Fumarolo v. Chicago Board of Education
Illinois Supreme Court
142 Ill. 2d 54 (1990)
- Written by Philip Glass, JD
Facts
The 1988 Chicago School Reform Act established a voting system for Chicago's local school councils. These councils would handle district-wide public-school administration. Under the act, voting rights would attach to two classes of residents. Single-district residents would have voting rights, although multiarea-district residents would not. Single-district residents with enrolled children could vote for six council members. Those with no children could vote for only two. All resident taxpayers would fund the local school councils. The Chicago Board of Education (board) (defendant) faced allegations that the act violated equal protection.
Rule of Law
Issue
Holding and Reasoning (Ward, J.)
What to do next…
Here's why 899,000 law students have relied on our case briefs:
- Written by law professors and practitioners, not other law students. 47,000 briefs, keyed to 994 casebooks. Top-notch customer support.
- The right amount of information, includes the facts, issues, rule of law, holding and reasoning, and any concurrences and dissents.
- Access in your classes, works on your mobile and tablet. Massive library of related video lessons and high quality multiple-choice questions.
- Easy to use, uniform format for every case brief. Written in plain English, not in legalese. Our briefs summarize and simplify; they don’t just repeat the court’s language.

