American Federation of Teachers representatives walk by some missing ceiling tiles while touring Osborn high school in Detroit in January. Credit: Romain Blanquart/Zumapress.com

American Federation of Teachers representatives walk by some missing ceiling tiles while touring Osborn high school in Detroit in January.
Credit: Romain Blanquart/Zumapress.com

Detroit public schools’ students are experiencing “serious and permanent” damage from Michigan governor Rick Snyder’s appointment of multiple emergency managers to run the district, according to an expansive federal lawsuit filed on Thursday.

The lawsuit, which aims to cover more than 58,000 students, said Michigan’s emergency manager law allows for Snyder to appoint an unelected individual to “rule by decree” over the school system.

“Michigan’s emergency manager law and related practices were used to compromise and damage the quality of education received by DPS students with life­long consequences in the name of financial urgency,” according to the 110-page complaint.

The case comes amid a tumultuous period for Snyder, who was named on Wednesday in a

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