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Berkeley Unified School District
June 11, 2009
Berkeley's Plan to Promote Diversity in Schools Stands
California Supreme Court declines to review case challenging Berkeley's student assignment plan
(New York, NY) – Yesterday, the California Supreme Court decided not to review
a case challenging the student assignment plan in Berkeley, California, which means
that the California Appellate Court's March 17, 2009 decision upholding the plan
stands. In 2006, a lawsuit was filed challenging Berkeley's plan, which seeks to
promote diversity in Berkeley schools by taking account of the demographics of the
neighborhoods where students live, including parental education level; family income;
and race and/or ethnicity.
"As this case comes to a close, those that recognize the importance of a diverse
learning environment and believe that opportunity should be equally afforded to
all have prevailed yet again," said John Payton, LDF President and Director-Counsel.
The California Appellate Court upheld Berkeley's plan because it considers the racial
makeup of neighborhoods, rather than characteristics of individual students, in
assigning students and therefore does not constitute discrimination or the granting
of a preference based on race in violation of California's Proposition 209. The
appellate court's decision appropriately recognized the importance of school district
efforts to bring students together across lines of race and class and to provide
access and opportunities to students who live in areas of concentrated disadvantage.
In 2007, the United States Supreme Court similarly recognized the importance of
efforts to promote diversity and avoid racial isolation in schools in Seattle and
Louisville, and the ability of school districts to take account of neighborhood
demographics, including race, as part of those efforts.
The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) along with the ACLU of
Northern California, the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights and the ACLU of Southern
California, successfully represented a group of parents who intervened to protect
the student assignment plan against a challenge from Ward Connerly's American Civil
Rights Foundation.
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The NAACP Legal Defense Fund has worked to dismantle racial segregation and ensure
equal educational opportunity in our nation's schools for over six decades, representing
African-American students in Brown v. Board of Education and numerous subsequent
landmark school desegregation cases. Information about LDF's school diversity work
can be accessed on this website, including a manual for parents, educators and advocates
entitled
Still Looking to the Future: Voluntary K-12 School Integration. (3.35 MB)
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