A 'Balanced' SAC
* Memo from the General Counsel about "appropriately balanced" SAC composition
Other SAC membership problems:
		*Research Data: 
			2007 
					Auditor General Reports Research re: SAC membership - 
					SI Funds, Gov't in Sunshine
*Research Data: Combined Report of 2007 + earlier 2004 Report on SAC, SI funds audit problems
*Research Data: Research data, online district policies regarding SAC membership & elementary students
*Research Data: 2004 Auditor General's Reports - elementary students & AP many not be SAC members
Memo from Jim Robinson, DOE General Counsel to Andrea Willett regarding balanced membership question
                Sent: Tuesday, March 12, 2002 12:04 
                PM
                To: Willett, Andrea
                Subject: RE: From your *favorite* nag: Have you received 
                information back yet?
                
                Andrea:
                Feel free to pass this along to the Ms. McCormick. 
                
                Regarding SACs and whether they are "appropriately balanced," 
                what the legislature meant by this term is and will remain 
                uncertain. Clearly, it is a term that is clearly intended to 
                apply on a case-by-case basis. We can all get a sense of what 
                the phrase means, i.e., that SACs reflect the face of the 
                communities they serve. But when it comes to quantifying the 
                percentage of White, African-American, Asian, Hispanic or other 
                ethnic group who should be represented on a particular SAC, 
                there is no Legislative answer. Nor does the Department have an 
                answer. It is a local decision to be  based upon the facts 
                and circumstances presented in any given case. If a decision 
                cannot be reached, or, having been reached, if the decision is 
                challenged, it may be necessary for a court to render judgment 
                as to whether an appropriate balance has been reached in the 
                case before it.
                
                For what it's worth, I doubt a court would require mathematical 
                precision in the ethnic makeup of the SAC (i.e., that the SAC 
                precisely mirror the ethnic makeup of the community it serves). 
                Courts will generally look to uphold was is reasonable under 
                circumstances such as this. But then, what is reasonable merely 
                begs the question if what you're looking for is a greater degree 
                of certainty. 
                
                I know that this question pops up over and over again. I wish 
                there was an easy answer.
                
                Jim Robinson
                General General 
Note about subject line in email above: In my quest for a definitive definition of 'balanced SAC membership, I playfully named myself the *favorite nag*, reflected in the subject line of this email, while corresponding with Andrea Willett, Bureau Chief, Bureau of School Improvement and Educational Flexibility, DOE). The email above is presented exactly how it was sent. "General General refers to his position of General Counsel, DOE