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Allegheny County Solicitor Terry McVerry delivered an opinion to County Council
that the Pennsylvania Constitution and the Public School Code forbid the creation
of a county-wide tax district for school funding. See Pittsburgh Post-Gazette,
February 15, 2000.
Jack Brubaker's commentary asks "Why can't all three of Lancaster County's
Commissioners be Republicans?" The commentary discusses the meaning of
Art. IX, section 4, and contrast it with the provision prior to the 1968 amendment.
See Lancaster New Era, November 9, 1999.
On Friday, October 1, 1999, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court affirmed a Commonwealth
Court ruling that the question of school funding is a nonjusticiable political
question. See The Legal Intelligencer, October 5, 1999, at p. 3. See also,
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, October 4, 1999, A 11.
On Monday, July 12, 1999, lawyers argued before Commonwealth Court Judge Kelly
that the new Pennsylvania lobbyist law, which is set to take effect on August
1, violates the State Constitution insofar as it regulates lawyers when they
are lobbying. This was said to violate the exclusive authority of the State
Supreme Court to regulate the practice of law in Pennsylvania. See Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette, July 13, 1999 at B-6.
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled that the amendment to the Pennsylvania
Constitution allowing video testimony of children was invalid because it contained
more than one amendment that could not be voted on separately. See the Pennsylvania
Law Weekly, June 21, 1999, at p.1 and The Legal Intelligencer, June 16, 1999,
at p.3.
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