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44 Ariz. St. L.J. 589 (2012)
100 Years of Keeping the Trust: The Historic Role of the Judiicary in Protecting Arizona's State Land Trust

handle is hein.journals/arzjl44 and id is 593 raw text is: 100 YEARS OF KEEPING THE TRUST: The
Historic Role of the Judiciary in Protecting
Arizona's State Land Trust
Timothy M. Hogan
Joy E. Herr-Cardillo**
I.       HISTORY OF THE STATE LAND TRUST
As the American Revolution drew to a close, the new government was
presented with the problem of how to manage its Western territories. The
nation's founders firmly believed that a well-educated citizenry was
essential to democracy's success. Therefore, a major strategy for ensuring
that the expanding Western population would embrace and participate in
self-governance was the establishment of public education in all of the new
states. However, the Western territories were sparsely populated and lacked
the tax base and public resources that were necessary to establish and fund
an adequate public school system.' Consequently, Congress established the
policy early on of granting large tracts of land to the new states for the
support of public education and other critical public institutions.2
Congress created a framework for distributing the land when it enacted
the General Land Ordinance of 1785 and the Northwest Ordinance of 1787.
The first ordinance established the Public Lands Survey System, which
*   Timothy M. Hogan is the Executive Director of the Arizona Center for Law in the
Public Interest (Center). Mr. Hogan received his undergraduate degree from Arizona State
University and his law degree from the University of Notre Dame Law School. Prior to joining
the Center, Mr. Hogan was Chief Counsel for the Arizona Corporation Commission. He also
served as an Assistant Arizona Attorney General in the Civil Rights and Financial Fraud
Divisions, and as Program Director of the Phoenix Program at Community Legal Services.
**. Joy E. Herr-Cardillo is a Staff Attorney at the Center. Ms. Herr-Cardillo received her
undergraduate degree from the University of Michigan and her law degree from the University
of Arizona College of Law. Prior to joining the Center, Ms. Herr-Cardillo was in private
practice with the law firm of Streich, Lang. Both Mr. Hogan and Ms. Herr-Cardillo have
litigated numerous cases involving state trust lands, and, in fact, each were counsel of record in
several cases discussed in this article.
1.  Sean O'Day, Note, School Trust Lands: The Land Manager's Dilemma Between
Educational Funding and Environmental Conservation, A Hobson's Choice?, 8 N.Y.U. ENVTL.
L. J. 163, 167 (1999).
2. Id.

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