BLACKS, HISPANICS SUE OVER 'DIVERSITY' SET-ASIDE FOR
WHITES, Lawsuit: Unfair to limit minorities to 75% of magnet-school
population, by Bob Unruh, 2/16/18, WND
Hartford, Connecticut, school
children charging it’s unfair to limit the black and Hispanic enrollment of much-desired magnet schools to
75 percent of the student population.
The case was brought by
Pacific Legal Foundation on behalf of nine Hartford parents against the state
Department of Education’s race-based enrollment quotas and lottery.
PLF explains the magnet
schools offer special instruction and opportunities and attract a diverse
student body. They are described as far outpacing traditional public schools
“in terms of student achievement.”
As a result, places in
their classrooms are highly sought by students and parents. But a quota system
set up following a state Supreme Court ruling in 1996 that found
unconstitutional de facto segregation in Hartford’s schools is creating issues.
The policy,
which sought to end “racial isolation” in the city’s neighborhood schools,
requires that 25 percent of the seats in magnet schools be reserved for white
and Asian students.
The objective was
to draw suburban white and Asian students to the city’s schools.
But Hartford’s “failing
neighborhood schools remain heavily segregated and high-performing magnet
schools are forced to turn away black and Latino students – based only on their
race,” PLF said.
PLF attorney Joshua
Thompson asserted Connecticut’s race-based admissions process violates
students’ constitutional rights.
“We are fighting for
their right to get the best education possible, and their race shouldn’t
deny them the opportunity to attend an excellent school,” he said.
The case, Robinson v.
Wentzell, was filed in U.S. District Court for the District of Connecticut
this week. It challenges the quota system and lottery as violations of the 14th
Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause.
The intent of limiting
black and Hispanic students to 75 percent of a school’s population is to have
racial diversity. But the consequence is that hundreds of classroom
seats remain empty each year because there are not enough whites and Asians
coming in from the suburbs, and blacks and Hispanics are not allowed to
fill the empty seats.
“Worthy kids are denied
the opportunity for an exceptional education for no reason other than skin
color,” PLF charges.
One plaintiff parent is
LaShawn Robinson, whose son, Jarod, was denied admission to a magnet
school even though had space for him.
“Those seats just stay
empty, no matter what,” Robinson said. “Even if I want Jarod to have a seat, he
can’t get in unless kids from the suburbs come in, too. It’s like Connecticut
says, ‘You have to have a white kid in a classroom for a black kid to be
educated.'”
http://www.wnd.com/2018/02/blacks-hispanics-sue-over-diversity-set-aside-for-whites/
Comments
It’s time for the US Congress to review
anti-discrimination laws, especially when they impinge on freedom and create
financial meltdowns.
The court simply ruled on current law in 1996 and
determined that segregated schools were unconstitutional. But Blacks objected
to bussing in favor of neighborhood schools and they still choose to live in
Black neighborhoods.
Congress needs to repeal the Community Reinvestment
Act that caused the 2008 Mortgage Meltdown and maybe they need to reset the
Civil Rights Act. It’s ironic that private black colleges produce great
graduates, but public black schools struggle to lower their drop-out rate.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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