacher unions, the California Supreme Court has decided to let the state’s teacher tenure law stand.

The high court said Monday it will not take up a lawsuit by a group of students who claimed that incompetent teachers were almost impossible to fire because of tenure laws and that schools in poor neighborhoods were dumping grounds for bad teachers. The decision leaves in place a lower court’s court ruling that upheld tenure and other job protections for teachers.

The appeals court said in its decision in April that the students had failed to show California’s hiring and firing rules were unconstitutional.

The ruling overturned a 2014 Los Angeles Superior Court judge’s decision that sided with the students.

The Supreme Court’s decision came in a lawsuit by a group of students who claimed that incompetent teachers were almost impossible to fire because of tenure laws and that schools in poor neighborhoods were dumping grounds for bad teachers.

An appeals court said in April that the students had failed to show California’s hiring and firing rules were unconstitutional.

The California Supreme Court was divided 4-3 in its decision to let the state’s teacher tenure law stand.

Three justices said Monday the court was wrong not to review a lower court ruling that upheld tenure and other job protections for teachers.

Associate Justice Goodwin Liu said the case affected millions of students statewide and presented a significant legal issue that the lower court likely got wrong. Associate Justice Mariano-Florentino Cuellar echoed those concerns in a separate dissent.

The Supreme Court’s decision came in a lawsuit by a group of students who claimed that incompetent teachers were almost impossible to fire because of tenure laws and that schools in poor neighborhoods were dumping grounds for bad teachers.

An appeals court said in April that the students had failed to show California’s hiring and firing rules were unconstitutional.

The American Federation of Teachers says it hopes the California Supreme Court’s decision upholding the state’s teacher tenure law closes the book on the flawed argument linking educators’ workplace protections with student disadvantage.

A representative for students who challenged the tenure law, meanwhile, says he hopes the state legislature will rewrite education laws with students’ best interests in mind.

In a victory for teacher unions, the California Supreme Court decided Monday to let the state’s teacher tenure law stand.

The high court said it would not take up a lawsuit by a group of students who claimed that incompetent teachers were almost impossible to fire because of tenure laws and that schools in poor neighborhoods were dumping grounds for bad teachers. The decision leaves in place a lower court’s court ruling that upheld tenure and other job protections for teachers.

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