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Union County Board Of Education v. Union County Board of Commissioners

N.C. Ct. App.April 7, 2015No. 14-633
RemandedUnion County Board of Commissioners
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Case Details

Status — whether other courts must follow this ruling
Published
Procedural Posture — the stage the case had reached
appeal

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Outcome

The Court of Appeals granted a new trial, reversing the jury verdict that awarded the school board $4,973,134 in additional current expense funding and $86,184,005 in capital outlay funding from the county commissioners.

What This Ruling Means

**Union County Board of Education v. Union County Board of Commissioners** This case involved a dispute between a school board and county commissioners over education funding. The Union County Board of Education sued the county commissioners, claiming they weren't providing enough money to run the schools. The school board argued they deserved additional funding for both day-to-day operations and building projects. Initially, a jury sided with the school board and ordered the county to pay over $91 million total - about $5 million for current expenses and $86 million for capital projects like buildings and equipment. However, the Court of Appeals reversed this decision and ordered a new trial, meaning the school board lost their funding award and the case would need to be heard again. **Why this matters for workers:** School employees and other public sector workers should pay attention to funding disputes like this one. When local governments fight over budgets, it can directly impact jobs, salaries, and working conditions. If school districts don't receive adequate funding from their counties or states, it often means fewer teaching positions, larger class sizes, delayed building repairs, or frozen wages. These funding battles ultimately affect whether public employees have the resources they need to do their jobs effectively.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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