Written by GARY D. ROBERTSON
A retired judge who has managed longstanding litigation on K-12 education spending in North Carolina for years said he’s received no direct explanation why he’s not handling the next portion of the case.
Superior Court Judge David Lee has been overseeing the lawsuit called “Leandro” since late 2016. But this week state Supreme Court Chief Justice Paul Newby instead assigned special Superior Court Judge Mike Robinson to evaluate school spending in a new state budget law in light of Lee’s November order directing $1.75 billion be moved from state coffers to government agencies.
Lee had ruled that the money had to fund a remedial spending plan through mid-2023 to help provide a constitutionally mandated “opportunity for a sound basic education” for at-risk children and those in poor regions. Republican legislative leaders said he had overstepped his powers by appropriating funds, which is a duty of the General Assembly. A state Court of Appeals later blocked the revenue transfer.
On Monday, the same day that it was revealed the state Supreme Court had agreed to fast-track appeals of the case, Newby issued an order telling Robinson to conduct the budget review and alter Lee’s order, if necessary, within 30 days. Robinson held a video conference call with parties in the lawsuit Thursday to schedule collecting data deadlines and in-person arguments for April 13.
Graham Wilson, a spokesperson for the Administrative Office of the Courts, said Wednesday that Lee had reached the mandatory retirement age for judges, which is 72. Judges who reach that age, however, can continue to preside over cases, with a chief justice’s approval. Wilson said he had no additional information when asked whether Lee’s age was Newby’s specific reason for the change.
Lee, from Union County, was named by then-Gov. Pat McCrory as an emergency Superior Court judge after he stepped down from his elected bench post in 2016. The day after his 72nd birthday in late January, Lee said he received a call from the court system stating that he was now a “recall” judge whose work would be at Newby’s discretion.
Although Lee has received a commission to preside over at least one pending case, he felt that his future with the Leandro matter was uncertain until he saw Robinson’s assignment.
“I’ve never gotten any formal notice or explanation,” Lee told The Associated Press in an interview Wednesday. Asked why he believes the change occurred, he added: “My guess on that is as good as yours.” But he said Newby is “perfectly at liberty” under the rules to do so.
Lee is a registered Democrat. Robinson and Newby are Republicans.
Lee, who had taken over managing the Leandro case after the retirement of Superior Court Judge Howard Manning, said he never expected to see this case through to completion. The lawsuit — named for one of the original plaintiffs — was filed in 1994. It led to landmark state Supreme Court decisions in both 1997 and 2004.
Lee, a longtime civil litigation attorney who was first appointed to the bench in 2003, acknowledged criticisms by GOP leaders. But he said it’s always been his job to do what he thinks is right based on the law.
“I didn’t intend to make this another career case,” Lee said. “The case is not about the judge. … It should be about these parties and the attorneys for these parties.”
Photo via Alex Granados/EducationNC.
Related Stories
‹

Health Experts, Orange County Officials Share Concern for LGBTQ Wellbeing in Wake of NC BillsThe passage of two bills by the North Carolina General Assembly has drawn condemnation from some elected bodies in Orange County and local pediatric health experts alike for their anti-LGBTQ+ elements. The bills’ sponsors say the elimination of gender-affirming medical care for those under 18, as well as the requirement of educators to alert parents […]

North Carolina Senate OKs Limits on LGBTQ School InstructionWritten by HANNAH SCHOENBAUM Public school teachers in North Carolina would be required in most circumstances to alert parents before they call a student by a different name or pronoun, under a bill passed by the Republican-controlled state Senate on Tuesday. Senators rejected a wave of warnings that the measure could endanger some LGBTQ students who have […]

North Carolina Senate OK’s Bill Limiting Racial TeachingsWritten by BRYAN ANDERSON North Carolina Senate Republicans on Thursday passed a bill to limit how teachers can discuss certain racial concepts inside the classroom. The proposal seeks to bar educators from compelling students to personally adopt any ideas from a list of 13 beliefs, including the views that one particular race or sex is inherently […]

Bill To Curb Racial Teachings Advances in North CarolinaWritten by BRYAN ANDERSON A state Senate hearing on how racial concepts are taught in North Carolina classrooms devolved into chaos Tuesday when one of the state’s highest-ranking Republicans shouted at a prominent Democratic lawmaker and stormed out of the room. Despite the uproar, the Senate Education Committee ultimately advanced the measure, which would bar […]

Cooper, Legislative Leaders Announce Deal on K-12 SchoolsWritten by GARY D. ROBERTSON Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper and Republican legislative leaders announced compromise legislation Wednesday that will mean more K-12 students in North Carolina will return to daily in-person instruction, some almost immediately. The agreement, announced in a rare bipartisan news conference by some the state’s most powerful leaders, comes nearly two weeks after […]

'A Junk Pile of Bad Ideas': State Sen. Graig Meyer on How to Understand the NC LegislatureState Sen. Graig Meyer (D-Orange) discusses the latest developments in the legislature - and how we can understand them from the outside.

North Carolina GOP Again Seeking To Limit Racial TeachingsWritten by HANNAH SCHOENBAUM A previously vetoed proposal advancing in the North Carolina House would restrict how teachers can discuss certain racial topics in the classroom amid a national GOP crusade against ideas they associate with “ critical race theory.” The bill, which passed Tuesday in the House Education Committee, would ban public schools from compelling students […]

North Carolina Senate Again Seeking LGBTQ Limits in SchoolsWritten by HANNAH SCHOENBAUM A bill advancing in North Carolina’s Senate would prohibit instruction about sexuality and gender identity in K-4 public school classes, defying the recommendations of parents, educators and LGBTQ youths who testified against it. Sponsors of the bill, approved Wednesday by the Senate education committee, say they want to grant parents greater authority […]

Blue-Ribbon Panel Makes NC Education RecommendationsWritten by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A bipartisan panel of education leaders, legislators and representatives of government agencies and outside groups on Monday recommended ways to improve North Carolina’s public education and access to it, from preschool to universities. Members of the Hunt-Lee Commission, which was formed to address inequities in student outcomes, backed 16 proposals, some of […]

NC Judge: No Explanation for Replacement in ‘Leandro’ CaseWritten by GARY D. ROBERTSON A retired judge who has managed longstanding litigation on K-12 education spending in North Carolina for years said he’s received no direct explanation why he’s not handling the next portion of the case. Superior Court Judge David Lee has been overseeing the lawsuit called “Leandro” since late 2016. But this […]
›