Date: Fri 12-Jul-1996
Date: Fri 12-Jul-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: STEVEB
Quick Words:
schools-Sheff-O'Neill-court
Full Text:
Effect Of Desegregation Ruling On Newtown Unclear
B Y S TEVE B IGHAM
How will Tuesday's state Supreme Court decision on the Sheff vs O'Neill case
affect Newtown students and schools?
It all depends on the lead taken by Gov John G. Rowland and on whether or not
the state legislature decides to reorganize school districts, Superintendent
of Schools John R. Reed commented Wednesday, still leafing through the lengthy
court ruling.
In a precedent-setting decision, the judges struck down the state's system of
municipal-based school districts, finding Hartford public schools to be
segregated because whites often move to the suburbs while minorities remain in
the inner-city, deprived of equal educational opportunities. The decision also
stated that the situation was not brought about by any state or local
statutes.
"The public elementary and high school students in Hartford suffer daily from
the devastating effects that racial and ethnic isolation, as well as poverty,
have had on their education," Chief Justice Ellen Ash Peters wrote in the 4-3
decision.
Though unsure of the direction the state will take, Dr Reed believes the state
would be well served to provide more equal education opportunities to its
young people and said reconfiguring of the districts was a possibility.
However, because Danbury is more diversified than cities like Hartford,
Bridgeport and New Haven, he doesn't see the decision having an effect on this
area any time soon.
"We have this problem because people are divided," he noted. "It's a problem
because we've had a long history of people having difficulty reaching out to
those with different racial backgrounds."
Board of Education Chairman Herb Rosenthal said the decision by the court was
vague in its direction to the legislature, making it difficult to tell what
will happen.
The court stopped short of ordering what steps must be taken to fix the racial
isolation of Hartford schoolchildren, leaving the decision to the legislature
and governor.
Gov. John G. Rowland and Attorney General Richard Blumenthal said they were
opposed to using forced busing as a solution. Mr Blumenthal also said that
municipalities should continue governing schools, and that he would do
everything possible to avoid massive reassignment of students.
Gov Rowland promised to immediately convene a meeting of legislative leaders
to determine how to proceed.
"It has taken seven years for this case to make its way through the courts,"
he said. "The problem of school segregation in our urban areas is a very
complicated problem with deep-running social and economic causes. I do not
expect any quick answers and I cannot predict what the remedies will be."
The case, based on a 1989 lawsuit brought by 17 pupils, was one of just a few
active ones in the nation seeking to integrate schools across district lines,
and the first to test whether segregated schools are illegal under the state
Constitution.
The lawsuit contended that minority students in the city receive illegally
inferior schooling despite the constitution's guarantee of equal educational
opportunity. It sought a court order linking Hartford schools with
overwhelmingly white suburban schools.
As Mr Rosenthal points out, Newtown is participating with other area schools
in an effort to establish a magnet school, a proposed regional career training
center which received a $37,921 grant from the state on Monday.
"The state court's action makes this effort (to establish a magnet school)
more important," he noted. "The legislature is more likely to fund these types
of efforts at diversity. Magnet schools are a way of achieving diversity
voluntarily."
As for forced busing, Dr Reed felt that while parents in the suburbs will be
opposed to having their children transported into another district, the same
would likely hold true of parents in the inner city.
"A massive uprooting of kids - I don't know if that's ever proven to work well
in the past," he said.
As for what the state can expect in the future, Dr Reed predicted much of it
would depend on whether Gov Rowland wishes to forget about public opinion.
"Taking a lead on this issue could have some public risk," he said. "We know
what he's against (forced busing), but we're not sure what he's for."
More than 95 percent of Hartford's 24,000 students are minorities, and most
are from poor families. In most of the suburbs in the 22-town region around
Hartford, minorities make up less than 10 percent of the student population.
In a sharply worded dissent, Justice David Borden said the implication of the
majority's reasoning is that "virtually every school district in the state is
now either unconstitutional or constitutionally suspect."
The dissent also warned that lawmakers were being given a nearly impossible
task because the court did not give them any principles to follow.
The US Supreme Court had held that only segregation brought about by
intentional state action violates the US Constitution. The state court said it
chose not to follow the federal precedent.
(Associated Press reports were used in this story.)
