Plaintiff/Appellant Susan Holz, an Alaskan Native, filed suit against Defendants/Appellees Nenana City Public School District (“School District”) and School District officials. Holz alleged that the defendants violated federal and state civil rights laws by failing to hire her for various positions with the School District. The district court concluded that the School District is an “arm of the state” and thereby immune from suit under the Eleventh Amendment. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants. Holz now appeals the district court’s ruling. Holz contends that the School District is not an “arm of the state” entitled to Eleventh Amendment immunity. Holz argues that the School District is not a state agency, but rather is akin to a local or county agency, most importantly because Alaska is not legally required to satisfy any possible judgment against the School District. And thus Holz argues the district court erred in its ruling. We agree and reverse.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In 1998, Holz, an Alaskan Native and life-long resident of Nenana, applied for a classroom aide position at the Nenana City Public School. The position was partly funded by an Indian Education grant that included an Indian employment preference requirement. William Black, the classroom teacher, believed that Holz was the best qualified applicant. But the classroom aide position went to Debbie Moore, the wife of the School Board President and a non-Native. When Black asked the school principal Joanne Romero why she recommended Moore for the job, and not Holz, the principal responded that Holz “did not interview very well.”
On August 4, 2000, Holz filed an action in the United States District Court for the District of Alaska against the School District and School District officials. Holz alleges that the defendants violated the federal Indian Self Determination and Education Assistance Act 1 and federal and state civil rights laws 2 by failing to hire her for several positions with the school district. 3
On October 29, 2001, the district court granted the School District’s motion for summary judgment. Applying the five factor test articulated by this court in
Mitchell v. Los Angeles Community College District,
The district court found that the first of the
Mitchell
factors — whether a money judgment would be satisfied out of state funds — pointed in favor of finding that the School District was an arm of the state. In 2001, the state provided approximately ninety-eight percent of the School District’s operating budget. The court noted that, unlike REAAs, the School District is “associated with a city that has the power to tax and raise bonds enabling the city to make a local contribution.” And the court further noted that in
Mt. Healthy City School District Board of Education v. Doyle,
Regarding the second Mitchell factor— whether the entity performs central governmental functions — the district court held that “[b]ased on Alaska state law it is clear that education is an essential state function.” The Alaska Constitution provides that “[t]he legislature shall by general law establish and maintain a system of public schools open to all children of the State.” Alaska Const, art. VII, § 1. In determining that education was a central governmental function, the district court, like the court in Straabe, relied heavily upon the Alaska Supreme Court’s statement that:
This constitutional mandate for pervasive state authority in the field of education could not be more clear. First, the language is mandatory, not permissive. Second, the section not only requires that the legislature ‘establish’ a school system, but also gives to that body the continuing obligation to ‘maintain’ the system. Finally, the provision is unqualified; no other unit of government shares responsibility or authority. That the legislature has seen fit to delegate certain educational functions to local school boards in order that Alaska schools might be adapted to meet the varying conditions of different localities does not diminish this constitutionally mandated state control over education.
Macauley v. Hildebrand,
*1179 The district court further held that “[i]t is undisputed that the last three factors— whether the entity may sue or be sued; whether the entity has the power to take property in its own name or only [in] the name of the state; and the corporate status of the entity — weigh against finding that Nenana is an arm of the state.” The court, however, concluded that the School District is an arm of the state entitled to Eleventh Amendment immunity because “approximately 98% of[ ] Nenana’s $6 million operating budget is funded by the state, the impact of a judgment against ‘Nenana to the Alaska state treasury is certain,’ and ‘Nenana carries out an essential state function.’ ”
On October 30, 2001, the district court filed its order granting summary judgment in favor of the School District. The order, however, made no mention of the Alaska Supreme Court’s decision in
Municipality of Anchorage v. Repasky,
On December 4, 2001, the district court ordered the parties to file supplemental briefing on whether the Alaska Supreme Court’s decision in Repasky should have affected the district court’s ruling that the School District was an arm of the state entitled to Eleventh Amendment immunity.
The parties submitted supplemental briefing, and on January 16, 2002, the district court issued an order concluding that the Alaska Supreme Court’s decision in Repasky did not require the district court to alter its holding that the School District was immune to suit under the Eleventh Amendment. The court stated that its holding was premised on its findings that education is an essential function of the state and that the satisfaction of a judgment against Nenana would impact the state treasury: “The decision in Repasky d[id] not effect [sic] th[o]se findings.” The court stated, however, that “[i]t is worth noting that after Repasky, it is a closer question whether a school district associated with a municipality (which does not enjoy Eleventh Amendment immunity) is distinct from the municipality for purposes of Eleventh Amendment immunity.” Nonetheless, the court concluded that:
The [Mitchell test,] however, is not affected. Education is an essential state function in Alaska and the negligible amount of local contribution from Nena-na does not defray the impact to the state treasury a judgment against Nena-na would have. For these reasons, the [summary judgment] order ... will remained unchanged.
See Mitchell,
Holz now appeals the district court’s final judgment.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review
de novo
the district court’s grant of summary judgment.
See Clicks Billiards, Inc. v. Sixshooters, Inc.,
III. DISCUSSION
The Eleventh Amendment provides that “[t]he Judicial power of the United States shall not be construed to extend to any suit in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted against one of the United States by Citizens of another State, or by Citizens or Subjects of any Foreign State.” U.S. Const, amend. XI. Immunity from suit under the Eleventh Amendment further extends to suits by citizens against their own state and “certain actions against state agencies and state in-strumentalities.”
Eason,
The issue before us is “whether the [School District] is to be treated as an arm of the State partaking of the State’s Eleventh Amendment immunity, or is instead to be treated as a municipal corporation or other political subdivision to which the Eleventh Amendment does not extend.”
4
Mt. Healthy City Sch. Dist.,
In applying the
Mitchell
factors, we are guided by our decision in
Belanger,
holding that school districts in California are arms of the state, and by our recent decision in
Eason,
holding that school districts in Nevada are
not
arms of the state.
6
The School District argues that Alaska’s public education system is “far more like California’s than it is like Nevada’s, and that
Belanger,
not
Eason,
is the case that controls.” Holz asserts, however, that
Ea-son
controls this dispute because Alaska, like Nevada, “does not share the unique structure of the California school system.”
Eason,
*1182 A. Application of the Mitchell Factors
1. Whether a money judgment will be satisfied out of state funds
The first factor is the most important of the five
Mitchell
factors in determining whether an entity is an arm of the state and thus qualifies for Eleventh Amendment immunity.
Eason,
No statutory provision requires Alaska to satisfy the School District’s debts. Rather, an Alaska statute explicitly provides that “[t]he state is not responsible for the debts of a school district.” Alaska Stat. § 14.17.900(a). We have previously concluded “[w]hen a state entity is structured so that its obligations are its own special obligations and not general obligations of the state, that fact weighs against a finding of sovereign immunity under the arm of the state doctrine.”
Durning,
Although Alaska law explicitly provides that the state is not liable for the School District’s debts, the School District argues that as a practical matter any judgment against the School District would be satisfied by state funds. Like the district court, the School District emphasizes that state funds provide ninety-eight percent of the School District’s budget. The School District contends “that if this Court determined [in
Belanger
] that California’s Ma-dera Unified School District was an arm of the state because it received approximately three-quarters of its funding from the state treasury, that [sic] the Nenana School District, which depends on the state to provide 98% of its budget, is likewise an arm of the state.”
But see Grady Mun. Schs.,
The School District’s reliance on
Belan-ger,
however, is misplaced.
8
It was not the
*1183
three-quarters funding from the state that was the basis for our decision in
Belanger.
Rather, the holding in
Belanger
was premised on “the unique structure of the California school system,”
Eason,
strict state control of public school funding. The state sets a revenue limit for each school district based on average attendance, subtracts property tax revenues from that limit, and allocates the balance to the school district from the state school fund. In short, the state determines the amount of money that school districts may spend per pupil and then provides the necessary state funds.
Id.
at 252 (citations omitted). “By virtue of this revenue limit system, ‘state and local revenue is commingled in a single fund under state control, and local tax revenue lost to a judgment must be supplanted by the interchangeable state funds already in the district budget.’ ”
Eason,
Alaska’s school funding structure, however, is more similar to the Nevada school funding structure at issue in
Eason
and not at all similar to the California school funding structure at issue in
Belanger. See Eason,
guarantees only a minimum amount of per pupil spending, not a maximum, and because school districts may generate funds in addition to those provided by the state, it is not necessarily true that an amount withdrawn from a school district’s account in order to pay a judgment will be replaced with state money.
Eason,
Like the defendants in
Eason,
the School District “make[s] much of the fact that the State ... limits school districts’ ability to raise local revenue.”
Id.
The School District is correct in asserting that Alaska “caps” the revenue that a city may contribute to its school district in addition to the required local contribution. Alaska Stat. § 14.17.410(e)(l)-(2)(the local contribution cannot be greater than the “equivalent of a two mill tax levy on the full and true value of the taxable real and personal property in the district” or “23 percent of the district’s basic need for the fiscal year”). Contrary to the School District’s assertions, however, this “tax cap’F’ is not similar to the “tax cap” of California’s Proposition 13.
See Belanger,
The School District also relies on
Alaska Cargo Transp., Inc. v. R.R. Corp.,
In the case before us, the defendant is not a single, unique entity upon which a great part of the state depends for its lifeline, and there is no comparable structure of compulsion thrusting the State into the role of real, substantial party in interest. As we have already pointed out in comparing the Alaska district system to that of Nevada, there is here no showing, in
Eason’s
words, that “any money withdrawn from the [School] District’s account to satisfy such a judgment will necessarily be replaced with state funds.”
Eason,
2. Whether the School District performs central governmental functions
With regard to the second
Mitchell
function, Alaska falls somewhere between California and Nevada. While Alaska maintains pervasive control over education, unlike California it does not “treat[ ] public schooling as a state-wide or central governmental function.”
Belanger,
We conclude, therefore, that the district court went too far in ruling that in Alaska “education is an essential state function.”
The Alaska Constitution provides that “[t]he legislature shall by general law establish and maintain a system of public schools open to all children of the State.” Alaska Const, art. VII, § 1. Nevada’s constitution similarly provides that the state will create and provide for the support of a public school system.
See Eason,
not only requires that the legislature ‘establish’ a school system, but also gives to that body the continuing obligation to ‘maintain’ the system. Finally, the provision is unqualified; no other unit of government shares responsibility or authority. That the legislature has seen fit to delegate certain educational functions to local school boards in order that Alaska schools might be adapted to meet the varying conditions of differing locations does not diminish this constitutionally mandated state control over education.
Instead, to determine whether an entity performs a central governmental function, the court must look at more than just state control over the entity.
See Belanger,
To determine whether Alaska considers its public school system as performing a central governmental function, it is helpful to look at the language of other Alaska statutes to see whether they explicitly provide that an entity is performing a central governmental function. Chapter 14 of the Alaska Statutory Code, governing education in Alaska, does not state that school districts perform an “essential governmental function.”
However, other Alaska statutes explicitly state that the governmental entity is providing an essential governmental function. As mentioned above, Alaska Stat. § 42.40.010 provides that “[t]he continued operation of the Alaska Railroad ... is considered an essential government function of the state.” Alaska Stat. § 44.85.020 provides that the exercise of authority by the Alaska Municipal Bond Bank Authority “is considered an essential governmental function of the state.” Alaska Stat. § 16.51.010 provides that “[exercise by the [Alaska Seafood Marketing Institute] of the powers conferred by this chapter is an essential governmental function of the state.” Alaska Stat. § 14.42.280 provides that the real and personal property of the Alaska Student Loan Corporation (providing student aid for post-secondary education) is “devoted to an essential public and governmental function.”
Under Alaska law, city and borough school districts are “political subdivisions,”
Kenai Peninsula Borough,
We conclude, therefore, that the district court erred in ruling that the second Mitchell factor favored immunity. We do recognize, however, that some of the constitutional and statutory provisions lean in the direction of immunity sufficiently to make the question somewhat close. At most, these provisions render the balance even, so that the second Mitchell factor favors neither side. At the least, they leave a slight incline against immunity. We need not resolve this slight difference, however, because we conclude that the other factors, particularly the first, preclude immunity.
3. Whether the School District has the power to sue and be sued
The School District does not dispute that it may sue or be sued in its own name.
14
Instead, the School District cor
*1188
rectly points out that “this factor is entitled to less weight than the first two factors.”
Belanger,
4. Whether the School District has the power to take property in its own name
There is no dispute that the School District can take property in its own name: the School District admits that it owns property. It appears that the authorization for city school districts to have property in their own name is derived from Alaska Stat. § 29.35.010(8)(“General Powers [of Municipalities]”). Again, city school districts seem akin to arms of municipalities, and not arms of the state.
Therefore, we conclude that the fourth Mitchell factor weighs against the finding that the School District is an arm of the state.
5. The corporate status of the School District
The final Mitchell factor is concerned with the extent to which the School District is an entity distinct from the state. The School District concedes that it is a distinct entity, but unpersuasively argues that because it is a “delegate of the State Legislature’s authority to operate public schools,” it does not have the independent corporate status that would prevent it from being treated as an arm of the State.
Neither Alaska nor Nevada statutes provide that the school district itself is a corporation.
See Eason,
Similarly, in this case, the home rule municipality of Nenana, which “establish[es], operate[s], and maintain[s][the School District],” Alaska Stat. § 29.35.260(b), is a municipal corporation. Alaska Stat. § 29.04.010 (“Home Rule”). In
Blue,
the Alaska Supreme Court held “that a city school district is not a distinct entity, independent of a city. It depends for its existence upon the existence of the city. In fact, the school district and city are one and the same thing so far as corporate status is considered.”
B. Weighing of the Mitchell factors
After examining the nature of school districts in Alaska and how Alaska law regards school districts, we conclude that the
Mitchell
factors weigh against finding that the School District is an arm of the state entitled to Eleventh Amendment immunity. Alaska’s public school system is similar to Nevada’s public school system and distinct from California’s unique public school system. Most importantly, Alaska is not legally required to satisfy any judgment against the School District.
See Eason,
Whether the School District performs a central governmental function is not as clear. City school districts in Alaska are not agents of the state as they are in California. And although Alaska maintains pervasive control over education, that control does not determine whether the School District ‘performs a central governmental function. Alaska appears to resemble more closely Nevada in terms of whether providing education is a central governmental function, which weighs against finding that the School District is an arm of the state.
Even if we were to conclude that the School District performs a central governmental function, that would not change the final result because all other Mitchell factors weigh against finding that the School District is immune to suit under the Eleventh Amendment.
As the district court correctly found, the last three Mitchell factors — whether the School District may sue or be sued; whether the School District can take property in its own name or only in the name of the state; and the corporate status of the School District — weigh against finding that the School District is an arm of the state. The last three Mitchell factors instead illustrate that under Alaska law the School District is an arm of the municipality, not an arm of the state.
IV. CONCLUSION
We find that the district court erroneously concluded that the School District is an arm of the state entitled to Eleventh Amendment immunity and hold that the School District is “to be treated as a municipal corporation or other political subdivision to which the Eleventh Amendment does not extend.”
Mt. Healthy City Sch. Dist.,
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. 25 U.S.C. § 450e.
. 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983, 2000d, 2000e-2; Alaska Stat. § 18.80.220, Alaska Stat. § 14.18.100.
.In addition to the position as a classroom aide, Holz also applied for positions with the School District as a correspondence aide and Accountant Payroll Manager.
. In
Eason,
we noted that the "Supreme Court has mentioned in passing that the Eleventh Amendment does not afford 'local school boards' immunity from suit."
. Holz contends that because under Alaska law the School District is part of the home rule city of Nenana, this court does not need to address the Mitchell factors. Rather, according to Holz, we can simply conclude that because the Eleventh Amendment does not bar suits against municipal corporations, and under Alaska law the school district is part of the Municipality of Nenana, Eleventh Amendment immunity does not apply.
As stated above, the district court noted that after the Alaska Supreme Court's decision in Repasky, "it is a closer question whether a school district associated with a municipality (which does not enjoy Eleventh Amendment immunity) is distinct from the municipality for purposes of Eleventh Amendment immunity.” Alaska law provides that "[a] home rule or first class city outside a borough [like Nenana] is a city school district.” Alaska Stat. § 29.35.260(b); see also Alaska Stat. § 14.12.010(1) ("each home rule and first class city in the unorganized borough is a city school district”). In Repasky, the Alaska Supreme Court stated that the Anchorage school district was "geographically *1181 coextensive with the Municipality of Anchorage” and that the Anchorage school board was " 'part of the municipality,’ even though 'it is a legislative body with legal responsibilities which in important respects are distinct from those exercised by the [municipal] assembly.’ ”34 P.3d at 306 (internal quotations omitted).
Given the reliance we have placed upon the Mitchell factors in determining whether an entity is entitled to Eleventh Amendment immunity, we decline Holz’s invitation to forgo applying the Mitchell factors, even if the School District is part of the municipality. Instead, we conclude that whether the School District is part of the municipality should be examined within the scope of the relevant Mitchell factors.
.
Eason
was filed on September 11, 2002, about a year after the district court’s ruling that the School District was an arm of the state, immune from suit. In a more recent decision,
Savage v. Glendale Union High Sch.,
. Holz also argues that
Eason
implicitly overruled
Belanger.
This is incorrect.
Eason
explicitly distinguished the "unique structure of the California school system” in
Belanger
from the Nevada school system and did not overrule
Belanger. Eason,
. Furthermore, we have already rejected the School District's argument that because a money judgment against the School District could exceed the School District’s limited resources, the first
Mitchell
factor should weigh in favor of immunity.
See Durning,
. The Alaska Supreme Court, unlike the California Supreme Court, has never required strict equalization of school spending per pupil under the equal protection provisions of the state constitution.
See Serrano v. Priest,
. As evident from the record, the School District has employer’s liability insurance with policy limits of $2.5 million per occurrence and a "$NIL” deductible.
. In Straabe v. Yupiit School District, 1999 WL 33456490 (D.Alaska 1999), the district court held that a school district that was a Regional Education Attendance Area was an arm of the State because, whether or not the State accepted any responsibility for satisfying the Area’s judgments, it would in fact pay such a judgment. It follows from our conclusion here that we do not accept this rationale.
. Justice Brennan, writing on behalf of himself and three other Justices, offered the following guidance:
The rule to be derived from our cases is that the Eleventh Amendment shields an entity from suit in federal court only when it is so closely tied to the State as to be the direct means by which the State acts, for instance a state agency. In contrast, when a State creates subdivisions and imbues them with a significant measure of autonomy, such as the ability to levy taxes, issue bonds, or own land in their own name, these subdivisions are too separate from the State to be considered its "arms.” This is so even though these political subdivisions exist solely at the whim and behest of their State.
Port Auth. Trans-Hudson Corp. v. Feeney,
.
Kenai Peninsula Borough
held that the state was not liable for a money judgment because the school district was not acting as an agent of the state.
. The district court stated that “[i]t is undisputed that the last three factors — whether the entity may sue or be sued; whether the entity has the power to take property in its own name or only the name of the state; and the corporate status of the entity — weigh against finding that Nenana is an arm of the state.” Unlike California or Nevada, Alaska has no particular statute providing that a city or borough school district can sue and be sued in its own name.
See Eason,
. While the holding in Blue appears to be no longer binding because it was not based on current Alaska education statutes, it remains highly instructive and persuasive. The statute the holding was based on provided that ”[e]very city shall constitute a school district.” S.L.A.1951, ch. 51, § 1 [§ 37-3-32, A.C.L.A.Cum.Supp.1957], The current law reads that "each home rule and first class city in the unorganized borough is a city school district.” Alaska Stat. § 14.12.010(1); see also Alaska Stat. § 29.35.260(b) ("[a] home rule or first class city outside a borough [like Nenana] is a city school district ...”). The practical difference between "every city shall constitute a school district” and “each home rule city is a city school district” is minimal.
