Full opinion text
OPINION ON DIRECT APPEAL GONZALEZ, Justice. We are again called upon to determine whether the state public school finance system violates the Texas Constitution. Article VII, section 1 of the Texas Constitution gives the Legislature the duty “to establish and make suitable provision for the support and maintenance of an efficient system of public free schools.” We have twice recently held that the state public school system, because of the way in which it is financed, is not “efficient” as required by this provision of the Constitution. Edgewood Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Kirby, 777 S.W.2d 391, 398 (Tex.1989) [“Edgewood I”], 804 S.W.2d 491, 498 (Tex.1991) [“Edgewood II”]. To try to cure the system’s constitutional infirmity, the Seventy-Second Legislature enacted Senate Bill 351, as amended by House Bill 2885 (“Senate Bill 351”), making various changes in the school finance scheme. At issue before us now is whether the method prescribed by this statute violates other provisions of the Texas Constitution. Appellants, composed of numerous school districts and individual citizens, challenge the constitutionality of the school finance system devised by Senate Bill 351 on three grounds: (1) that it levies a state ad valorem tax in violation of article VIII, section 1-e; (2) that it levies an ad valorem tax without approval of the voters in violation of article VII, section 3; and (3) that it creates county education districts (“CEDs”) in violation of article VII, section 3 and article III, sections 56 and 64(a). Appellees include the State of Texas, certain CEDs created by Senate Bill 351, and other interested school districts and individual citizens. In this proceeding, all appellees are aligned with the State in defending Senate Bill 351 against the challenges by appellants. We are fully aware of the gravity of the issues raised by the present appeals and the singular importance of this litigation to the people of Texas. In Edgewood I, we stated: [W]e have not been unmindful of the magnitude of the principles involved, and the respect due to the popular branch of the government_ Fortunately, however, for the people, the function of the judiciary in deciding constitutional questions is not one which it is at liberty to decline_ [We] cannot, as the legislature may, avoid a measure because it approaches the confines of the constitution; [we] cannot pass it by because it is doubtful; with whatever doubt, with whatever difficulties a case may be attended, [we] must decide it, when it arises in judgment. 777 S.W.2d at 394, citing Morton v. Gordon, Dallam 396, 397-398 (Tex.1841). In Edgewood II, we stated: We do not undertake lightly to strike down an act of the Legislature. We are mindful of the very serious practical and historical difficulties which attend the Legislature in devising an efficient system [of public schools], and we recognize the efforts of the legislative and executive departments to achieve this goal. 804 S.W.2d at 498. The appellants must bear the burden of demonstrating that Senate Bill 351 is unconstitutional, because we presume state statutes to be constitutional. E.g., Vinson v. Burgess, 773 S.W.2d 263, 266 (Tex.1989); Spring Branch Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Stamos, 695 S.W.2d 556, 558 (Tex.1985), appeal dism’d, 475 U.S. 1001, 106 S.Ct. 1170, 89 L.Ed.2d 290 (1986). After careful consideration of the constitutional principles in issue, we sustain two of the appellants’ challenges to Senate Bill 351. First, we hold that Senate Bill 351 levies a state ad valorem tax in violation of article VIII, section 1-e; and second, we hold that the Bill levies an ad valorem tax without an election in violation of article VII, section 3 of the Texas Constitution. Appellees argue that in Edgewood II we in effect pre-approved the constitutionality of the finance structures later adopted in Senate Bill 351 and now under attack. Their argument, as we shall show, is disproved both by the text of Edgewood II and by the doubts raised before the Legislature concerning the validity of Senate Bill 351. We do not suggest that the Legislature has failed to act in good faith; we hold only that it has failed to enact a constitutional school finance system. Our holding in this case does not conflict with our previous decisions in Edgewood I and Edgewood II, and we in no way withdraw from those opinions. None of the parties to this proceeding has urged us to reconsider our decisions in Edgewood I and Edgewood II, and we have not done so. We reaffirm our earlier holdings that unconstitutional inefficiency in the public school system must be eliminated without delay. Yet we cannot brush aside the serious constitutional infirmities that affect Senate Bill 351 in the interest of expediting necessary changes in public school finance. It is not clear that upholding Senate Bill 351 would advance this goal. The appellee school districts and private citizens do not concede that Senate Bill 351 satisfies the constitutional standard of efficiency set out in our earlier opinions; but that issue is not now before us. This case broaches other constitutional standards which must be applied as scrupulously as we previously applied the standard of efficiency to the provision of public education. We recognize “the vital role of education in a free society.” San Antonio Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Rodriguez, 411 U.S. 1, 30, 93 S.Ct. 1278, 1295, 36 L.Ed.2d 16 (1972). We acknowledge “that ‘education is perhaps the most important function of state and local governments.’ ” Id. at 29, 93 S.Ct. at 1295; Brown v. Board of Educ., 347 U.S. 483, 493, 74 S.Ct. 686, 691, 98 L.Ed. 873 (1954). Article VII, section 1 of the Texas Constitution enunciates these same principles: A general diffusion of knowledge being essential to the preservation of the liberties and rights of the people, it shall be the duty of the Legislature of the State to establish and make suitable provision for the support and maintenance of an efficient system of public free schools. The dissent implies that the Court’s commitment to more equal educational opportunity has waned. The Court’s commitment is to the Constitution, to each and every one of its provisions, and in that commitment we remain steadfast. I Although we have reviewed the nature and history of our school finance system in Edgewood I and Edgewood II, an understanding of these matters is so important to the proper assessment of the legal issues before us that we revisit the subject here. The history of Texas school finance has been one of a “ ‘rough accommodation’ of interests in an effort to arrive at practical and workable solutions.” Rodriguez, 411 U.S. at 55, 93 S.Ct. at 1308 (citations omitted). Texas has steadily progressed from a time when local ad valorem taxes for public education were seen as a supplement to state funding, to the point that local ad valorem taxes now are expected to provide most of the basic needs of education. From 1906 to 1989, the portion of total state school funding contributed by local tax revenue increased from 24 percent to 53 percent. Billy D. Walker, The District Court and Edgewood III: Promethean Interpretation or Procrustean Bed? 21-22 (Oct. 23, 1991) (unpublished monograph, on file with record). Differences in the wealth in local tax bases created great disparities in the amount of revenue which varying locales could generate with the same tax effort, despite regular legislative adjustments to the system. In Edgewood I and Edgewood II we determined that these disparities are indicative of an inefficient system. It is within this historical context that the Legislature passed Senate Bill 351. When our present Constitution was adopted in 1876, it provided for the meting out of state education funds on a per-student basis. Tex. Const, art. VII, § 5. In 1883, the Constitution was amended so that local taxes could augment the required funding for education. The amendment allowed the Legislature to create local school districts and to authorize them to levy a tax within certain limits. Tex. Const, art. VII, § 3 (1876, as amended 1883). School districts, and the tax revenue each could contribute to education, did not develop at the same rate. By 1915, disparities in local tax resources had grown to the point that the Legislature made a special appropriation of equalization aid for rural school districts that were already taxing at the maximum legal rate. Act of May 26, 1915, 34th Leg., 1st C.S., ch. 10, 1915 Tex.Gen. Laws 22; see generally William P. Hobby & Billy D. Walker, Legislative Reform of the Texas Public School Finance System, 1973-1991, 28 HARV.J.LEG. 379, 380 (1991). This Court upheld rural equalization aid as being an appropriate means for the Legislature to discharge its duty to make “suitable provision for the support and maintenance of an efficient system of public free schools.” Mumme v. Marrs, 120 Tex. 383, 40 S.W.2d 31, 36 (1931), quoting TEX. CONST. art. VII, § 1. The Court identified the very problem that persists to this day: The inequality of educational opportunities in the main arises from natural conditions.... The type of school which any community can have must depend upon the population of the community, the productivity of its soil, and generally its taxable wealth. Mumme, 40 S.W.2d at 36. The disparity of the wealth among local tax bases only increased as Texas moved towards an increasingly industrialized economy. Sizable differences in the value of assessable property between local school districts became increasingly evident as the State became more industrialized and as rural-to-urban population shifts became more pronounced. The location of commercial and industrial property began to play a significant role in determining the amount of tax resources available to each school district. These growing disparities in population and taxable property between districts were responsible in part for increasingly notable differences in levels of local expenditure for education. Rodriguez, 411 U.S. at 8, 93 S.Ct. at 1283. As we observed in Edgewood I: If our state’s population had grown at the same rate in each district and if the taxable wealth in each district had also grown at the same rate, efficiency could probably have been maintained within the structure of the present system. That did not happen. Wealth, in its many forms, has not appeared with geographic symmetry. The economic development of the state has not been uniform. Some cities have grown dramatically, while their sister communities have remained static or have shrunk. Formulas that once fit have been knocked askew. 777 S.W.2d at 396. Limited resources were further strained by the creation of a large number of small, uneconomic school districts. In 1936, for example, 5938 of the 6953 school districts contained an average of 65 students each. Hobby & Walker, supra, 28 HaRvJ.Leg. at 381, citing State BoaRD of Education, RepoRT of the Results of the Texas Statewide School Adequacy SURVEY 11 (1938). Although the total number of school districts has now declined to between 1000 and 1100, the crazy-quilt pattern of small school districts remains a significant feature of the Texas public education system. Edgewood II, 804 S.W.2d at 497. Public school finance was comprehensively overhauled in 1949 by the enactment of the Gilmer-Aikin Bills. These statutes created the Minimum Foundation Program as the basic vehicle for allocating school funds and envisioned a guaranteed minimum amount of resources per student, with roughly 80 percent of the funds for the program to come from the State and only 20 percent to come from local tax bases. The exact amount of funds each district would receive from the State was dependent on a formula designed to measure each county’s ability to contribute towards the share of the program for the school districts within its boundaries, or its “local fund assignment.” The local fund assignment was deducted from the guaranteed allotment, and the State made up the difference. No district was required to raise any revenue; each district would receive its share of state funds as determined by the formula, regardless of whether the district actually raised its portion of the local fund assignment. Once a district met its local fund assignment obligation, it was free to add additional funds to enrich its educational programs. Hobby & Walker, supra, 28 HARV.J.LEG. at 382. Support of schools by local taxes was thus encouraged but not mandated. By the 1960’s, the Legislature had amended the Gilmer-Aikin Bills to include a number of adjustments to their economic index formulae. The amendments encouraged the development of improved and special educational programs through matching funds. The property-rich school districts were more capable of implementing these special programs, and thus they generally took advantage of the newly earmarked state funds. This aspect of the Foundation School Program unfortunately undermined the Program’s original aim of equalizing educational opportunities. Patricia A. Fry, Comment, Texas School Finance: The Incompatibility of Property Taxation & Quality Education, 56 Tex. L.Rev. 253, 256 (1978), citing REPORT op the Joint Senate Interim Comm, to Study Public School Finance at II — 8 to II — 9 (1973). This led a federal district court to observe in 1971 that the system of state “equalizing” actually benefited wealthier school districts more than the poorer districts, because only the wealthier districts could afford the programs which would generate state matching funds. Rodriguez v. San Antonio Indep. Sch. Dist., 337 F.Supp. 280, 282, 285 (W.D.Tex.1971), rev’d, 411 U.S. 1, 93 S.Ct. 1278, 36 L.Ed.2d 16 (1973). Because of these disparities, that court held that the Texas system of public school funding violated equal protection guarantees of the United States Constitution. 337 F.Supp. at 285. The United States Supreme Court reversed, holding that the statutory plan bore at least a rational relationship to furthering state goals of guaranteeing a minimum level of educational opportunity and at the same time encouraging local control. Rodriguez, 411 U.S. at 55, 93 S.Ct. at 1308. In reaching its decision, the Court did not pronounce the patient well: We hardly need add that this Court’s action today is not to be viewed as placing its judicial imprimatur on the status quo. The need is apparent for reform in tax systems which may well have relied too long and too heavily on the local property tax_ But the ultimate solutions must come from the lawmakers and from the democratic pressures of those who elect them. Id. at 58-59, 93 S.Ct. at 1309-10. In the wake of Rodriguez, the Legislature renamed the Minimum Foundation Program the Foundation School Program, reformed the economic index formulae, and based the local fund assignment directly on the wealth within a school district rather than the county. Act of June 1, 1975, 64th Leg., R.S., ch. 334, 1975 Tex.Gen.Laws 877-899; House Research Organization, Special Legislative Report, No. 157, An Introduction to School Finance at 4 (Feb. 23, 1990) [hereinafter Special Legislative Report]. The 1975 legislation created a second tier of financing, called State Equalization Aid, the purpose of which was to direct more state money to the poorer systems through the foundation program. 1975 Tex.Gen.Laws, supra, at 894. The stated policy was: that each student enrolled in the public school system shall have access to programs and services that are appropriate to his educational needs and that are substantially equal to those available to any similar student, notwithstanding varying local economic factors. Id. at 877-78. The State, however, did not fully supply its own share of the funding necessary to meet this goal. Fry, supra, 56 TEX.L.REV. at 257 & n. 27. In 1977, the Education Code was amended again. Act of July 15, 1977, 65th Leg., 1st C.S., ch. 1,1977 Tex.Gen.Laws 11. This time the Legislature lowered the local fund assignment which school districts were encouraged to contribute and adjusted the second tier of state funding directed to poorer districts. Special Legislative RePORT, supra, at 4. The statute expressly provided that a qualified school district need not contribute its total local share of revenue to participate in the Foundation School Program and receive state funds. 1977 Tex.Gen.Laws, supra, at 26. In 1979, the Legislature established county appraisal districts to afford more uniform local appraisal methods and increased state funds for education. Act of May 26, 1979, 66th Leg., R.S., ch. 841, 1979 Tex.Gen.Laws 2221, 2224; Act of May 28, 1979, 66th Leg., R.S., ch. 602, 1979 Tex. Gen.Laws 1300, 1318; Special Legislative REPORT, supra, at 4. Legislation in 1984, House Bill 72, made further adjustments in the formula, including refinements to the basic allotment, equalization aid, and the local fund assignment. Act of June 30, 1984, 68th Leg., 2nd C.S., ch. 28, 1984 Tex. Gen.Laws 117. In 1989, the Legislature changed significantly the qualifications for participation in the state system of school finance. For the first time the Legislature required that a local district raise the full amount of its local share before it could qualify for state aid from the program fund. Act of May 29,1989, 71st Leg., R.S., ch. 816, 1989 Tex.Gen.Laws 3732, 3742. Despite the periodic adjustments to the system, when Edgewood I was brought forward on appeal, the ratio of taxable property in the wealthiest district to that in the poorest school district was 700 to 1, which resulted in a range in per-student spending of $2,112 to $19,333. In Edge-wood I, we held that the existing system of public school finance, which relied so heavily upon an ad valorem tax in local districts, failed to provide for an “efficient” system for the “essential” purpose of a “general diffusion of knowledge” in violation of article VII, section 1 of the Texas Constitution. Edgewood I, 777 S.W.2d at 398. The inefficiency was this gross disparity both in tax burden and in tax spending. To put it graphically, in some areas of the state, education resembled a motorcycle with a 1000-gallon fuel tank, and in other areas it resembled a tractor-trailer rig fueled out of a gallon bucket. Some vehicles were flooded, some purred along nicely, and some were always out of gas. A fleet of such vehicles is not efficient, even though a few of them may reach their destination. We did not hold that efficiency requires absolute equality in spending; rather, we said that citizens who were willing to shoulder similar tax burdens, should have similar access to revenues for education. Specifically, we said: There must be a direct and close correlation between a district’s tax effort and the educational resources available to it; in other words, districts must have substantially equal access to similar revenues per pupil at similar levels of tax effort. Children who live in poor districts and children who live in rich districts must be afforded a substantially equal opportunity to have access to educational funds. Id. at 397. Following Edgewood I, the Legislature enacted Senate Bill 1 as a remedy to the constitutional defects. It codified a goal that equivalent tax effort should produce roughly the same yield regardless of the local property wealth for at least 95 percent of the school districts. It retained, however, the basic system of administration of funds for public education through the Foundation School Program. The Foundation School Program maintained the two levels of financing. The first tier provided the basic allotment per student as adjusted by a number of factors. 1990 Tex.Gen.Laws, 6th G.S., at 2. The second tier guaranteed a yield based on local tax effort. Id. at 5. In addition, local districts were entitled to supplement the first and second tiers of financing. Id. Senate Bill 1 provided for ongoing study so that state contributions to revenue could be adjusted biennially. Id. at 7. Senate Bill 1 was challenged in Edge-wood II. We held that it, too, failed to meet the requirements of article VII, section 1. “The fundamental flaw of Senate Bill 1,” we said, “lies not in any particular provisions but in its overall failure to restructure the system.” 804 S.W.2d at 496. Specifically, the heavy reliance upon disparate local ad valorem taxes had not changed at all. Senate Bill 1 did not change the boundaries of any of the 1052 school districts then in existence, or the basic funding allocation with more than half of all state education funds coming from local property taxes rather than state revenue. The great disparities in property wealth and spending among the school districts, though somewhat ameliorated, remained, and so did the resulting constitutional infirmities. Reiterating what we had said in Edgewood I, we concluded: To be efficient, a funding system that is so dependent on local ad valorem property taxes must draw revenue from all property at a substantially similar rate. Id. We ordered the trial court to enforce our mandate in Edgewood /, which was stayed until April 1, 1991, to provide the Legislature time to enact new legislation. Id. at 499. The Legislature responded with Senate Bill 351. Senate Bill 351 retains the same historical reliance upon local ad valorem taxes to fund most of the state cost of education. To ameliorate disparities among school districts due to local property wealth, Senate Bill 351 creates 188 county education districts. Most of these CEDs consist of school districts in a single county, although some of them include school districts in more than one county. Tex. Educ.Code § 20.941. CEDs have only tax functions; they perform no educational duties. They employ no teachers, provide no classrooms, and educate no children. CEDs do not even determine their own tax rate. That rate is effectively prescribed by statute. Id. at § 16.252(a). The CEDs’ sole function is to levy, collect, and distribute property taxes as directed by the Legislature. Id. at § 20.942. The complex provisions of Senate Bill 351 may be summarized as follows. Senate Bill 351 still provides a two-tiered program. The first tier “guarantees sufficient financing for all school districts to provide a basic program of education that meets accreditation and other legal standards.” Tex.Educ. Code § 16.002(b). To this end, the statute entitles each district to a basic allotment for each student, which increases from $2200 for the 1991-1992 school year to $2800 for the 1994-1995 school year. Id. at § 16.101. This basic allotment, in addition, is subject to adjustment, e.g., for the district’s local “cost of education,” and supplementation by “special allotments” for matters ranging from special education to “technology funds.” Id. at §§ 16.102-104 (cost of education, small districts, and sparsity); §§ 16.151-160 (special, compensatory, vocational, and bilingual education students; gifted and talented students; transportation costs; career ladder supplements; technology funds). Each district is guaranteed these basic and special allotments. Senate Bill 351, however, mandates that each CED shall raise for this first tier an assigned “local share,” defined as the product of a specified tax rate and the taxable value of property within the CED. The tax rate per hundred dollars of valuation is set for each school year: $0.72 for 1991-92, $0.82 for 1992-1993, $0.92 for 1993-1994, and $1.00 thereafter. Tex.Educ.Code § 16.-252; see also Id. at § 11.86 (“Determination of School District Property Values”). Senate Bill 351 also commands that each CED “shall levy” an ad valorem tax at a rate sufficient to collect its assigned local share. Id. at § 20.945. The commissioner of education notifies each CED of the amount due each component school district under the statute and sets the schedule for distributions. Id. at § 16.501-.502. Tier two aspires “to provide all school districts with substantially equal access to funds to provide an enriched program and additional funds for facilities” with the “opportunity” to supplement as they should choose. Tex.Educ.Code §§ 16.002, 16.301. In simplified form, the tier two formula guarantees each school district a specified amount per student, ranging from $21.50 for the 1991-1992 school year to $28 for the 1993-1994 school year, for each cent of tax effort over that already assigned to the CED. The State’s guarantee, however, extends only to $0.45 of tax effort, and the statute caps a district’s “enrichment and facilities tax rate,” or “DTR,” at $0.45. Id. at § 16.303. If a district’s local revenue for the 1991-1992 school year, for example, should exceed $21.50 per student for each cent of the district’s DTR, the district would get nothing more from the State. What it takes in excess of that amount, however, might be called “local enrichment.” There is a second, independent limit on each school district’s tax rate provided in Tex.Educ.Code § 20.09. Except to the extent that they are authorized to collect taxes pledged for previously authorized debt, school districts may not tax at a rate exceeding $0.78 for 1991, $0.68 for 1992, $0.58 for 1993, and $0.50 for each subsequent year. Id. at § 20.09(a). These annual limits, if combined with the annually increasing CED tax rate, result in a maximum rate of $1.50 per $100 valuation in each tax year. Id.; see also § 16.252. The gap between the annually decreasing caps on school district tax rates, set by section 20.09, and the constant cap on each district’s “DTR” in tier two, set by section 16.302, steadily decreases from $0.33 to $0.05. The effect of this is to reduce a district’s ability to raise unequalized revenue — the so-called “third tier” of school finance. There is an overall “revenue limit” for local school districts, defined as an amount equal to 110 percent of the state and local funds guaranteed under the Foundation School Program per student to each school district taxing at a rate of $0.25 per $100 of taxable value as calculated for the 1994-1995 school year. Tex.Educ.Code § 16.-009(a). This limit does not appear to be uniform, comprehensive or absolute. That is, it is not a single amount which applies equally to all school districts, nor does it encompass all local revenues, nor does it absolutely bar transgression. Each district evidently has its own revenue limit, annually estimated by and certified to that district by the commissioner of education. Id. at § 16.009(b). Finally, the commissioner of education determines the State’s share of the costs of the Foundation School Program — both tiers one and two — by subtracting what the district is due from the CED funds and what the district has collected from state available school funds. He then grants and approves a warrant for the difference. If state appropriations prove insufficient, however, the commissioner will reduce each district's allocation. Tex.Educ.Code § 16.254. GYA = (GL x WADA x DTR x 100) - LR Tex.Educ.Code § 16.302. "GL” is the dollar amount of state and local funds guaranteed for each weighted student for each cent of tax effort, "WADA” is the number of weighted students in average daily attendance, and "DTR” is the district enrichment and facilities tax rate of the school district, determined by dividing the total amount of taxes collected by the school district for the applicable school year by the quotient of the district’s taxable value of property as determined under Tex.Educ.Code § 11.86, divided by 100. "LR” is the local revenue, determined by multiplying "DTR” by the quotient of the district’s taxable value of property divided by 100. Thus, since Edgewood I, some aspects of the public school system have been changed, but others have not. The reliance on local ad valorem taxes for more than half of the revenue for education has not changed. However, the manner in which local funds are contributed to the system has changed dramatically. The State has moved from encouraging school districts to contribute local tax revenue, to conditioning state funds on such contribution, to mandating a specified contribution. This has reduced the geographical disparities in the availability of revenue for education. It has accomplished this, however, by requiring the taxpayers in one school district, without a vote of approval, to fund the schools in other districts over which they have no control. These changes present the constitutional issues now raised before us. II Article VIII, section 1-e of the Texas Constitution states: “No State ad valo-rem taxes shall be levied upon any property within this State.” Appellants contend that the taxes which the CEDs are required by Senate Bill 351 to levy are state ad valorem taxes prohibited by this provision. We agree. Senate Bill 351 mandates the tax CEDs levy. No CED may decline to levy the tax. The tax rate for all CEDs is predetermined by Senate Bill 351. No CED can tax at a higher rate or a lower rate under any circumstances. Indeed, the very purpose of the CEDs is to levy a uniform tax statewide. The distribution of the proceeds is set by Senate Bill 351. No CED has any discretion to distribute tax proceeds in any manner except as required by statute. Every function of the CEDs is purely ministerial. See Letter from John Hannah, Jr., Texas Secretary of State, to Assistant Attorney General, United States Department of Justice, Voting Section (May 3,1991). If the State mandates that a tax be levied, sets the rate, and prescribes the distribution of the proceeds, the tax is a state tax, regardless of the instrumentality which the State may choose to use. Appellees advance several reasons why the tax should not be characterized as a State ad valorem tax. First, the State points out that while the Legislature has mandated the yield, it is the CED that sets the rate to achieve that yield. A witness in the district court testified that Senate Bill 351 does not mandate a tax rate because a CED is allowed to take into account projected tax delinquencies in arriving at the rate necessary to obtain the CED’s share. One district court concluded that because collection rates will vary, the State does not set the rate, and therefore it is not a state tax. As one commentator observes: The court’s logic is precarious because: (1) the state sets the amount of the local share at a fixed dollar figure, and (2) the CED taxable base is also fixed by the certified tax roll it receives from one or more appraisal districts. The rate, then, is self-calculating (levy divided by tax base). In effect, the state sets a de facto rate when it mandates a specific tax levy. The fact that each CED’s collection rate will vary is a thin distinction to draw between a state-established tax rate and a locally-established tax rate. Walker, supra, at 19 (footnotes omitted). The collection rate is based on objective facts, another fixed number in the formula mandated by the State. Despite this contention that it does not set the CED tax rate, the State concedes, as it surely must, that if the proceeds of the tax levied by the CEDs under Senate Bill 351 were deposited into the state treasury, the tax would be a state tax prohibited by article VIII, section 1-e. But the State argues that because the proceeds are not deposited into the state treasury, the tax is not a state ad valorem tax. The distinction the State attempts to draw is not viable. If the State could avoid the prohibition of article VIII, section 1-e simply by requiring that tax proceeds be deposited in some lesser instrumentality’s account, that provision would be essentially meaningless. The State could create County Highway Districts, or County Prison Districts, or all-purpose County Funding Districts to levy taxes at set rates for prescribed purposes, and by such means accomplish what it could not do itself. CEDs are mere puppets; the State is pulling all the strings. Though the hands collecting the tax be Esau’s, the voice of authority is unmistakably Jacob’s. The depository for CED taxes does not govern whether they are state or local. By the same analysis, the dedication of the proceeds of each CED’s tax to activities conducted wholly within its boundaries does not make the tax a local one outside the prohibition of article VIII, section 1-e. Again, were it otherwise, the State could simply divide itself into districts and prescribe the funding for activities conducted within each district. Although the activities funded by CED taxes are conducted within the district, their funding is part of the state public education scheme mandated by Senate Bill 351. The State argues that the CED taxes required by Senate Bill 351 simply reflect the historical uses of both local and state funds for public education, authorized by article VII, section 3 of the Constitution. However, neither the plain language of article VIII, section 1-e nor its history reveals any exception that permits state ad valorem taxes for education. Prior to January 1, 1951, the State could levy ad valo-rem taxes for general purposes. Effective that date, article VIII, section 1-a proscribed state ad valorem taxes for general revenue purposes, still allowing such taxes for specific purposes, including education. Article VIII, section 1-a did not eliminate the state ad valorem tax for public schools authorized by article VII, section 3. However, when article VIII, section 1-e was adopted in 1968, this special state ad valo-rem school tax was repealed: 1. From and after December 31,1978, no State ad valorem taxes shall be levied upon any property within this State for State purposes except the tax levied by Article VII, Section 17, for certain institutions of higher learning. 2. The State ad valorem tax authorized by Article VII, Section 3, of this Constitution shall be imposed at the following rates on each One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) valuation for the years 1968 through 1974: [setting forth a rate that declines in each of these years] and thereafter no such tax for school purposes shall be levied and collected. TEX. CONST, art. VIII, § 1-e (1968, amended 1982); see also, Tex.S.J.Res. 32, 60th Leg., R.S., 1967 Tex.Gen.Laws 2972 (emphasis added). In 1982, article VIII, section 1-e was amended to remove any remaining authority to impose state ad valorem taxes, resulting in the blanket prohibition now in effect. The history of article VIII, section 1-e thus establishes that its framers and ratifiers specifically intended to eliminate the state ad valorem tax as a source of funds for public education. In the past, the State has taken a carrot- and-stick approach in encouraging local funding for public education. For several years prior to 1989, a qualified school district was not required to contribute its total local share to obtain state funding from the Foundation School Program. See, e.g., Act of June 30, 1984, 68th Leg., 2nd C.S., ch. 28, 1984 Tex.Gen.Laws 143. School districts were encouraged to raise in excess of their local share; however, this was only so that they could be rewarded with increased aid under the guaranteed yield program. After changes in the law in 1989, a school district could not qualify for state aid from the program fund unless it raised its local share. Act of May 29, 1989, 71st Leg., R.S., ch. 816,1989 Tex.Gen.Laws 3742. Although districts thus had some incentive to raise their local share for education, none was mandated to do so. Senate Bill 351 takes a final step away from local discretion, and for the first time, state law mandates local ad valorem taxes at a set rate for specified purposes. Senate Bill 351 is thus all stick with no carrot attached. The State argues that CED taxes uniform statewide are necessary to meet the requirement of article VII, section 1 that the public school system be efficient. Assuming that this argument is correct, it does not follow, nor does the State argue, that this system is the only one which would comply with article VII, section 1. While the Legislature has some latitude in the manner it chooses to discharge its duty to establish and maintain an efficient public school system, it cannot go so far as to violate another constitutional provision in attempting to comply with article VII, section 1. An ad valorem tax is a state tax when it is imposed directly by the State or when the State so completely controls the levy, assessment and disbursement of revenue, either directly or indirectly, that the authority employed is without meaningful discretion. How far the State can go toward encouraging a local taxing authority to levy an ad valorem tax before the tax becomes a state tax is difficult to delineate. Clearly, if the State merely authorized a tax but left the decision whether to levy it entirely up to local authorities, to be approved by the voters if necessary, then the tax would not be a state tax. The local authority could freely choose whether to levy the tax or not. To the other extreme, if the State mandates the levy of a tax at a set rate and prescribes the distribution of the proceeds, the tax is a state tax, irrespective of whether the State acts in its own behalf or through an intermediary. Between these two extremes lies a spectrum of other possibilities. If the State required local authorities to levy an ad valorem tax but allowed them discretion on setting the rate and disbursing the proceeds, the State’s conduct might not violate article VIII, section 1-e. It is difficult, perhaps impossible, to define for every conceivable hypothetical precisely where along this continuum such taxes become state taxes. Therefore, if the Legislature, in an effort to remedy Senate Bill 351 with as few changes as possible, chose to inject some additional element of leeway in the assessment of the CED tax, it is impossible to say in advance whether that element would remove the tax from the prohibition of article VIII, section 1-e. Each case must necessarily turn on its own particulars. Although parsing the differences may be likened to dancing on the head of a pin, it is the Legislature which has created the pin, summoned the dancers, and called the tune. The Legislature can avoid these constitutional conundra by choosing another path altogether. Two things are clear, however, among many which are not. One is that local revenue may play a role in achieving an efficient system of free public schools. The other is that article VIII, section 1-e prohibits the State from doing indirectly through CEDs what it cannot do directly, that is, levy an ad valorem tax. We have not attempted to dictate to the Legislature what part local revenue should play in funding public education, viewing that decision as properly the Legislature's prerogative in the first instance. Although the Constitution requires the Legislature to “establish and make suitable provision for” free public schools, it contains no specific requirement that public education be funded completely with state revenue. The Constitution prohibits, however, heavy reliance on grossly disparate local revenue to provide the funding essential for public schools. Edgewood II, 804 S.W.2d at 496-97, 500. Were local revenue but an insubstantial part of the total funding, the disparities in school district property wealth might be inconsequential to the system as a whole. But when local revenue pays a very significant part of the cost of a fundamental education — now more than half— those disparities dominate the entire system. In sum, we conclude that the tax mandated by Senate Bill 351 is a state ad valorem tax prohibited by article VIII, section 1-e of the Constitution. Ill Independently of their argument based upon article VIII, section 1-e, appellants argue that Senate Bill 351 violates article VII, section 3, because the CEDs levy a tax without first gaining the approval of the affected voters. Appellees counter that local taxes may be levied under article VII, section 3 without voter approval, or alternatively, that article VII, section 3-b excuses the voting requirement because Senate Bill 351 has “consolidated” school districts. We consider first the article VII, section 3 argument, and then the article VII, section 3-b argument. A Article VII, section 3 is a constitutional wilderness. “[A] rather patched up and overly cobbled enactment,” Shepherd v. San Jacinto Junior College Dist., 363 S.W.2d 742, 744 (Tex.1962), it has been cited as an example of how not to write a constitution, GeoRge BRaden, 2 The Constitution of the State of Texas: An Annotated and Comparative Analysis 519 (1976). In its present form, it is a single sentence of 393 words. It retains obsolete provisions such as the poll tax and state ad valorem tax, and covers subjects as disparate as the provision of free text books and the procedure for forming school districts. Our focus is on the following four consecutive clauses: [1] the Legislature may also provide for the formation of school district ... [2] and the Legislature shall be authorized to pass laws for the assessment and collection of taxes in all said districts and for the management and control of the public school or schools of such districts ... [3] and the Legislature may authorize an additional ad valorem tax to be levied and collected within all school districts ... [4] provided that a majority of the qualified property tax paying voters of the district voting at an election to be held for that purpose, shall vote such tax.... Tex. Const, art. VII, § 3. Senate Bill 351 “nominally” creates CEDs as “independent school districts,” although as we have noted, they do not perform any of a school district’s traditional functions. Tex.Educ.Code § 20.942. The Constitution does not prescribe the functions for a school district, and we have long regarded the Legislature to have plenary power to constitute and regulate school districts. Love v. City of Dallas, 120 Tex. 351, 40 S.W.2d 20, 26 (1931); State v. Brownson, 94 Tex. 436, 61 S.W. 114, 115 (1901). We therefore consider it to be within the Legislature’s power to create entities like the CEDs before us as school districts. Appellees acknowledge that the tax authorized by the third of the clauses quoted above must, according to the fourth clause, be approved by the voters. The issue is whether the second clause imparts upon the Legislature a power to tax that is independent of the third clause and free of the proviso in the fourth. The history of article VII, section 3 helps resolve this issue. The original section 3 simply limited the amount of the State’s general revenue to be spent on schools and established a poll tax. Other sections of the article provided additional funding mechanisms for public schools. However, no provision of the original article VII expressly authorized local school districts to levy taxes. In City of Fort Worth v. Davis, 57 Tex. 225 (1882), this Court rejected the argument that the Legislature had the inherent power to authorize school districts to levy taxes under former article VII, section 3. The Court reasoned that the Constitution manifested an intention to limit the power of the government to tax; because the Constitution spoke on the matter of school funding in article VII, there was no room for implied authority. Id. at 231-32. The Court stated that: Taxation by school districts was familiar to the framers of the present constitution. It was the system generally prevailing in other states, by which the deficiencies of a general or state school fund were supplemented. The omission of a provision authorizing that system was plainly intentional, for, in addition to what has been said, the journals of the convention show that all propositions embracing that system were voted down. Id. at 232. In response to Davis, article VII, section 3 was amended and greatly expanded in 1883. The amendment authorized a state ad valorem tax to fund the public schools and then added what eventually became the first, third and fourth clauses which we quoted above. This amendment empowered the Legislature to authorize school districts to levy local ad valorem taxes as long as the taxes were approved by local voters. In 1908, this Court held in Parks v. West, 102 Tex. 11, 111 S.W. 726 (1908), that article VII, section 3, as amended, did not allow the creation of school districts that crossed county lines. The Court also suggested that even if section 3 authorized such districts, they nevertheless might lack the power to tax: it is not true that the Constitution gave or has ever given the Legislature unlimited power to levy or to authorize the levy of taxes to provide the school fund. On the contrary, the Constitution has, itself, said what the fund should consist of and how it may be raised.... Id. Ill S.W. at 727. Parks prompted another amendment in 1909 to article VII, section 3. This amendment principally allowed the creation of school districts that crossed county lines and removed any doubt that such districts had the power to tax. Of note, the 1909 amendment added the substance of the second clause on which we focused above: [1] the Legislature may also provide for the formation of school districts ..., and all such school districts ... may embrace parts of two or more counties. [2] And the Legislature shall be authorized to pass laws for the assessment and collection of taxes in all said districts and for the management and control of the public school or schools of such districts, whether such districts are composed of territory wholly within a county or in parts of two or more counties. [3] And the Legislature may authorize an additional ad valorem tax to be levied and collected within all school districts ..., [4] provided that a majority of the qualified property taxpaying voters of the district, voting at an election to be held for that purpose, shall vote such tax.... Tex.H.R.J.Res. 6, 31st Leg., R.S., 1909 Tex. Gen.Laws 251. Amendments to article VII, section 3 were proposed in 1915 and 1916 to allow for increased county school taxes, but they were both defeated. See generally 2 BRA-den, supra, at 512-13. The section was again amended in 1918, in part to raise the state ad valorem tax, and in 1920, to remove the limit on local taxation. The final amendment, adopted in 1926, removed the authority of the State to create school districts by special law, and edited the language to the form now in effect. The history of article VII, section 3 thus indicates that what we have called clause two was added in response to Parks to ensure that school districts which crossed county lines could tax. There is no suggestion of support for appellees’ conclusion that clause two authorizes imposition of a local ad valorem tax without an election. Their argument rests upon two questionable premises. First, appellees assert that the word “assessment” in clause two means levy; thus clauses two and three would have an identical effect. While we have some doubt that the two words are synonymous, at least in this context, we assume that they are and confront the second premise necessary to appellees’ argument, which is that the condition of an election in clause four does not apply to clause two. Appellees’ reading of article VII, section 3 would allow a local ad valorem tax to be imposed either with or without an election. If a district can impose a tax without the burden of an election under clause two, there is no reason why it should choose instead to impose the tax only after calling an election under clauses three and four. Thus, the effect of appellees’ reading of clause two, independent of clause four, is to nullify clauses three and four altogether. One fundamental provision of constitutional construction is that effect must be given to all its provisions if possible. Hanson v. Jordan, 198 S.W.2d 262, 263 (Tex.1946). Applying that principle here, we construe article VII, section 3 to condition the imposition of a local ad valorem tax upon the approval of the electorate. We are supported in this construction by the additional fact that in the eight decades since ratification of the 1909 amendment, the Legislature has never acted as if this amendment authorized local ad valorem taxes without voter approval. To the contrary, every time the Legislature has sought to alter the power of districts to levy an ad valorem tax, it went to the trouble of seeking constitutional amendments. If appellees’ reading of article VII, section 3 were correct, the Legislature could simply have passed a statute. Not until Senate Bill 351 has the Legislature asserted such power. “[A]lthough non-use[ ] will not defeat the power to exercise rights expressly delegated in a written Constitution, an established practical construction ‘should not be disregarded unless the terms of the provision furnish clear and definite support for a contrary construction.’ ” Walker v. Baker, 145 Tex. 121, 196 S.W.2d 324, 327 (1946). Not only is there no clear and definite support for a construction of article VII, section 3 contrary to the view of the provision that the Legislature apparently held for over eighty years, we think the more plausible reading of the provision is consistent with that view. Accordingly, we conclude that a CED may not be authorized to levy an ad valorem tax under article VII, section 3, without the approval of the voters in the CED. The dissent cynically refers to this right to vote as a “veto,” transposing the vowels. But the right to vote cannot be brushed aside with word tricks; the people have insisted upon this right as a prerequisite to ad valorem taxation by school districts by establishing it in article VII, section 3. The right is no less deserving of protection simply because there may be votes cast against a public school finance plan that the Legislature has passed and of which the dissent strongly approves, or because some who vote against this plan may be wealthier, or in the dissent’s words, more “privileged,” than some who vote for it. The record shows that although a school district may be property rich, it does not necessarily mean that its citizens are “privileged.” It is of course axiomatic that the votes cast by all persons, regardless of their circumstances, count equally. The vote which the Constitution vouchsafes under article VII, section 3, is a veto of the CED tax mandated by Senate Bill 351 only if there are more voters against the tax than for it; and if there are, they are no less entitled to vote simply because they do not favor a tax that the dissent favors. The dissent seems to assume that the CED tax mandated by Senate Bill 351 would not be approved by the voters. This assumption leads the dissent to first disparage and then deny the constitutional right to vote to save the statute from the people’s will. The people may surrender their right to vote under article VII, section 3, by amending that provision; but they ought not to have the right taken from them by judicial fiat, or ignored by the Legislature. B Appellees further contend that article VII, section 3-b excuses an election by the CEDs created under Senate Bill 351. The legislature adopted this provision, which is nearly as cumbersome as section 3 of the same article, in 1962 but limited its application to “any independent school district, the major portion of which is located in Dallas County.” Tex.S.J.Res. 6, 57th Leg., R.S., 1961 Tex.Gen.Laws 1301. It appears to have been prompted by the necessity of having a tax authorization election every time the boundaries of a school district changed. See Crabb v. Celeste Indep. Sch. Dist., 105 Tex. 194, 146 S.W. 528 (1912); Parks, 111 S.W. 726; Davis, 57 Tex. 225; Burns v. Dilley County Line Indep. Sch. Dist., 295 S.W. 1091 (Tex.Comm’n App. 1927, judgm’t adopted); Millhollon v. Stanton Indep. Sch. Dist., 231 S.W. 332 (Tex.Comm’n App.1921, holding approved). It is not clear why the provision was originally restricted to Dallas County. 2 BRA-den, supra, at 521. In 1966, it was amended to apply to all school districts. Tex. H.J.Res. 65, 59th Leg., R.S., 1965 Tex.Gen. Laws 2230. The first sentence of section 3-b has no application in this case. Appellees base their argument upon the following portions of the second and third sentences of the provision: After any change in boundaries, the governing body of any such district, without the necessity of an additional election, shall have the power to assess, levy and collect ad valorem taxes on all taxable property within the boundaries of the district as changed, for the purposes of the maintenance of public free schools ... in the amount, at the rate, or not to exceed the rate, and in the manner authorized in the district prior to the change in its boundaries.... In those instances where the boundaries of any such independent school district are changed by the annexation of, or consolidation with, one or more whole school districts, the taxes to be levied for the purposes here-inabove authorized may be in the amount or at not to exceed the rate theretofore voted in the district having at the time of such change the greatest scholastic population according to the latest scholastic census.... Tex. Const, art. VII, § 3-b. These provisions do not fit the creation of CEDs. No physical boundaries of school districts are changed by Senate Bill 351, only the imaginary boundaries of their taxing power. It is stretching somewhat to regard a school district’s ceding of taxing power as a change in its “boundaries.” Even so, the first sentence quoted above does not apply to CEDs, because the change in imaginary boundaries occurs only in existing school districts, not in the newly created CEDs. The first sentence would allow existing school districts to go on exercising their taxing power irrespective of the creation of CEDs. But it is the taxing power of the CEDs, not of existing school districts, that is in question. There has been no change in the boundaries of CEDs, imaginary or otherwise, because they are newly created by Senate Bill 351. The first sentence relied upon by appellees does not confer taxing authority on CEDs. Nor does the second sentence. It applies to boundaries changed by “the annexation of, or consolidation with, one or more whole school districts.” Tex. Const, art. VII, § 3-b. Senate Bill 351, as appellees admit, does not consolidate whole school districts, but only a portion of their taxing power. The purpose of article VII, section 3-b is to obviate the necessity of a tax authorization election every time a school district’s boundaries are changed. If boundaries are changed, the prior electoral authorization is unaffected. If whole districts are consolidated, the effective authorization is that approved by the voters in the prior district with the largest scholastic population. In either situation, the changed district exercises a power to tax authorized by the electorate to support schools in the district. When school districts are consolidated, the power of the new district may be somewhat more or less than that previously authorized in one or more of the consolidated districts; the use of the power, however, remains to support the schools in the district. Neither the purpose nor the language of article VII, section 3-b authorizes a newly created CED to siphon off the taxing power of its constituent school districts and exercise it to take revenue from one school district and spend it in another. We have construed article VII, section 3-b only once, in Freer Municipal Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Manges, 677 S.W.2d 488 (Tex. 1984) (per curiam), rev’g 653 S.W.2d 553 (Tex.App.—San Antonio 1983), after remand, 728 S.W.2d 842 (Tex.App.—San Antonio 1987, writ ref’d n.r.e.), and 775 S.W.2d 774 (Tex.App.—San Antonio 1989, no writ). In that case, the inhabitants of the City of Freer voted to withdraw from the Benavides Independent School District, of which Freer was a part, and form a separate independent school district. Freer, 677 S.W.2d at 489. This Freer did, and later annexed additional area which had also been part of the Benavides district. Property owners in this annexed area refused to pay taxes assessed by the newly formed Freer district because the voters in the district had never authorized it to levy taxes. Id. This Court held that despite the Freer district’s failure to have a tax authorization election, under article VII, section 3-b it derived the same power to levy taxes that the voters, including the property owners in the annexed area, had approved for the Benavides district when Freer was a part of it. Id. at 490. The Court concluded: Article VII, section 3-b authorizes independent school districts to tax for school purposes in those instances in which the subject district was formed wholly by disannexation from an existing independent school district that possessed the power to tax. Id. As we have seen, no part of article VII, section 3-b addresses specifically the creation of new districts. However, in Freer, the new school district was created by a change in the boundaries of an existing school district, a situation contemplated by article VII, section 3-b. But by no stretch of the language or history of article VII, section 3-b can that section be read as permitting half or more of the districts’ allotted tax authorization to be stripped away and redeposited in a new state-controlled entity without voter participation. This case is quite different from Freer. In Freer, the voters in the Benavides district, including Freer, voted to authorize the district to levy an ad valorem tax for support of the schools within the district. 677 S.W.2d at 489. The creation of the Freer district out of the Benavides district, with the same power to tax, did not fundamentally alter what the voters had authorized. The residents of both districts continued to be subject to an ad valorem tax for local schools. In the present circumstances, however, transferring a portion of the taxing power of a school district to a CED fundamentally changes the tax burden approved by the voters of the school district. Now they are subject to being taxed not only to pay for the schools in their own school district, but they must share the cost of schools in all the other school districts in the CED. They are entitled to no voice in the affairs of these other districts, yet they are obliged to pay their expenses. The residents of a CED may choose to vote to do this, that is, they may vote to authorize the CED to levy taxes that will be disbursed among the school districts in the CED to be expended at the discretion of the school boards of those districts. Here, however, the residents of the CEDs have never voted to take this course. Rather, Senate Bill 351 thrusts it upon them. The dissent attempts to justify the consolidation of taxing power in CEDs as “less intrusive” than school district consolidation, which the Legislature might have undertaken in order to remove the enormous disparities in property wealth on which school finance so heavily relies. It is difficult to measure which course is more “intrusive” or “disruptive.” Certainly, general consolidation of whole school districts would dilute a community’s control over its own schools and alter the entire structure of the education system, but consolidation of taxing power in CEDs without a vote forces taxpayers to pay for schools over which they have nothing to say. The effects of the former alternative are hardly minimal, but neither are the effects of the latter. In sum, article VII, section 3-b does not allow CEDs created by Senate Bill 351 to levy the ad valorem tax mandated by the statute on all the property in the CED, based solely upon the prior approval of the voters in each constituent school district to allow their district to levy a tax. Article VII, section 3, requires that before CEDs may levy the statutory tax, it must be approved by the voters in the CED. IV Some appellants contend that the creation of CEDs as school districts vi