This is an appeal from orders of the Western District of New York, Chief Judge John T. Curtin, approving a plan submitted by the appellee-Board of Education (Board) for the desegregation of Buffalo’s public school system which was found to have been intentionally segregated in
Arthur v. Nyquist,
It is apparent that even as this appeal was taken, the time schedule for implementing Phase III and the “final deadline” for achieving system-wide desegregation were not agreed upon by the parties and had not yet been submitted by'the Board to the district court. The proposed schedule was eventually submitted to the district court a week before oral argument of this appeal and thus, we have had neither notice of the contents of the proposal nor the benefit of the district court’s consideration of this issue. The timeliness of the remedy for intentional school segregation is certainly a major source of contention between the appellants and the Board and is of the utmost constitutional importance.
Green v. County School Board,
In addition, the district court orders appealed from provide a paucity of detailed factual findings to support approval of the Board’s plan, leaving this court with a myriad of inconclusive maps and statistics offered by both parties in aid of their conflicting positions. The district courts have been vested with discretion to use “broad and flexible equitable powers to implement a remedy.that [is both] sensitive to the burdens that can result from a decree and the practical limitations involved... . ”
United States v. DeSoto Parish School Board,
Furthermore, there are no findings in the most recent orders regarding the shortcomings of Buffalo’s second school desegregation plan that were identified by Chief Judge Curtin when he disapproved that plan and ordered further development of a system-wide remedy.
Arthur
v.
Nyquist,
On the record presented, we cannot determine whether the Board has demonstrated that Phase III represents the maximum desegregation practically achievable. Until that finding is made by the district court, jurisdiction is retained. Furthermore, since “the most exacting form of review” is required when a plan may disproportionately burden the minority group which was the target of intentional discrimination,
Parent Association of Andrew Jackson High School v. Ambach,
Remanded.
Notes
. The District Court reserved decision on the following issues: Hispanic-intervenors’ plans for bi-lingual education; appointment of a “monitor” to oversee progress of desegregation; proposals for four all-minority schools which the Board concedes are “indeterminates” for future desegregation. In addition, no reference has been made to faculty assignments which had previously reflected “intentional segregation by the school board.”
Arthur v. Nyquist,
