Doe No. 1 v. Secretary of Education , 479 Mass. 375 ( 2018 )


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    SJC-12275
    JANE DOE NO. 11 & others2 vs.   SECRETARY OF EDUCATION & others.3
    Suffolk.     October 2, 2017. - April 24, 2018.
    Present:    Gants, C.J., Lenk, Lowy, Budd, Cypher, & Kafker, JJ.
    Education, Charter school. Education Reform Act.
    Constitutional Law, Education, Equal protection of laws,
    Standing. Jurisdiction, Constitutional question,
    Declaratory relief. Declaratory Relief. Practice, Civil,
    Declaratory proceeding, Standing.
    Civil action commenced in the Superior Court Department on
    September 15, 2015.
    A motion to dismiss was heard by Heidi E. Brieger, J.
    The Supreme Judicial Court granted an application for
    direct appellate review.
    1   A minor, by her parent and next friend.
    2 Jane Doe No. 2 and John Doe Nos. 1, 2, and 3, minor
    children, each by their parent and next friend.
    3 Chair of the board of elementary and secondary education;
    commissioner of elementary and secondary education; and members
    of the board of elementary and secondary education.
    2
    Kevin P. Martin (Paul F. Ware, Jr., also present) for the
    plaintiffs.
    Robert E. Toone, Assistant Attorney General (Juliana deHaan
    Rice & Julia Kobick, Assistant Attorneys General, also present)
    for the defendants.
    Melissa C. Allison for Savina Tapia & others.
    Ira Fader, Alan H. Shapiro, & John M. Becker, for
    Massachusetts Teachers Association, amicus curiae, submitted a
    brief.
    Brian C. Broderick & Ryan P. McManus, for Pioneer
    Institute, Inc., & others, amici curiae, submitted a brief.
    BUDD, J.   Five students who attend public schools in the
    city of Boston filed a complaint in the Superior Court against
    the Secretary of Education, the chair and members of the board
    of secondary and elementary education, and the Commissioner of
    Education (commissioner), alleging that the charter school cap
    under G. L. c. 71, § 89 (i), violates the education clause and
    the equal protection provisions of the Massachusetts
    Constitution because the students were not able to attend public
    charter schools of their choosing.   A judge of that court
    allowed the defendants' motion to dismiss.   We affirm the
    judgment of dismissal and conclude, as did the motion judge,
    that the plaintiffs have failed to state a claim for relief
    under either provision.4
    4 We acknowledge the amicus briefs submitted by the
    Massachusetts Teachers Association; Pioneer Institute, Inc.,
    Cheryl Brown Henderson, and The Black Alliance for Educational
    Options; and Savina Tapia, Samuel Ding, N.H., Z.L., A.Q., T.K.,
    B.H, The New England Area Conference of National Association for
    3
    Background.     1.   Statutory framework and history.    Twenty-
    five years ago, the Legislature enacted the Education Reform Act
    of 1993 (1993 Act).       St. 1993, c. 71.   The 1993 Act "entirely
    revamped the structure of funding public schools and
    strengthened the board [of education]'s authority to establish
    Statewide education policies and standards, focusing on
    objective measures of student performance and on school and
    district assessment, evaluation and accountability."5        Hancock v.
    Commissioner of Educ., 
    443 Mass. 428
    , 437 (2005) (Marshall,
    C.J., concurring).    Among other things, the 1993 Act added G. L.
    c. 71, § 89 (charter school statute), authorizing charter
    schools to operate in the Commonwealth to encourage innovation
    in the educational realm.      St. 1993, c. 71, § 55.
    Policymakers established charter schools as a reaction to
    what was seen as a traditional public school system resistance
    the Advancement of Colored People, Boston Branch of the
    N.A.A.C.P., and The Boston Education Justice Alliance.
    5 The Education Reform Act of 1993 (1993 Act) was enacted
    with the intent "to ensure: (1) that each public school
    classroom provides the conditions for all pupils to engage fully
    in learning as inherently meaningful and enjoyable activity
    without threats to their sense of security or self-esteem, (2) a
    consistent commitment of resources sufficient to provide a high
    quality public education to every child, (3) a deliberate
    process for establishing and achieving specific educational
    goals for every child, and (4) an effective mechanism for
    monitoring progress toward those goals and for holding educators
    accountable for their achievement."   St. 1993, c. 71, § 27.
    See G. L. c. 69, § 1.
    4
    to innovative education methods.   As the 1993 Act was making its
    way through the Legislature, one policymaker publicly opined
    that charter schools were needed because teachers wanted to
    bring creative teaching styles to the public schools, but
    principals, superintendents, and school committees often blocked
    their innovations:    "The current system is too rigid, too
    inflexible[,] and it doesn't adopt to change quick enough to
    meet the needs of students."   State House News Service, Charter
    Schools (Feb. 24, 1993) (statement of Undersecretary of
    Education for Policy and Planning Michael Sentance).
    Ultimately, charter schools were intended to provide "a
    laboratory for testing different methods and those methods that
    proved useful . . . would be replicated" in traditional public
    schools.   
    Id. (statement of
    Senate Ways and Means Chairman
    Thomas Birmingham).   A bill summary accompanying the conference
    committee report described charter schools as "laboratories of
    change, allowing for experimentation to encourage creative ways
    of addressing the needs of the children of the Commonwealth."6
    6 The 1993 Act states: "The purposes for establishing
    charter schools are: (1) to stimulate the development of
    innovative programs within public education; (2) to provide
    opportunities for innovative learning and assessments; (3) to
    provide parents and students with greater options in choosing
    schools within and outside their school districts; (4) to
    provide teachers with a vehicle for establishing schools with
    alternative, innovative methods of educational instruction and
    school structure and management; (5) to encourage performance-
    5
    The Education Reform Act of 1993, Conference Committee Report
    Highlights (May 24, 1993).
    There are two types of charter schools:   "commonwealth"
    charter schools and "Horace Mann"7 charter schools.    G. L. c. 71,
    § 89 (a) and (c).   Horace Mann charter schools are subject to
    more statutory requirements than commonwealth charter schools.
    See 
    id. at §
    89 (c).   Both types of schools operate under
    charters granted by the board of elementary and secondary
    education (board) and each is managed by a board of trustees.
    
    Id. However, a
    Horace Mann charter school must be "approved by
    the school committee and the local collective bargaining unit in
    the district where the school is located," whereas a
    commonwealth charter school operates independently of the local
    based educational programs and; (6) to hold teachers and school
    administrators accountable for students' educational outcomes."
    St. 1993, c. 71, § 55. In 1997, the Legislature added an
    additional purpose: "to provide models for replication in other
    public schools." St. 1997, c. 46, § 2.    See G. L. c. 71, § 89
    (b).
    7Horace Mann was the President of the Senate in 1836 and
    1837 when the Legislature first created the board of education
    and tasked its Secretary with reporting to the Legislature and
    the public information about best practices in education. See
    St. 1837, c. 241 (An Act relating to common schools); Manual for
    the General Court, 2013-2014, at 340. Mann served as the first
    Secretary of the board of education until 1848. 6 Dictionary of
    American Biography 241-242 (1961). Mann's influence led to,
    among other accomplishments, extending the length of the school
    year, significantly increasing spending and appropriations for
    schools, raising salaries for schoolteachers, enriching
    curricula, and placing professional training of teachers on a
    firmer basis. 
    Id. at 242.
                                                                       6
    school committee and local collective bargaining unit.8    
    Id. The Department
    of Elementary and Secondary Education (department)9
    now identifies these "standard" Horace Mann schools as Horace
    Mann I schools.   See 603 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.04(1)(a) (2014).
    Additionally, charter schools may operate as Horace Mann II or
    Horace Mann III charter schools.   See G. L. c. 71, § 89 (c) &
    (i); 603 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.04(1)(a).   The latter two schools
    are subject to requirements that are somewhat different from
    those to which the Horace Mann I schools are subject.     See G. L.
    8 Although the legislative history is silent on this point,
    the Legislature's decision in 1997 to rename the charter schools
    set forth in the 1993 Act as "commonwealth" charter schools
    reflects the fact that they are chartered and regulated only by
    the State and have complete autonomy from local control. See
    St. 1997, § 2; G. L. c. 71, § 89.
    9 The board of elementary and secondary education (board) is
    established under G. L. c. 15, § 1E. In contrast, the
    Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (department) is
    established under G. L. c. 15, § 1, and is "under the
    supervision and management of the commissioner of elementary and
    secondary education" (commissioner). G. L. c. 15, § 1. The
    commissioner is "secretary to the board, its chief executive
    officer, and the chief [S]tate school officer for elementary and
    secondary education." 
    Id. at §
    1F. Although the Secretary of
    Education appoints the commissioner, the Secretary may only
    appoint a candidate who has been recommended to him or her by a
    two-thirds majority of the board. 
    Id. The board
    may also
    remove the commissioner. 
    Id. The Legislature
    often assigns the
    board, the commissioner, and the department separate statutory
    duties. See, e.g., G. L. c. 69, §§ 1A, 1B, 1J. However, "[t]he
    board may delegate its authority or any portion thereof to the
    commissioner whenever in its judgment such delegation may be
    necessary or desirable." G. L. c. 15, § 1F.
    7
    c. 71, § 89 (c) & (i), as amended by St. 2010, c. 12, § 7; 603
    Code Mass. Regs. § 1.04(1)(a).10
    Commonwealth and Horace Mann charter schools are also
    funded differently.   See 603 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.07 (2014).
    Horace Mann charter schools operate under budgets determined and
    annually approved by the local school committee.     G. L. c. 71,
    § 89 (w).   For commonwealth charter schools, the department
    calculates a tuition payment for each district sending students
    to the school based on a statutory formula designed "to reflect,
    as much as practicable, the actual per pupil spending amount
    that would be expended in the district if the students attended
    the district schools."   
    Id. at §
    89 (ff).     The State treasurer
    pays these amounts to the schools and then reduces education and
    other aid payments to the sending districts by the same amounts.
    
    Id. See 603
    Code Mass. Regs. § 1.07(2)(d).
    Creating a Horace Mann II charter school involves a
    10
    conversion of an existing public school but does not require
    approval of the local collective bargaining unit. G. L. c. 71,
    § 89 (c); 603 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.04(1)(a)(2) (2014). Horace
    Mann III schools do not need an agreement with the local
    collective bargaining unit prior to approval by the board.
    G. L. c. 71, § 89 (i) (1); 603 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.04(1)(a).
    Horace Mann III schools must "develop a memorandum of
    understanding with the school committee and the local union
    regarding any waivers to applicable collective bargaining
    agreements." G. L. c. 71, § 89 (i) (1). "[I]f an agreement is
    not reached on the memorandum of understanding at least 30 days
    before the scheduled opening of the school the charter school
    shall operate under the terms of its charter until an agreement
    is reached." 
    Id. 8 Since
    1993, only a limited number of charter schools have
    been authorized under the statute.   See St. 1993, c. 71, § 55;
    G. L. c. 71, § 89 (i).   One explanation for the Legislature's
    decision to limit charter schools is that the limited funds of
    local school districts are allocated to charter schools and away
    from traditional public schools each time charter schools
    expand.   See G. L. c. 71, § 89 (w) & (ff).11   Widespread concern
    over the impact of charter schools on public school district
    revenues supports the conclusion that a primary purpose of caps
    on charter schools is to limit this impact.
    11 This reasoning is supported by the legislative history of
    statutes raising the charter schools cap. For example, in 2000,
    members of the House of Representatives engaged in a vigorous
    debate over a bill that would become a statute to increase the
    charter school cap, discussed infra. During debate, many
    legislators expressed their concerns with the financial effect
    of charter schools on traditional public schools, with one
    legislator noting that "[w]e will not take the money away from
    struggling school systems." State House News Service (House
    Sess.), June 21, 2000 (statement by Representative Byron
    Rushing). See 
    id. (statement by
    Representative Ronny M. Sydney
    that charter schools "are good environments, but we cannot take
    from the public schools to give to them"); 
    id. (statement by
    Representative Anne M. Paulsen that charter schools are
    "undermining our public schools," and as result of expansion,
    "education in public schools will be undercut"); 
    id. (statement by
    Representative Philip Travis that by expanding charter
    schools, "[w]e are stealing from the towns"). Opponents of 2016
    ballot question 2, discussed infra, argued to voters: "Every
    time a new charter school opens or expands, it takes funding
    away from the public schools in that district." Massachusetts
    Information for Voters, 2016 Ballot Questions, State Elections
    (Nov. 8, 2016), at 6 (2016 Ballot Questions).
    9
    As currently written, the charter school statute limits
    commonwealth charter schools in two ways:   a net school spending
    cap, which applies only to commonwealth charter schools, and a
    limit on the total number of charter schools permitted to
    operate in the Commonwealth.12   See G. L. c. 71, § 89 (i).     The
    net school spending cap limits the amount of school district
    money that must be set aside for commonwealth charter schools
    (and therefore limits the amount of commonwealth charter school
    seats in a district).   See 
    id. at §
    89 (i) (2).   Net school
    spending comprises all school district spending on public
    education, from both State aid and local sources.13   See G. L.
    12 Horace Mann II charter schools, which are schools
    converted from existing public schools, are exempt from any cap
    on the number of charter schools. See G. L. c. 71, § 89 (c).
    13 Net school spending is defined as
    "the total amount spent for the support of public
    education, including teacher salary deferrals and tuition
    payments for children residing in the district who attend a
    school in another district or other approved facility,
    determined without regard to whether such amounts are
    regularly charged to school or non-school accounts by the
    municipality for account purposes; provided, however, that
    net school spending shall not include any spending for long
    term debt service, and shall not include spending for
    school lunches, or student transportation. Net school
    spending shall also not include tuition revenue or revenue
    from activity, admission, other charges or any other
    revenue attributable to public education. Such revenue
    will be made available to the school district which
    generated such revenue in addition to any financial
    resources made available by municipalities or state
    assistance. The department of education, in consultation
    with the department of revenue shall promulgate regulations
    10
    c. 70, § 2.   For most school districts in the Commonwealth, the
    statute limits net school spending to nine per cent of total
    public education spending.    G. L. c. 71, § 89 (i) (2).   However,
    in districts that the board has designated as the lowest
    performing ten per cent of school districts Statewide, the net
    school spending cap is eighteen per cent of total public
    education spending.   Id.14   The charter school statute also
    limits the total number of charter schools permitted to operate
    in the Commonwealth to 120, only seventy-two of which may be
    commonwealth charter schools.    See G. L. c. 71, § 89 (i) (1).
    The history of charter school caps in Massachusetts
    encompasses multiple legislative enactments spanning several
    decades.   The Legislature has steadily increased the number of
    permissible charter schools and charter school seats.      See St.
    to ensure a uniform method of determining which municipal
    expenditures are appropriated for the support of public
    education and which revenues are attributable to public
    education in accordance with this section. The regulations
    shall include provisions for resolving disputes which may
    arise between municipal and school officials." G. L.
    c. 70, § 2.
    14 General Laws c. 71, § 89 (i) (2), provides: "In any
    fiscal year, no public school district's total charter school
    tuition payment to commonwealth charter schools shall exceed
    [nine] per cent of the district's net school spending; provided,
    however, that a public school district's total charter tuition
    payment to charter schools shall not exceed [eighteen] per cent
    of the district's net school spending if" the school fails
    certain student performance criteria for a number of consecutive
    years as determined by the board.
    11
    1993, c. 71, § 55 (limiting number of charter schools in each
    city or town and total number of students attending charter
    schools in Commonwealth to no more than three-quarters of one
    per cent of public school students; and permitting no more than
    twenty-five charter schools to operate in Commonwealth at any
    one time); St. 1997, c. 46, § 2 (increasing total number of
    charter schools permitted to operate and total number of
    Commonwealth's public school students permitted to attend
    charter schools, and setting net school spending cap at six per
    cent for all districts); St. 2000, c. 227, § 7 (increasing total
    number of charter schools permitted, but authorizing only seven
    each year until reaching new total cap; increasing total number
    of   public education students permitted to attend charter
    schools; and increasing net school spending cap to nine per
    cent); St. 2010, c. 12, § 7 (increasing net school spending cap
    to eighteen per cent for commonwealth charter schools located in
    districts designated as having student performance in lowest ten
    per cent Statewide,15 eliminating cap on total number of
    Commonwealth's public school students permitted to attend
    charter schools, and exempting Horace Mann II schools from all
    caps).
    15In those districts, the Achievement Gap Act of 2010
    phased in increased school-district funding of commonwealth
    charter schools between fiscal years 2011 and 2017. St. 2010,
    c. 12, § 9.
    12
    Whether the charter school cap should be lifted continues
    to be debated vigorously in the Commonwealth.    Although the
    Legislature has not increased the caps since 2010, both chambers
    have frequently considered and voted on measures that would have
    done so.   See 2016 Senate Doc. No. 2203, § 93; 2016 Senate J.,
    Uncorrected Proof (Apr. 7, 2016); 2014 Senate Doc. No. 2262;
    2014 House Doc. No. 4108; 2014 House J. 1396-1400; 2014 Senate
    J., Uncorrected Proof (July 16, 2014).    On November 8, 2016,
    voters considered and rejected ballot question 2, which would
    have permitted up to twelve new charter schools or enrollment
    expansions in existing charter schools each year.16
    2.    Factual and procedural history.   The following facts
    are taken from the plaintiffs' complaint.    The plaintiffs are
    five students who attend, or are assigned to attend, schools in
    the city of Boston.    Each plaintiff attends a school that is
    designated as a level three or level four school, that is, a
    school that is in the bottom fifth of all schools Statewide.17
    16The ballot question was rejected by sixty-two per cent of
    voters (2,025,840 to 1,243,665) voting on the question, with
    three per cent of Massachusetts voters (109,296) not voting on
    the measure. See Secretary of the Commonwealth, The Elections
    Division, Massachusetts Election Statistics 2016, Pub. Doc. No.
    43, at 529 (Election Statistics 2016).
    17The department classifies schools by level based on
    performance for purposes of accountability and providing
    assistance to improve student achievement. 603 Code Mass. Regs.
    § 2.03 (2012). The department may designate a school at level
    13
    Few students in each of the plaintiffs' schools have achieved a
    level of proficiency or above on subjects tested by the
    Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System (MCAS), which
    include English language arts, mathematics, and science.18    Each
    three if it is in the lowest-performing twenty per cent of
    schools. 
    Id. at §
    2.04 (2017). The commissioner may designate
    a subset of the lowest performing twenty per cent of schools as
    level four or level five schools. See G. L. c. 69, § 1J (a);
    603 Code Mass. Regs. § 2.05(2)(a)(2017). The commissioner's
    decision to designate a school at level four is based on
    indicators of school performance set forth in the regulation.
    See 603 Code Mass. Regs. § 2.05(2)(b). Superintendents of
    school districts containing a level four school must develop a
    turnaround plan, approved by the commissioner, designed to
    improve the school's performance. See G. L. c. 69, § 1J; 603
    Code Mass. Regs. § 2.05(5). The commissioner may place a level
    four school in level five if performance-improvement attempts
    have failed. See 603 Code Mass. Regs. § 2.06(2) (2017). If the
    commissioner places a school in level five, the commissioner may
    select an external receiver to operate the school. See G. L. c.
    69, § 1J (r); 603 Code Mass. Regs. § 2.06(5). Not more than
    four per cent of the total number of public schools may be in
    levels four and five, taken together, at any given time. See G.
    L. c. 69, § 1J (a); 603 Code Mass. Regs. § 2.05(2)(c).
    18The Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System (MCAS)
    is a standardized test that the Commonwealth uses to assess
    student performance at public schools. See Student No. 9 v.
    Board of Educ., 
    440 Mass. 752
    , 753 (2004) The four possible
    achievement levels on MCAS are advanced, proficient, needs
    improvement, or failing. See 
    id. at 758-759
    (2004); FY2015
    Annual Report, Massachusetts Board of Elementary and Secondary
    Education (Jan. 2016) Appx. 2.
    The complaint presented detailed statistics showing the low
    performance of the students in the plaintiffs' schools on the
    MCAS test. In 2014, the percentage of students who attended the
    plaintiffs' schools scoring as proficient or higher in the
    English language arts ranged from a high of thirty-nine per cent
    to a low of ten per cent; in mathematics the high was thirty-
    14
    applied to attend a charter school, but failed to secure a seat
    through the lottery.19
    In September, 2015, the plaintiffs commenced an action in
    the Superior Court seeking declaratory and injunctive relief.
    The plaintiffs claimed that their existing schools do not
    provide a constitutionally adequate education and that the
    defendants' enforcement of G. L. c. 71, § 89 (i), violates the
    education clause and the equal protection provisions of the
    seven per cent and the low was fifteen per cent; and in science
    the high was thirty per cent and the low was ten per cent.
    Moreover, in each of the last five years no more than
    thirty-five per cent of students in John Doe No. 1's school
    tested as proficient or higher in any subject.
    19Where there are fewer seats available at a charter school
    than eligible students who apply to attend, the charter school
    must hold an admissions lottery to enroll students. See G. L.
    c. 71, § 89 (n); 603 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.05(6)(c), (7)(a).
    John Doe No. 1 applied to attend Edward Brooke East Boston
    Public Charter School. Jane Doe No. 1 applied to attend the
    Match Charter Public School. John Doe No. 2 applied to attend
    the Edward Brooke Roslindale Public Charter School. John Doe
    No. 3 applied to attend "multiple charter schools in each of the
    last two years." Jane Doe No. 2 applied to attend multiple
    public charter schools. In their brief, the plaintiffs state
    that since their complaint was filed, only one plaintiff, Jane
    Doe No. 1, again entered and lost a charter school lottery and
    remains in the school to which she was assigned in 2015. During
    the pendency of the litigation, John Doe No. 1's family has
    moved outside Boston to ensure that their children could obtain
    an adequate education. John Doe No. 2 did not enter the most
    recent charter school lottery. John Doe No. 3 was accepted to a
    charter school in Boston after another charter school lottery.
    Jane Doe No. 2 applied and was accepted to a selective Boston
    district high school for the school year beginning in 2016.
    15
    Massachusetts Constitution.20   In their complaint, the plaintiffs
    sought to represent a class including themselves and all other
    children attending or assigned to attend constitutionally
    inadequate schools in Boston who have applied to public charter
    schools, but have failed to gain entry via the lottery.
    In 2015, the defendants filed a motion to dismiss the
    plaintiffs' complaint.   The motion judge granted the motion,
    concluding that, although an actual controversy between the
    parties existed and the plaintiffs had standing to bring their
    claims against the defendants, the plaintiffs had failed to
    state a claim under either the education clause or the equal
    protection provisions of the Massachusetts Declaration of
    Rights.   The plaintiffs appealed, and we allowed their
    application for direct appellate review.
    Discussion.    "We review the allowance of a motion to
    dismiss de novo."   Curtis v. Herb Chambers I-95, Inc., 
    458 Mass. 674
    , 676 (2011).    "For purposes of that review, we accept as
    true the facts alleged in the plaintiffs' complaints and any
    exhibits attached thereto, drawing all reasonable inferences in
    20The plaintiffs' complaint also asserts a cause of action
    under the due process and liberty provisions of the
    Massachusetts Declaration of Rights. However, as they failed to
    argue these claims in their brief before this court, we do not
    address them. See Mass. R. A. P. 16 (a) (4), as amended, 
    367 Mass. 921
    (1975); Doe v. New Bedford Hous. Auth., 
    417 Mass. 273
    ,
    275 n.3 (1994).
    16
    the plaintiffs' favor."   Revere v. Massachusetts Gaming Comm'n,
    
    476 Mass. 591
    , 595 (2017).   Before turning to the substance of
    the plaintiffs' claims, we must determine whether there is
    jurisdiction to adjudicate them.
    1.    Jurisdiction.   "[A] plaintiff seeking declaratory
    relief must demonstrate not only the existence of an actual
    controversy but also 'the requisite legal standing to secure its
    resolution'" (citations omitted).   Entergy Nuclear Generation
    Co. v. Department of Envtl. Protection, 
    459 Mass. 319
    , 326
    (2011).   "The purpose of both the actual controversy and the
    standing requirements is to ensure the effectuation of the
    statutory purpose of G. L. c. 231A, which is to enable a court
    'to afford relief from . . . uncertainty and insecurity with
    respect to rights, duties, status and other legal relations.'"
    Massachusetts Ass'n of Indep. Ins. Agents & Brokers v.
    Commissioner of Ins., 
    373 Mass. 290
    , 292 (1977), quoting G. L.
    c. 231A, § 9, inserted by St. 1945, c. 582, § 1.    The questions
    whether an actual controversy and standing exist are closely
    related in actions for declaratory relief.    
    Id., citing South
    Shore Nat'l Bank v. Board of Bank Incorporation, 
    351 Mass. 363
    ,
    366-367 (1966).   In declaratory judgment actions, both
    requirements are liberally construed.    " Massachusetts Ass'n of
    Indep. Ins. Agents & Brokers, supra at 293. Notwithstanding the
    17
    defendants' arguments to the contrary, the plaintiffs have
    adequately demonstrated both an actual controversy and standing.
    a.   Actual controversy.   The plaintiffs here assert that
    the "actual controversy" here is the fact that they are assigned
    to inadequate schools and the cap restricts the number of
    commonwealth charter schools, which, in turn, impedes the
    plaintiffs' access to an adequate education.21   The defendants
    argue that because (1) there is no limit on the number of Horace
    Mann II charter schools, (2) the numerical cap for Horace Mann I
    and III charter schools has not been reached, and (3) the net
    school spending cap does not apply to Horace Mann charter
    schools, the plaintiffs have not presented an "actual
    controversy."   Here, however, we agree with the motion judge
    that when the plaintiffs refer to "public charter schools" in
    their complaint, their focus is solely on commonwealth rather
    than Horace Mann charter schools and they implicitly contend
    21The complaint contains claims that G. L. c. 71, § 89 (i),
    is unconstitutional because of its charter school cap. Section
    89 (i) presently contains two types of commonwealth charter
    school caps, or limits on commonwealth charter schools. There
    is a limit on the total number of charter schools in the
    Commonwealth. G. L. c. 71, § 89 (i). There also is the net
    school spending cap, which limits the amount of any school
    district's total payment to commonwealth charter schools to a
    percentage of that district's net school spending in any fiscal
    year. 
    Id. The net
    school spending cap does not apply to Horace
    Mann charter schools. 
    Id. In 2010,
    the Legislature eliminated
    another cap that had limited the State's total charter school
    population to four per cent. See St. 2010, c. 12, § 7; St.
    2000, c. 227, § 2.
    18
    that charter operators are seeking to expand as commonwealth,
    not Horace Mann, charter schools.22
    One or more of the differences in regulatory treatment of
    commonwealth charter schools and Horace Mann charter schools
    under G. L. c. 71, § 89, may explain why charter school
    operators have opted to apply for and operate commonwealth
    charter schools in much greater numbers than Horace Mann charter
    schools.   At any rate, the limit on commonwealth charter funding
    22The plaintiffs provided evidentiary support for their
    contention that charter school operators would open more
    commonwealth charter schools if the net school spending cap were
    increased. The plaintiffs submitted a memorandum entitled
    Charter Schools -- Amendments for Boston Schools, authored by
    the commissioner and dated February 12, 2016, that was sent to
    the members of the board, and that noted that existing
    commonwealth charter schools requested significantly more new
    seats at their schools in Boston than can be accommodated under
    the net school spending cap. 
    Id. at 1.
    The memorandum pointed
    out that "existing [commonwealth charter] schools requested
    2,701 new seats in Boston." 
    Id. at 1.
    However, it also
    indicated that "[u]nder the eighteen per cent [net school
    spending cap] for Boston, the [d]epartment estimates that [only]
    approximately 1,275 seats remain." 
    Id. at 2.
    As a result, the
    memorandum provides recommendations regarding which commonwealth
    charter schools within Boston should have their requests for
    additional seats granted and which should not, while ensuring
    compliance with the net school spending cap. 
    Id. at 1,
    6. The
    commissioner further noted that applications for more seats
    "came from schools with track records of performance that, if
    more seats were available in Boston, have the potential to be
    strong candidates for my recommendation[,]" 
    id. at 6,
    but that
    "[b]arring any reallocation of unused seats, I anticipate that
    no additional increases in enrollment in [c]ommonwealth charter
    schools in Boston will be available in future years under the
    current statute." 
    Id. at 2.
    No evidence in the record suggests
    that the operators of these schools or others are considering
    opening Horace Mann charter schools in Boston.
    19
    in the charter school statute has been reached in the
    plaintiffs' district.    We need not divine the reason why charter
    operators favor the commonwealth charter school framework in
    order to conclude that, for the purposes of determining whether
    an actual controversy exists, the plaintiffs have an
    identifiable interest in the opportunity to attend a
    commonwealth charter school that is actually limited by the caps
    in the charter school statute.    We conclude, as did the motion
    judge, that the plaintiffs have presented an actual controversy.
    See G. L. c. 231A, § 1.
    b.    Standing.    A party has standing when it can allege an
    injury within the area of concern of the statute, regulatory
    scheme, or constitutional guarantee under which the injurious
    action has occurred.    School Comm. of Hudson v. Board of Educ.,
    
    448 Mass. 565
    , 579 (2007), quoting Enos v. Secretary of Envtl.
    Affairs, 
    432 Mass. 132
    , 135-136 (2000).     "[I]t is not enough
    that the plaintiff be injured by some act or omission of the
    defendant; the defendant must additionally have violated some
    duty owed to the plaintiff."     Penal Insts. Comm'r for Suffolk
    County v. Commissioner of Correction, 
    382 Mass. 527
    , 532 (1981),
    quoting L.H. Tribe, American Constitutional Law § 3-22, at 97-98
    (1978).   The plaintiffs have set forth sufficient facts to
    demonstrate standing as to both counts in their complaint.
    20
    First, the plaintiffs claimed their injury, i.e., an
    inadequate public education, falls within the area of concern of
    the education clause of the Massachusetts Constitution.      The
    education clause imposes a duty on the Commonwealth to provide
    an adequate public education to its schoolchildren.    McDuffy v.
    Secretary of Executive Office of Educ., 
    415 Mass. 545
    , 618-619,
    621 (1993).
    Second, the equal protection principles of the
    Massachusetts Constitution prohibit lawmakers from treating
    similarly-situated citizens differently without adequate
    justification.   See Goodridge v. Department of Pub. Health, 
    440 Mass. 309
    , 330 (2003); Massachusetts Fed'n of Teachers, AFT,
    AFL-CIO v. Board of Educ., 
    436 Mass. 763
    , 778-779 (2002).      Thus,
    the plaintiffs' alleged equal protection injury --
    discrimination in the provision of public education without
    adequate justification -- is within the area of concern of the
    Constitution's equal protection guarantee.    The plaintiffs
    therefore have standing to bring their declaratory judgment
    action.
    2.    Substantive claims.   "To survive a motion to dismiss,
    the facts alleged must 'plausibly suggest[] (not merely be
    consistent with) an entitlement to relief.'"    Edwards v.
    Commonwealth, 
    477 Mass. 254
    , 260 (2017), quoting Iannacchino v.
    Ford Motor Co., 
    451 Mass. 623
    , 636 (2008).   "Factual allegations
    21
    must be enough to raise a right to relief above the speculative
    level . . . [based] on the assumption that all the allegations
    in the complaint are true (even if doubtful in fact)."
    
    Iannacchino, 451 Mass. at 636
    , quoting Bell Atl. Corp. v.
    Twombly, 
    550 U.S. 544
    , 555 (2007).   "[W]hen the allegations in a
    complaint, however true, could not raise a claim of entitlement
    to relief, 'this basic deficiency should . . . be exposed at the
    point of minimum expenditure of time and money by the parties
    and the court.'"   Bell Atl. 
    Corp., 550 U.S. at 558
    , quoting 5
    C.A. Wright & A.R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure
    § 1216, at 233-234 (3d ed. 2004).
    a.   Education clause claim.    The plaintiffs allege that
    they attend noncharter public schools that are constitutionally
    inadequate.   They assert that their assignment to inadequate
    schools is caused by a statutory provision prohibiting more than
    eighteen per cent of their school district's funding from being
    allocated to commonwealth charter schools.    See G. L. c. 71,
    § 89 (i).   Accordingly, they contend that the charter school cap
    statute violates the education clause.
    We agree with the plaintiffs that the education clause
    imposes an affirmative duty on the Commonwealth to provide a
    level of education in the public schools for the children there
    22
    enrolled that qualifies as constitutionally "adequate."23   See
    
    McDuffy, 415 Mass. at 618-619
    , 621.   However, we conclude that
    they have failed to state a claim under the education clause
    because, to state a claim, the plaintiffs would need to plead
    23The Commonwealth's duty requires the Commonwealth to have
    a State public education plan to ensure that our children are
    educated in a manner so that they possess capabilities that
    "accord with our Constitution's emphasis on educating our
    children to become free citizens on whom the Commonwealth may
    rely" to ensure the functioning of our democracy and society.
    McDuffy v. Secretary of the Executive Office of Educ., 
    415 Mass. 545
    , 619 (1993). The McDuffy court described those capabilities
    as follows:
    "(i) sufficient oral and written communication skills to
    enable students to function in a complex and rapidly
    changing civilization; (ii) sufficient knowledge of
    economic, social, and political systems to enable students
    to make informed choices; (iii) sufficient understanding of
    governmental processes to enable the student to understand
    the issues that affect his or her community, state, and
    nation; (iv) sufficient self-knowledge and knowledge of his
    or her mental and physical wellness; (v) sufficient
    grounding in the arts to enable each student to appreciate
    his or her cultural and historical heritage; (vi)
    sufficient training or preparation for advanced training in
    either academic or vocational fields so as to enable each
    child to choose and pursue life work intelligently; and
    (vii) sufficient level of academic or vocational skills to
    enable public school students to compete favorably with
    their counterparts in surrounding states, in academics or
    in the job market."
    
    Id. at 618-619,
    quoting Rose v. Council for Better Educ., Inc.,
    
    790 S.W.2d 186
    , 212 (Ky. 1989).
    The above-listed aptitudes comprise "broad guidelines."
    McDuffy, supra at 618. See 
    Hancock, 443 Mass. at 455
    n.29
    (Marshall, C.J., concurring). Significantly, the capabilities
    considered to be essential "necessarily will evolve together
    with our society." McDuffy, supra at 620.
    23
    facts suggesting not only that they have been deprived of an
    adequate education but also that the defendants have failed to
    fulfil their constitutionally prescribed duty to educate.     See
    
    Hancock, 443 Mass. at 435
    (Marshall, C.J., concurring); 
    McDuffy, 415 Mass. at 621
    .   Here, the plaintiffs have fulfilled the
    former but not the latter condition.
    To allege that the Commonwealth has failed to fulfil its
    duty to educate, plaintiffs must plead sufficient facts that,
    accepted as true, demonstrate that the Commonwealth's extant
    public education plan does not provide reasonable assurance of
    an opportunity for an adequate education to "all of its
    children, rich and poor, in every city and town," 
    McDuffy, 415 Mass. at 606
    , over a reasonable period of time, or is otherwise
    "arbitrary, nonresponsive, or irrational."    See 
    Hancock, 443 Mass. at 435
    (Marshall, C.J., concurring); 
    id. at 457,
    459; Doe
    v. Superintendent of Schs. of Worcester, 
    421 Mass. 117
    , 129
    (1995); McDuffy, supra at 606, 618, 621.     Here, although the
    plaintiffs' complaint supports the claim that the education
    provided in their schools is, at the moment, inadequate,24 they
    24For example, the plaintiffs claim substandard performance
    on standardized student performance assessment examinations in
    their schools. Although sufficient for the motion to dismiss
    stage, we note that performance levels on such examinations
    should be relied on with caution as evidence of a
    constitutionally inadequate education without an examination of
    other factors that may bear on test results and an examination
    24
    have not alleged any facts to support a claim that the
    Commonwealth's public education plan does not provide reasonable
    assurance of improvements for their schools' performance over a
    reasonable period of time.    As was the case in Hancock, there
    may be moments in time where particular public schools are not
    providing an adequate education to their students.     See Hancock,
    supra at 457 (Marshall, C.J., concurring) (although some
    students were not at full academic competency, coordinate
    branches were satisfactorily acting on their education clause
    duty).    This alone is insufficient to support a claim that the
    Commonwealth has failed to fulfil its constitutional
    obligation.25   See 
    id. of whether
    those test results actually measure whether an
    education is constitutionally adequate. 
    McDuffy, 415 Mass. at 618-619
    .
    25In describing the differences between the public
    education system under review in McDuffy with the system under
    review in Hancock, the plurality in Hancock noted that the
    latter's "shortcomings, while significant in the focus
    districts, do not constitute the egregious, Statewide
    abandonment of the constitutional duty identified in" McDuffy.
    
    Hancock, 443 Mass. at 433
    (Marshall, C.J., concurring). We
    disagree with the motion judge that this language implies the
    need for a "Statewide abandonment" of the education clause duty
    in order to state an education clause claim. If the
    Commonwealth's public education plan were to abandon students
    attending schools in a particular city or town, those students
    may seek recourse under the clause. See 
    McDuffy, 415 Mass. at 618
    ("The crux of the Commonwealth's duty lies in its obligation
    to educate all of its children").
    25
    In order to establish that their schools are performing
    poorly, the plaintiffs utilize classifications established by
    the department's regulations classifying schools based on
    performance in order to "hold districts and schools accountable
    for educating their students well and to assist them in
    improving the education they provide."   603 Code Mass. Regs.
    § 2.01(3) (2012).   See 
    id. at §
    2.02 (defining "[l]evels 1
    through 5" as "the levels in the [d]epartment's framework for
    district accountability and assistance . . . in which schools
    and districts in the Commonwealth are placed"); 
    id. at §
    2.03(1).26 See note 
    17, supra
    .   Although the plaintiffs allege
    that their education is inadequate because two of their schools
    have been designated by the Commonwealth as level four schools
    and three have been designated as level three schools, they do
    not claim that the Commonwealth's framework for ensuring that
    all schools, including the plaintiffs', meet constitutional
    26The department's regulations provide that the
    "[d]epartment shall implement a five-level system for school
    accountability and assistance, approved by the [b]oard and known
    as the framework for district accountability and assistance, for
    the purpose of improving student achievement. Both the priority
    for assistance and the degree of intervention shall increase
    from [l]evel 1 to [l]evel 5, as the severity and duration of
    identified problems increase. Under the framework, districts
    shall hold their schools accountable for educating their
    students well and assist them in doing so; the [d]epartment
    shall hold districts accountable for both of these functions and
    assist them in fulfilling them" (emphases added). 603 Code
    Mass. Regs. § 2.03(1) (2012).
    26
    educational adequacy fails to satisfy the requirements of the
    education clause.   They instead focus solely on the charter
    school cap.   As there is no constitutional entitlement to attend
    charter schools, and the plaintiffs' complaint does not suggest
    that charter schools are the Commonwealth's only plan for
    ensuring that the education provided in the plaintiffs' schools
    will be adequate, the Superior Court judge did not err in
    dismissing the plaintiffs' education clause claim.
    Furthermore, even if the plaintiffs had successfully stated
    a claim under the education clause, the specific relief that
    they seek would not be available.   The education clause provides
    a right for all the Commonwealth's children to receive an
    adequate education, not a right to attend charter schools.
    "[T]he education clause leaves the details of education
    policymaking to the Governor and the Legislature."   
    Hancock, 443 Mass. at 454
    (Marshall, C.J., concurring).   Although a violation
    of the education clause may result in judicial action to remedy
    the wrong, the clause does not permit courts to order
    "fundamentally political" remedies or "policy choices that are
    properly the Legislature's domain."   
    Id. at 460.
    Thus, here, although the remedy the plaintiffs seek by way
    of this action, i.e., expanding access to charter schools, could
    potentially help address the plaintiffs' educational needs,
    other policy choices might do so as well, such as taking steps
    27
    to improve lower-performing traditional public schools.     There
    may be any number of equally effective options that also could
    address the plaintiffs' concerns; however, each would involve
    policy considerations that must be left to the Legislature.     See
    
    id. at 460.
      Whether to divert an increased amount of school
    district funds from traditional public schools to charter
    schools to comply with the education clause mandate is a choice
    for the Legislature, not for the courts.27   See 
    id. See also
    id.
    at 484 
    (Greaney, J., dissenting) (acknowledging "the
    disagreement between competent experts on how best to remediate
    a nonperforming or poorly-performing school district").
    b.   Equal protection claim.   "The Declaration of Rights of
    the Constitution of this Commonwealth in arts. 1, 6, 7, [and] 10
    . . . contain[s] ample guarantees for equal protection [of the
    laws]."   Brest v. Commissioner of Ins., 
    270 Mass. 7
    , 14 (1930).
    The plaintiffs claim the charter school cap violates their right
    to equal protection because it creates two classes of children:
    those who are guaranteed to receive an opportunity for an
    adequate education because all traditional public schools in
    27In fact, as set out in the first section of this opinion,
    not only has the Legislature modified the commonwealth charter
    school cap numerous times since 1993, the voters of the
    Commonwealth considered and rejected an initiative petition in
    November, 2016, that would have provided the similar policy
    relief that the plaintiffs request here under the education
    clause. See St. 2010, c. 12, § 7; St. 2000, c. 227, § 2;
    St. 1997, c. 46, § 2; Election Statistics 2016, supra at 529.
    28
    their districts provide one, and those in districts with many
    failing schools whose educational prospects are determined by a
    lottery.   Even assuming that the statute at issue meets the
    requirement of being discriminatory for the purposes of an equal
    protection analysis,28 we conclude that the plaintiffs do not
    state a plausible claim.
    In order to evaluate whether the plaintiffs' complaint
    contains factual allegations plausibly suggesting that the
    statute violates the equal protection, we must determine the
    appropriate standard of review that would apply to their claim.
    For purposes of equal protection analysis, strict scrutiny
    of a statute is appropriate where the statute either burdens a
    fundamental right or targets a suspect class.   
    Goodridge, 440 Mass. at 330
    ; Murphy v. Department of Correction, 
    429 Mass. 736
    ,
    739-740 (1999).   Here, although the plaintiffs do not allege
    that a suspect class is involved, they argue that the charter
    28"Classification, and differing treatment based on a
    classification, are essential components of any equal protection
    claim . . . ." Doe v. Acton-Boxborough Regional Sch. Dist., 
    468 Mass. 64
    , 75 (2014). On its face, the net school spending cap
    operates in a way to encourage more commonwealth charter schools
    in the plaintiffs' school district than in higher performing
    districts. See G. L. c. 71, § 89 (i) (subjecting most school
    districts to nine per cent net school spending cap for
    commonwealth charter schools while subjecting bottom ten per
    cent of districts to eighteen per cent net school spending cap).
    Under the plaintiffs' theory of discriminatory injury, they are
    part of the advantaged class associated with the statute's
    facial discrimination, and likely would not have standing to
    challenge it.
    29
    school cap statute deserves strict scrutiny because it burdens a
    fundamental right to education protected by the Massachusetts
    Constitution.29
    We have had occasion to hold that the Massachusetts
    Constitution does not guarantee each individual student the
    fundamental right to an education in circumstances in which a
    student's behavior leads to expulsion.   See Doe v.
    Superintendent of Schs. of 
    Worcester, 421 Mass. at 129-130
    (declining "to hold . . . that a student's right to an education
    is a 'fundamental right' which would trigger strict scrutiny
    analysis whenever school officials determine, in the interest of
    safety, that a student's misconduct warrants expulsion").
    Although heightened scrutiny does not apply in the individual
    student misconduct context, whether the education clause implies
    heightened scrutiny of education-related discriminatory
    classifications in other circumstances is an open question.    We
    need not determine whether such circumstances exist and, if so,
    what they might be, in order to conclude that heightened
    scrutiny does not apply to the charter school cap statute.     See
    Lee v. Commissioner of Revenue, 
    395 Mass. 527
    , 530 (1985) (where
    29In addition to those rights afforded explicit protection
    under our Constitution, "[h]istory and tradition guide and
    discipline" the process of identifying and protecting
    fundamental rights implicit in liberty. See Obergefell v.
    Hodges, 
    135 S. Ct. 2584
    , 2598 (2015); Gillespie v. Northampton,
    
    460 Mass. 148
    , 153 (2011).
    30
    fundamental right is at issue, not every statute that affects
    that right must be supported by compelling State interest).
    Under an equal protection analysis, only a statute that
    "significantly interfere[s] with" the fundamental right at issue
    burdens that right and justifies application of strict scrutiny.
    Zablocki v. Redhail, 
    434 U.S. 374
    , 386 (1978).30     Even if we were
    to conclude that circumstances exist where the Constitution
    protects a fundamental right to education, we do not think that
    the right could be characterized in such a manner that, on these
    alleged facts, the charter school cap statute interferes with it
    significantly.
    The Legislature first created charter schools as
    laboratories only twenty-five years ago to accomplish purposes
    such as "simulat[ing] the development of innovative programs
    within public education" and "provid[ing] models for replication
    in other public schools."   G. L. c. 71, § 89 (b).    Although the
    charter school statute is simultaneously intended to provide
    30In Zablocki v. Redhail, 
    434 U.S. 374
    , 387-388 & n.12
    (1978), the Court considered "[t]he directness and
    substantiality of the interference" with a fundamental right in
    determining whether a statute significantly interfered with that
    right; however, under the Massachusetts Constitution, "it is
    unimportant whether the burden imposed is direct or indirect,"
    because only the substantiality of the interference is relevant.
    Moe v. Secretary of Admin. & Fin., 
    382 Mass. 629
    , 652 (1981).
    31
    parents and students with greater options in selecting schools,31
    and to encourage and even pressure traditional public schools to
    innovate and improve,32 the plaintiffs have no constitutional
    right to attend charter schools, and the charter school cap does
    not interfere with the students' ability to attend traditional
    public schools.    Where the charter school cap statute "neither
    burdens a fundamental right nor targets a suspect class," it is
    subject to rational basis review.     
    Murphy, 429 Mass. at 739-740
    ;
    
    Lee, 395 Mass. at 532
    .
    Under rational basis review, a law "will be upheld as long
    as it is rationally related to the furtherance of a legitimate
    state interest."    English v. New England Med. Ctr., Inc., 
    405 Mass. 423
    , 428 (1989), quoting Dickerson v. Attorney Gen., 
    396 Mass. 740
    , 743 (1986).      At the same time, under the
    Massachusetts Constitution, "equal protection analysis requires
    the court to look carefully at the purpose to be served by the
    statute in question and at the degree of harm to the affected
    class."   
    English, supra
    .
    31See G. L. c. 71, § 89 (b) (including express purpose "to
    provide parents and students with greater options in selecting
    schools within and outside their school districts").
    32See, e.g., G. L. c. 71, § 89 (i) (providing for higher
    net school spending cap in school districts that board
    determines among lowest ten per cent Statewide).
    32
    "[C]haracterizing the tests to be applied to determine the
    constitutional validity of legislation as '[rational basis]' and
    'strict scrutiny' is shorthand for referring to the opposite
    ends of a continuum of constitutional vulnerability determined
    at every point by the competing values involved."   
    Id. at 428-
    429, quoting Marcoux v. Attorney Gen., 
    375 Mass. 63
    , 65 n.4
    (1978).   This method of analysis highlights that the "rational
    basis test 'includes a requirement that an impartial lawmaker
    could logically believe that the classification would serve a
    legitimate public purpose that transcends the harm to the
    members of the disadvantaged class."    
    English, supra
    at 429,
    quoting Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr., Inc., 
    473 U.S. 432
    ,
    452 (1985) (Stevens, J., concurring).   That standard is met
    here.
    Although the charter school cap cannot be said to burden
    any potential fundamental right, based on the facts alleged in
    the plaintiffs' complaint, the charter school cap nevertheless
    may impose a serious degree of harm on the plaintiffs and others
    in the plaintiffs' position given the nature of the educational
    interest at stake.   The plaintiffs' educational interest is
    undeniably greater than an interest in operating a self-service
    gasoline station, see Shell Oil Co. v. Revere, 
    383 Mass. 682
    ,
    683 (1981); an interest in selling alcoholic beverages on
    Sundays, see Chebacco Liquor Mart, Inc. v. Alcoholic Beverages
    33
    Control Comm'n, 
    429 Mass. 721
    , 721-722 (1999); a math teacher's
    interest in not taking an assessment test prior to license
    renewal, see Massachusetts Fed'n of Teachers, AFT, 
    AFL-CIO, 436 Mass. at 777
    ; or an interest in possessing marijuana, see
    Commonwealth v. Leis, 
    355 Mass. 189
    , 195 (1969).   See also
    
    Hancock, 443 Mass. at 485-486
    (Ireland, J., dissenting), quoting
    Brown v. Board of Educ. of Topeka, 
    347 U.S. 483
    , 493 (1954) ("it
    is doubtful that any child may reasonably be expected to succeed
    in life if he is denied the opportunity of an education").
    However, the purposes of the charter school cap reflect a
    legislative attempt to balance the plaintiffs' strong
    educational interest with other interests that are just as
    strong.   As a result, we conclude that no plausible set of facts
    exist to overcome the statute's presumption of rationality.
    The charter school cap reflects the education interests of
    students in the Commonwealth who do not attend charter schools.
    As the Superior Court judge noted in this case, funding for
    charter schools necessarily affects the funding for traditional
    public schools.   The cap is an effort to allocate education
    funding among all the Commonwealth's students attending these
    two types of publicly funded schools.   Because of the statutory
    funding mechanism that mandates payment of charter school
    tuition from resources that would otherwise go to traditional
    public schools, the expansion of charter schools has detrimental
    34
    effects on traditional public schools and the students who rely
    on those schools and their services.   See G. L. c. 71, § 89.
    The process of balancing these competing values in education
    "calls for . . . legislative judgments as to the desirability,
    necessity, or lack thereof of" charter schools.    Zayre Corp. v.
    Attorney Gen., 
    372 Mass. 423
    , 437 (1977).    This attempt to
    allocate resources among all the Commonwealth's students
    represents the rational basis for the statutory cap.
    There are other legitimate public purposes that would
    provide a rational basis for the statute as well.    For example,
    limits on charter schools may be based on a policy concern
    regarding the departure from local democratic control over
    public schools by local school committees because charter
    schools are instead governed by private boards of trustees.
    Additionally, a limit on charter school growth permits education
    administrators to assess, manage, and develop for replication
    any innovative educational practices that develop in charter
    schools for the students enrolled in traditional public schools.
    It cannot be said that these goals and the charter school cap
    are "so attenuated as to render the [cap] arbitrary or
    irrational."   Murphy v. Commissioner of the Dep't of Indus.
    Accs.   
    415 Mass. 218
    , 230 (1993), quoting 
    Cleburne, 473 U.S. at 446
    .
    35
    The plaintiffs argue that the Legislature's specific
    decision to set the charter school cap at eighteen per cent of
    net school spending in their school district is irrational.
    However, "[l]egislative line drawing . . . does not violate
    equal protection principles simply because it 'is not made with
    mathematical nicety or because in practice it results in some
    inequality.'"   Chebacco Liquor Mart, 
    Inc., 429 Mass. at 723
    ,
    quoting Dandridge v. Williams, 
    397 U.S. 471
    , 485 (1970).
    Although deciding the issue whether a law is supported by a
    rational basis on a motion to dismiss rather than later in
    litigation may present the exception rather than the rule,33 for
    the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the motion judge
    properly dismissed the equal protection claim because there is
    no plausible set of facts that the plaintiffs could prove to
    33Compare Shell Oil Co. v. Revere, 
    383 Mass. 682
    , 688 n.11
    (1981) ("we express no views on whether the judge could have
    granted summary judgment . . . [or] a motion to dismiss . . .
    rather than have a protracted hearing" on constitutional
    challenge that legislation was without rational basis [citations
    omitted]), with Marcoux v. Attorney Gen., 
    375 Mass. 63
    , 63-64,
    71-72 (1978) (statute deemed constitutional on motion to
    dismiss). See Polk Co. v. Glover, 
    305 U.S. 5
    , 6, 9-10 (1938)
    (per curiam) (motion to dismiss inappropriate way to resolve
    claim challenging constitutionality of State statute regulating
    labels of canned citrus fruit or juice). But see Wroblewski v.
    Washburn, 
    965 F.2d 452
    , 459-460 (7th Cir. 1992) (noting that
    "[a] perplexing situation is presented when the rational basis
    standard meets the standard applied for dismissal under Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 12[b][6]" and "[t]o survive a motion to dismiss for
    failure to state a claim, a plaintiff must allege facts
    sufficient to overcome the presumption of rationality that
    applies to government classifications").
    36
    support a conclusion that the charter school cap does not have a
    rational basis.   See 
    Iannacchino, 451 Mass. at 636
    ("What is
    required at the pleading stage are factual allegations plausibly
    suggesting [not merely consistent with] an entitlement to
    relief" [quotations and citation omitted]).
    Additionally, the Constitution demands respect for the
    products of the democratic process.   See Commonwealth v. Henry's
    Drywall Co., 
    366 Mass. 539
    , 544 (1974) ("It is not our function
    to consider the expediency of an enactment or the wisdom of its
    provisions").   As 
    outlined supra
    , charter school funding and
    caps have been subject to frequent and intense scrutiny by the
    Legislature and the public at large,34 see note 
    17, supra
    , with
    advocates advancing arguments on behalf of legitimate student
    interests on both sides.   Where a statute does not use a suspect
    classification or burden a fundamental right, is supported by a
    rational basis, and does not otherwise violate the Constitution,
    advocates may not turn to the courts merely because they are
    unsatisfied with the results of the political process.   See
    Zayre 
    Corp., 372 Mass. at 433
    ("principle of judicial restraint
    includes recognition of the inability and undesirability of the
    34As 
    discussed supra
    , a majority of voters, including those
    in the plaintiffs' own school district, recently rejected a
    ballot measure that would have provided similar relief. See
    note 
    17, supra
    , and accompanying text; Election Statistics 2016,
    supra at 529, 534.
    37
    judiciary substituting its notions of correct policy for that of
    a popularly elected Legislature"); Commonwealth v. Perry, 
    155 Mass. 117
    , 123-125 (1891) (Holmes, J., dissenting) (emphasizing
    importance of judicial restraint when evaluating popular public
    policy).   See also Lochner v. New York, 
    198 U.S. 45
    , 74-78
    (1905) (Holmes, J., dissenting) (stressing restraint from
    judicial adaptation of policies "which a large part of the
    country does not entertain").
    Conclusion.    For the reasons stated above, we conclude that
    the plaintiffs failed to state a claim that G. L. c. 71, § 89
    (i), violates the education clause or equal protection rights
    embodied in the Massachusetts Constitution.   The judgment of the
    Superior Court is affirmed.
    So ordered.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: SJC 12275

Citation Numbers: 95 N.E.3d 241, 479 Mass. 375

Filed Date: 4/24/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (23)

John F. Wroblewski v. City of Washburn , 965 F.2d 452 ( 1992 )

Rose v. Council for Better Education, Inc. , 790 S.W.2d 186 ( 1989 )

English v. New England Medical Center, Inc. , 405 Mass. 423 ( 1989 )

Dickerson v. Attorney General , 396 Mass. 740 ( 1986 )

Zayre Corp. v. Attorney General , 372 Mass. 423 ( 1977 )

Lee v. Commissioner of Revenue , 395 Mass. 527 ( 1985 )

Moe v. Secretary of Administration & Finance , 382 Mass. 629 ( 1981 )

Commonwealth v. Henry's Drywall Co., Inc. , 366 Mass. 539 ( 1974 )

McDuffy v. Secretary of the Executive Office of Education , 415 Mass. 545 ( 1993 )

Shell Oil Co. v. City of Revere , 383 Mass. 682 ( 1981 )

MASS. ASSOC. OF IND. INS. AGENTS v. Commr. of Ins. , 373 Mass. 290 ( 1977 )

South Shore National Bank v. Board of Bank Incorporation , 351 Mass. 363 ( 1966 )

Marcoux v. Attorney General , 375 Mass. 63 ( 1978 )

Murphy v. COMMR. OF THE DEPT. OF INDUSTRIAL ACCIDENTS , 415 Mass. 218 ( 1993 )

Obergefell v. Hodges , 135 S. Ct. 2584 ( 2015 )

Lochner v. New York , 25 S. Ct. 539 ( 1905 )

Polk Co. v. Glover , 59 S. Ct. 15 ( 1938 )

Doe v. New Bedford Housing Authority , 417 Mass. 273 ( 1994 )

Brown v. Board of Education , 74 S. Ct. 686 ( 1954 )

Zablocki v. Redhail , 98 S. Ct. 673 ( 1978 )

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