In his opening statement on Friday, a lawyer representing GOP House Speaker Bryan Cutler argued that while there are some disparities among districts, Pennsylvania schools are able to provide the “thorough and efficient” education required by the state constitution.
“I’m not going to stand here and argue that all of the school buildings in all of the school districts are the Taj Mahal,” the lawyer, Patrick Northen, said. “But the evidence will show kids in petitioner districts have the basic instrumentalities of an adequate education, with chairs to sit in, desks or tables to write at, walls and roofs, working plumbing.”
Asked for his response to that statement, McAndrew said he was “appalled a little bit by hearing that because so much more goes into education.”
Sometimes Panther Valley doesn’t even have those basics, McAndrew said, describing a leaky elementary school roof, plumbing issues, and “75 kindergarteners that use one toilet and two urinals.”
Lawyers for the plaintiffs argue that Pennsylvania’s current school funding model, which relies more heavily on local taxes to fund schools than most other states, creates an education system of haves and have nots.
On the stand, McAndrew noted that Panther Valley’s tax rate is the 10th highest in Pennsylvania, but the former coal mining community still cannot raise enough to sufficiently fund its schools.
“We can’t keep going to the poorest people and asking for more money,” McAndrew said. “It’s a balance. Do you want kids to have an arts education or do you want to tax people out of their house? That’s the tough decisions that people want us to make.”
Closing out his direct testimony, McAndrew said he was part of the case to ask the state of Pennsylvania for help.
“Who else is there to ask?” he said. “We can’t keep asking our local taxpayers. We can’t ask our teachers to work for free,” or parents to teach students at home.
“What else can we do? We need a revenue source to give these kids an education. That’s what the constitution says we should have, and we’re just not meeting that need right now. And we need it to change.”
Cross examination started late in the day Monday. A defense attorney for GOP Senate President Pro Tempore Jake Corman played video footage from inside the district’s schools, with clean hallways, large classrooms, and a shiny gymnasium floor.
The attorney also walked McAndrew through a wide range of course offerings in the district’s high school, from AP Chemistry to Apocalyptic and Dystopian Literature.
During his testimony, McAndrew noted that the district was able to expand its course catalogue using pandemic relief funds, adding honors and remedial classes along with more specialized classes like Cinema and History.
As cross examination continued Tuesday, the defense attorney brought up past statements from the district and its former superintendent, where they claimed standardized test scores don’t accurately reflect students’ knowledge and capabilities.
McAndrew had pointed to Panther Valley students’ below-average performance on state tests as evidence that the district wasn’t able to meet their needs.
Asked to confirm that Panther Valley “has repeatedly and historically downplayed the importance and usefulness of standardized tests in evaluating its students,” McAndrew stated that he has not taken the same stance as his predecessor, and believes that test results are meaningful.
The trial, which is expected to last for months, continues Wednesday afternoon.