This case presents an equal protection challenge to a Utah statute that allows cities, through an election open only to residents in the proposed new district, to detach from an existing school district.
The Appellants in this case were excluded from voting in an election that reduced the size of their existing school district because they were outside the proposed new district’s boundaries. They argue Utah’s detachment law violates their Fourteenth Amendment equal protection rights since they have a substantial interest in the new school district’s configuration and boundaries. In a summary judgment rul
After considering Utah’s statute and the applicable equal protection principles, we agree with the district court that rational basis review applies and the Utah statute bears a rational relationship to legitimate state purposes. The electoral scheme furthers, among other things, the state’s interests in promoting local control of public school districts by extending the franchise only to those voters who will reside in the new district.
Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we AFFIRM.
I. Background
Utah law provides three ways to initiate the process of creating a new school district: (1) through a citizen initiative petition; (2) at the request of the board of the existing or future districts; or (3) at the request of a city or group of cities within the boundaries of an existing school district. See Utah Code Ann. § 53A-2-118(2)(a).
Initiating the creation of a new school district under either of the first two methods — citizen initiative or school board action — puts the issue before all legal voters in the existing school district. See id. § 53A-2-118(4)(d)(i). But initiating the creation of a new school district under the third method puts the issue before only residents within the proposed new school district’s boundaries. See id. § 53A-2-118(5)(a)(i).
In 2007, several cities 1 (Intervenors) within the Jordan School District entered into an interlocal agreement to detach from the district. At the time, the Jordan School District was one of the forty largest in the country and served a substantial portion of Salt Lake Cоunty. The proposed new district, which would contain approximately forty-three percent of the then-existing Jordan School District’s student population, would encompass the cities predominately in the eastern part of the Jordan School District as well as a small portion of a neighboring school district. The Intervenors initiated the detachment process using the third method Utah law provides. See id. § 53A-2-118(2)(a)(iii). Thus, only residents in the proposed new district would vote in the election. 2
Shortly before the scheduled election, a number of voters residing within the Jordan School District, but outside of the proposed new district, sought injunctive relief in federal court against the Lieutenant Governor of Utah, at that time Gary R. Herbert, and the Salt Lake County Clerk, Sherrie Swensen. They claimed this exclusion from voting violated equal protection principles.
3
Herriman City, also lo
The district court denied the injunction request after concluding Herriman City and the excluded voters failed to show a reasonable likelihood of succeeding on the merits with their claim that the Utah statutory scheme violated equal protection.
See Herriman City v. Swensen,
The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment in January 2008. After briefing and oral argument, the district court, among other things, granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants on both the facial and as-applied equal protection challenges to the detachment statute.
See Herriman City v. Swensen,
No. 2:07-CV-711 TS,
On appeal, the excluded voters make two equal protection arguments: (1) the district court erred in applying rational basis review to the detachment statute instead of strict scrutiny, and (2) even if rational basis review was appropriate, the detachment statute would nevertheless fail to pass constitutional muster. 4
The crux of the votеrs’ equal protection argument is that while a state may limit local voting rights to residents in a particular electoral district, strict scrutiny review applies when the state defines that particular district so as to exclude voters who are “substantially interested in and affected by” the election at issue. Aplt. Br. at 15, 31. Utah’s detachment statute, they assert, excludes voters in precisely this way.
To demonstrate they were substantially interested in and affected by the election from which they were excluded, the voters marshal evidence detailing the detachment’s impact — most notably the financial consequences they will experience because of the split. These include both short— and long-term property tax increases, an abiding property tax disparity with the detaching school district, debt servicing obligations, and approximately $40.5 million in division costs (as opposed to $25.8 million for the new district). On top of these financial costs lie significant logistical and administrative burdens, including appointing a transition team, allocating property betwеen the districts, and transferring educators and personnel. See Utah Code Ann. § 53A-2-118.1(3)-(4). Finally, the detachment affects the Jordan School District’s self-governance in the short term — the district must hold elections for its new school board as a result of the separation, see id. § 53A-2-118.1(3)— as well as in the long term.
Citing these facts and relying on the Supreme Court’s equal protection case law, the voters claim their inability to vote under the detachment statute results from an impermissible voting restriction. Strict scrutiny review should therefore apply to strike down the statutory scheme, they argue, and the district court erred in failing to apply the heightened standard.
For the reasons discussed below, we disagree.
II. Analysis
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, “applying the same legal standard used by the district
A. Standing and Justiciability Issues
Before reaching the merits of the excluded voters’ equal protection claims, wе must first address several preliminary jurisdictional matters, including mootness and standing.
1. Mootness
Our Article III case-or-controversy requirement continues through all stages of federal judicial proceedings. “[I]t is not enough that a dispute was very much alive when suit was filed.”
Lewis v. Cont’l Bank Corp.,
“In general a case becomes moot when the issues presented are no longer live or the parties lack a legally cognizable interest in the outcome.”
Murphy v. Hunt,
As the district court correctly concluded, however, this case fits comfortably within the established exception to mootness for disputes “capable of repetition, yet evading review.”
FEC v. Wis. Right to Life, Inc.,
Regarding the first prong of the exception, neither party disputes that the challenged action — the November 2007 election — was too short in duration to be fully litigated before its conclusion. The excluded voters were unable to file their complaint challenging the November election until late September 2007. As the district court noted, “full litigation on the merits was simply not possible before the election.”
Swensen,
The second prong of the “capable of repetition” exception requires a “reasonable expectation” or a “demonstrated probability” that “the same controversy will recur involving the same complaining party.”
Wis. Right to Life,
Because this dispute is capable of repetition but evades review, mootness does not preclude us from deciding this case.
2. Standing and Permissive Intervention
This case also presents standing and permissive intervention issues.
i. Swensen
Swensen is the Salt Lake County Clerk charged with placing a proposal to detach a portion of a school district on the general election ballot, and placing school board candidates in the subsequently divided school districts on the ballot. See Utah Code Ann. §§ 53A-2-118(5)(a), - 118.1(3)(a)(i). Swensen argues (1) the excluded voters lack standing to assert their claims because they cannot obtain a remedy from her that will redress their injuries, and (2) the excluded voters’ claims against her are now moot because she has already placed the detachment and school board candidacy issues on the ballot. Wе reject both arguments.
The irreducible constitutional minimum of standing contains three elements: injury in fact, a causal connection between the injury and the conduct complained of, and a likelihood that a favorable decision will redress the injury.
See Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
Swensen, however, cannot dispute that the distriсt court has the power to enjoin her from conducting school district-related elections under her authority stemming from the challenged statute. Nor can she argue that, at the time the lawsuit was filed, she was not the appropriate local official for injunctive relief. So while she may not be able to enforce a federal remedy against the state, she was the official responsible for running the local detachment election, and may yet be subject to future federal court restrictions. This is sufficient to satisfy the voters’ redressability requirement for standing.
See Lujan,
We therefore reject Swensen’s challenges to the voters’ standing as well as her argument that the issue is moot.
ii. Herriman City
In a cross-appeal, Herbert argues Herriman City is a political subdivision of the state and lacks both standing and the authority to bring a Fourteenth Amendment equal protection claim against Utah or its officers. The district court agreed, but nevertheless allowed Herriman City to intervene under Rule 24(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
See Swensen,
First, the district court correctly held Herriman City may not challenge the constitutionality of a state statute under the Fourteenth Amendment.
See Rural Water Dist. No. 1 v. City of Wilson,
Second, although the district court held Herriman City had neither rights to protect under the Fourteenth Amendment nor the authority to bring suit, it nevertheless permitted the city to intervene under Rule 24(b). We review such a determination for an abuse of discretion.
See Alameda Water & Sanitation Dist. v. Browner,
Herbert argues the district court abused its discretion because, as a matter of law, Herriman City does not satisfy Rule 24(b)’s requirements.
See DeJulius v. New England Health Care Employees Pension Fund,
We agree that Herriman City should not have been permitted to intervene. It is true our case law supports the view that a prospective intervenor need not have its own standing to intervene under Rule 24(b).
See, e.g., City of Colo. Springs v. Climax Molybdenum Co.,
Nevertheless, to intervene under Rule 24(b) the proposed intervenor must have a claim or defense that shares at least some aspect with a claim or defense presented in the main action. Here, because the Fourteenth Amendment claim Herriman City asserts is foreclosed, Herriman City has no claim and thus cannot satisfy Rule 24(b)’s requirements. This being the case, however, nothing would prevent the district court from allowing Herriman City to participate as an amicus curiae and present its views in that manner.
Accordingly, while we recognize that the district court’s discretion under Rule 24(b) is very broad,
see United States v. Hooker Chem. & Plastics Corp.,
B. Equal Protection and Applicable Review
We now turn to the excluded voters’ equal protection challenge to the Utah school district detachment statute.
The right to vote is fundamental under the Constitution.
See Reynolds v. Sims,
While we agree the Utah statute implicates the right to vote, our review of established Supreme Court precedent persuades us that the Utah detachment stаtute must be judged — as the district court concluded — by whether its limitation rationally furthers legitimate state policies. Applying the rational basis standard, we conclude the detachment statute furthers reasonable government interests and comports with the requirements of equal protection.
1. Supreme Court Framework
We start with a line of cases beginning over one hundred years ago. In these cases, we see that the Supreme Court has consistently favored the political judgments of state legislatures in structuring political subdivisions within states and defining the electoral community making up those entities. More importantly, the Court has consistently upheld laws that give different constituencies different voices in elections, especially those involving the annexation or adjustment of political boundaries.
The Supreme Court first considered challenges to state laws defining qualified voters in local annexation elections in
Hunter v. City of Pittsburgh,
The Hunter Court affirmed that the “state is supreme” in constructing municipalities’ boundaries. It may
expand or contract the territorial area [of a city], unite the whole or a part of it with another municipality, repeal the charter and destroy the corporation. All this may be done, conditionally or unconditionally, with or without the consent of the citizens, or even against their protest. In all these respects the state is supreme, and its legislative body ... may do as it imll, unrestrained by any provision of the Constitution of the United States .... The power is in the state, and those who legislate for the state are alonе responsible for any unjust or oppressive exercise of it.
Id.
(emphasis added). Subject to certain important limitations discussed below, Hunter remains good law.
See, e.g., Hess v. Port Auth. Trans-Hudson Corp.,
Since
Hunter,
however, the Supreme Court has placed two key limitations on the expansive articulation of state power over political subdivisions. First, neither states nor their political subdivisions may draw boundaries that discriminate on an invidious basis, such as race or sex.
See, e.g., Gomillion v. Lightfoot,
Second, equal protection prohibits states from restricting or diluting votes in violation of the “one person, one vote” principle announced in
Reynolds v. Sims,
In a series of cases following Reynolds and Avery, the Court addressed and reconciled the competing demands of local control of political subdivisions on the one hand, and voter equality on the other. 5 But the core holding of Hunter has retained its vitality. As long аs the state treats voters within the same electoral district or governmental unit equally, the right to vote is not compromised. In addition, the state has the right to draw different boundaries for voting purposes — and we generally defer to these delineations— as long as the separate units further reasonable government objectives.
Several conclusions flow from these cases. When a state law discriminates among eligible voters within the
same
elec
Importantly, none of these cases held strict scrutiny should apply to voting restrictions based on voters’ residency
outside
the relevant electoral district. Indeed, the cases suggest just the opposite. The seminal case of
Kramer v. Union Free School District,
for example, while striking down a New York statute that limited voting in school board elections to parents or property owners, expressly noted that New York retained “the power to impose reasonable ... residency requirements on the availability of the ballot.”
While these holdings shed light on the appropriate equal protection framework, none squarely addresses the constitutionality of a statute restricting the franchise in a school district detachment election like the one presented here.
Two cases from the late 1970s, however, support the conclusion that the voting limitations in Utah’s school detachment statute are subject to rational basis review. These cases hold that states have considerable leeway in discriminating against voters residing in different governmental units or electoral districts even when the outcome of a particular election affects them.
The first case,
Town of Lockport v. Citizens for Community Action at the Local Level, Inc.,
Reviewing the constitutionality of the New York law, the Supreme Court first recognized that the “single-shot” nature of the referendum procedure was due substantial deference.
Id.
at 266,
Instead, in determining whether equal protection principles permit discrimination between voters in different governmental or electoral units when it comes to referenda,
Lockporb
focused on two inquiries: (1) “whether there is a genuine difference in the relevant interests of the groups that the state electoral classification has created;” and, if so, (2) “whether any resulting enhancement of minority voting strength nonetheless amounts to invidious discrimination in violation of the Equal Protection Clause.”
Id.
at 268,
The Lockporb Court did not expressly state it was applying rational basis review. But the wide discretion it applied in analyzing the statute is consistent with no other standard.
In a second case, the Supreme Court again emphasized the leeway states have in treating voters residing in separate governmental units or electoral districts differently. Examining an Alabama statute that excluded residents outside a city from participating in local elections, the Court held a voting scheme constitutional even when the city exercised certain police and other powers over the excluded residents. In
Holt Civic Club v. City of Tuscaloosa,
Holt
distinguished the earlier voting limitation cases such as
Kramer, Evans, Hill, Cipriano,
and
City of Phoenix.
The Court noted these earlier cases struck down laws denying the franchise to residents
within
the boundaries of the particular entity exercising police power.
See id.
at 68,
With this understanding of the scope of the right to vote, the question before the Court became whether the Alabama statute satisfied rational basis review, i.e., whether it had a “rational relationship to [a] legitimate state purpose.”
Id.
at 70,
While instructive, none of the Supreme Court cases directly addresses the residency and boundary concerns this case presents. Almost all of the cases from lower courts applying these principles, however, support our conclusion that Utah can limit the franchise only to those voters within the detaching district.
2. Lower Court Applications
Other courts addressing annexation and secession statutes have also deferred to state laws restricting the franchise in local boundary elections.
Two local election boundary decisions are particularly helpful:
Moorman v. Wood, 504
F.Supp. 467 (E.D.Ky.1980), and
City of New York v. State,
Moorman
involved several neighborhoods seeking simultaneous detachment from a large city and annexation into two adjoining, smaller cities.
See
After reviewing Hunter, Lockport, Holt, and other Supreme Court voting rights decisions, see id. at 471-73, the Moorman court held that:
so long as the residents of the affected areas are treated alike within those areas, statutory provisions for a wide variety of voting schemes will be upheld against an equal protection attack, and the vote of one area may be give[n] more weight than that of the other, or the franchise may even be granted to one area and denied to another if a rational basis exists for so providing.
Id.
at 473 (emphasis added) (citing
Hunter,
The second secession case,
City of New York,
involved a New York stаtute that created a procedure allowing residents of Staten Island to decide whether the borough should detach from the rest of New York City. The procedure involved two referenda in which the residents of Staten Island would vote on detachment, but did not give other voters in New York City an opportunity to vote on the matter.
See
Moorman and City of New York considered the precise issue the Utah detachment statute raises — whether, in a voter referendum on a proposed detachment from an existing state political entity, a state may restrict voting to persons residing in the proposed area of detachment— and found rational basis review to be appropriate. 7
In addition to these cases, numerous other authorities addressing analogous legal issues support our conclusion that the deferential standard of scrutiny is required.
See, e.g., St. Louis County v. City of Town and Country,
* * *
When viewed together, these cases compel several important conclusions that guide our inquiry. Most notably, states have significant power in allocating voting rights when it comes to the formation and boundaries of their political subdivisions.
See Hunter,
But rational basis review applies when a state’s voting laws discriminate against those “residing beyond the geographic confines of the governmental entity concerned,”
Holt,
C. Rational Basis Review Applies to the Detachment Statute
Applying these principles to the Utah school district detachment statute, we find that rational basis review is the appropriate level of scrutiny.
First, rational basis review accords with
Hunter’s
holding that states have wide discretion in structuring political subdivisions and conferring authority upon them.
See
While
LockpoU
did not specifically address voting rights in boundary change cases, it did emphasize the “wide discretion the States have in forming and allocating governmental tasks to local subdivisions,” and indicated the Court would defer to a state’s determination “that the residents of the annexing city and the residents of the area to be annexed formed sufficiently different constituencies with sufficiently different interests.”
Second, there is no allegation that the Jordan School District detachment discriminates on an invidious basis — e.g., along racial lines — in a manner that would merit strict scrutiny review. 10
Third, the single-shot nature of the referendum supports applying rational basis review. The detachment elections permitted under the Utah statute serve a limited purpose — the alteration of school district boundaries — and leave other governmental decisions to be made at recurring general elections. For this reason, the equal protection principles involved are calibrated less stringently.
See Lockport,
Finally, because the Utah school district detachment statute distinguishes among voters having genuinely different relevant interests, rational basis review is appropriate.
The Jordan School District voters strongly contest this final point, arguing they do reside in the same governmental unit as those residents allowed to vote, and are equally interested in the detachment issue. They concede a state may limit voting rights to a particular governmental unit, but argue a relevant boundary cannot be drawn where it excludes voters who are as “substantially interested and affected” as those residents who can vote. Aplt. Br. at 15, 31. Citing the financial and administrative consequences as well as the limitation on self-governance accompanying the Jordan School District’s division, the excluded voters claim they are as “substantially interested and affected” as those residents of the new district who were permitted to vote. Aplt. Reply Br. at 2, 11. They argue the relevant governmental unit is the entire Jordan School District, and that the Utah statute giving only residents in a proposed new district the right to vote is arbitrary and unconstitutionally narrow.
In essence, the Jordan School District voters contend strict scrutiny review applies whenever a state legislature excludes residents of a governmental unit or electoral district from voting on local government boundary modifications, unless it can demonstrate that the excluded area is substantially less interested in or affected by the proposed modification. Any analysis of voting restrictions based on residence cannot defer simplistically to political boundaries, they assert, but must begin with a review of the interests of the voters and non-voters in the outcome of the election.
But no major decision has adopted a substantial interest test for elections involving different governmental units or electoral districts. To the contrary, cases from Holt to Lockport to City of New York all affirm that, when states use different local boundaries “to delimit the electorate for purposes of the application of Equal Protection analysis, the state will be given considerable discretion in determining which boundary counts[,] even when it operates to deny some group of affected residents an equally weighted vote, or any vote at all.” Richard Briffault, Voting Rights, Home Rule, and Metropolitan Governance, 92 Colum. L.Rev. 775, 794 (1992) (discussing cases) (emphasis added). That is why courts have always deferred to state electoral schemes regarding annexations that may have substantial economic or cultural consequences on voters excluded from the annexation election. Reynolds, Local Government Law, supra, at §§ 73, 253 (citing Holt).
In
Holt,
for example, the Supreme Court utilized Tuscaloosa’s city limits as the relevant political boundary for its equal protection analysis, but it just as easily could have used a boundary extending beyond the city and encompassing Holt. Similarly, in
Lockport,
the Court could have viewed the relevant governmental unit as the entire county. Had it done so, the differently-weighted votes among those living in the county’s cities and rural рarts would have presented a thornier equal protection problem. But, given the “genuine difference in the relevant interests of the groups [ (i.e., city and non-city voters) ] that the state electoral classification has created,”
Lockport,
Lockport
emphasized, in fact, the “genuine differences” in the relevant interests of the voting groups between which the law discriminated.
Id.
at 268,
These are two very different standards, and the Jordan School District voters have improperly conflated them. As in
Lock-port,
where the New York law at issue rested on the state’s identification of the distinctive interests of the cities and towns within a county,
see id.
at 268-69,
Finally, the excluded voters forget that the residents disenfranchised in
Holt
were every bit as “substantially affected” as those in
Kramer, Cipriano, City of Phoenix,
or
Hill.
The Supreme Court upheld the Alabama law at issue in
Holt,
despite the fact the statute subjected Holt’s residents to Tuscaloosa’s police and sanitary regulations, criminal jurisdiction, and power to license businesses, trades, аnd professions.
See
At the very least, this suggests the principle from Cipriano, City of Phoenix, and other earlier cases — disenfranchisement of those affected by a local government’s action triggers strict scrutiny — “only applies within that government’s borders.” Briffault, Who Rules at Home?, supra at 387 (emphasis added). It also suggests that states should be given much leeway in determining the relevant boundaries for voting.
In conclusion, the Supreme Court has left a state’s ability to change the boundaries of its local governmental entities largely undisturbed. In the equal protection context, the question is not whether there will be extraterritorial effects or what the magnitude of those effects will be. The question is whether the distinctions were made based on governmental units or electoral districts wherein the voters had genuinely different interests.
The statutory scheme challenged in this case is a residency restriction based on relevant electoral criteria. Utah made a determination that the geographical areas that would comprise the new school district would be most directly affeсted, and
D. The Detachment Statute Furthers Legitimate State Interests
Having determined that rational basis review applies, we consider whether Utah’s law satisfies such review.
A rational basis equal protection analysis is highly deferential to state legislatures, and we accord a strong presumption of validity to laws that neither involve fundamental rights nor proceed along suspect lines.
See Heller v. Doe,
We need not wrestle long with whether the Utah detachment statute satisfies rational basis review. The detaching cities provide a litany of justifications for the law, including, among many others, supporting the creation of community-based school districts, encouraging the creation of smaller school districts more responsive to the needs of students and parents, and promoting the localized use of tax revenues so that taxes collected within a local area are used for education in the same area. These justifications attest to the statute’s constitutionality.
The excluded voters seize on this last justification, and assert that localized use of tax revenues among the wealthier eastern cities is the actual reason for detaching from the Jordan School District. Even if this were the only rational basis for the detachment statute, though, the goal of localizing property tax revenues is sufficiently rational to uphold the constitutionality of legislation.
See San Antonio Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Rodriguez,
Nor are we persuaded by the argument that inconsistent methods of detachment in the statute — at times requiring a vote of all residents in the existing district and at times requiring only a vote in the new district — means the statute lacks a rational basis. What may or may not occur under other statutory provisions has no bearing-on whether the state has legitimately limited the franchise to the relevant class of voters under the statute.
Even if the comparison to other statutory provisions were relevant to the constitutionality of the vote being challenged, there are distinct rational differences in the relevant political entities. For example, in citizen and school board initiatives to create a new district, allowing the entire school district to vote makes the franchise co-extensive with the political entity whose officials sponsored the proposal. Thus, the relevant jurisdiction is the entire school district.
But when a subset of cities initiates the creation of a new school district via interlocal agreement, the cities are seeking to create a new, smaller district that is coextensive with their political boundaries. Limiting the franchise to those in the initiating cities allows the citizens to review
We conclude the Utah detachment statute withstands rational basis review. The district court correctly decided there were no genuine issues of material fact and thus properly granted summary judgment in favor of the detaching cities.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment.
Notes
. The cities (also parties in this lawsuit) are Cottonwood Heights, Sandy City, Draper City, and Midvale City. The City of Alta, which also entered into the interlocal agreement, is not a litigant.
. This third statutory method of detachment did not exist when the cities originally sought to form a new school district. The Utah State Legislature only added it after the cities initially failed to put the detachment issue on the ballot using the second method.
See Herriman City v. Swensen,
. Herbert, an appellee and cross-appellant in this case, is charged with filing the certificate to create a new school district. See Utah Code Ann. § 53A-2-118(5)(b)(i)(B). Swensen, also an appellee in this case, is charged with placing a proposal to detach a portion of a school district on the general election ballot, and placing school board candidates in the subsequently divided school districts on the ballot. See id. §§ 53A-2-118(5)(a), 118.1(3)(a)(i).
. This case also presents standing and justiciability issues that do not bear on the core equal protection claim. We address these arguments separately below.
. As one commentator puts it, the Supreme Court sought to reconcile the "tension between state efforts to design local governments serving particular local constituencies (and arranging systems of local voting ... accordingly)” and "claims by other local residents that they are sufficiently affected by a local unit’s action that they too ought to be enfranchised or еqually represented.” Richard Briffault, Who Rules at Home? One Person/One Vote and Local Governments, 60 U. Chi. L.Rev. 339, 350-51 (1993).
. Only a narrow line of Supreme Court cases applying rational basis review to voting restrictions discriminating among voters in specialty districts tempers these holdings.
See Ball v. James,
. Secondary authorities support this analysis. See, e.g., Osborne M. Reynolds, Jr., Local Government Law § 70, at 253 & n. 4 (2d ed.2001) (citing Hunter and observing that “the validity of [detachment] statutes has been upheld even where the consent of the inhabitants of the disconnected area need not be obtained”); Richard Briffault, Voting Rights, Home Rule, and Metropolitan Governance, 92 Colum.L.Rev. 775, 800 (1992) ("[T]he Supreme Court considers the entire issue of local boundary-drawing, with its attendant impact on the scope of the right to vote, to be a matter for political judgment of state legislatures without federal constitutional limitation or guidance.”)
. The only exception to this case law is
Fullerton Joint Union High Sch. Dist. v. State Bd. of Educ.,
. We also note that this school district detachment statute is consistent with existing Utah municipal law. For example, the state’s municipal incorporation law provides that the voters residing within the boundaries of a proposed new city may participate in the election, while residents from the surrounding county may be excluded. See Utah Code Ann. § § 10-2-109,-111.
. A feasibility study that the detaching cities commissioned concluded separation of the Jordan School District’s population would not raise division issues relating to social or racial characteristics. The excluded voters do not challenge this conclusion.
