Judge: Tenure for teachers unconstitutional

Lawyers for teachers say changes would allow the firing of teachers on a whim

Plans could be changing for school teachers who expect tenure.

A judge has ruled that California's tenure protections for public school teachers are unconstitutional.

Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Rolf Treu on Tuesday ruled in favor of nine students who sued the state saying tenure and seniority policies have made it virtually impossible to fire bad teachers.

They argued that tenure laws preserve academic freedom and help attract talented teachers to a profession that doesn't pay well.

Lawyers for the teachers say the changes would allow the firing of teachers on a whim.

The decision could have wide-ranging impact on the way California hires and fires teachers and could spur changes in other states with strong tenure laws.

Dozens of states have moved in recent years to weaken or throw out their seniority policies.