213 A.2d 843 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1965
In this action the plaintiffs, parents and taxpayers, seek to enjoin the board of education of the city of New Haven from carrying out certain provisions of a plan adopted by the board on July 7, 1964. The plan had been published on June 8, 1964, and was designated as "Proposals for promoting equality of educational opportunity and dealing with problems of racial imbalance." Several public hearings preceded the final action, and the report was vigorously defended and assailed. As a result, only a modified plan was adopted.
In effect, the part of the plan objected to paired the Sheridan Junior High School and the Bassett Junior High School into one attendance zone and then provided that all seventh grade pupils in the entire zone attend one school and all eighth grade pupils in the area attend the other. Since the Sheridan school served a predominantly white area and the Bassett school a predominantly colored one, bussing of some pupils was required, and as a result the racial imbalance in the area was equated to a certain extent. *123
Claim is made that such a change amounts to a discrimination against the children transported as well as against those not similarly transported, regardless of race, and that General Statutes §
General Statutes §
While recognition is given of the extensive powers enjoyed by boards of education, claim is made that the problem of racial imbalance is one requiring legislative enactment and is beyond their power. The action here is described as an attempt to balance the races under the guise of an educational gambit. It is not a question of the board's acting arbitrarily or in abuse of its discretion, but rather one of illegal action. *124
The report dealt not only with the racial imbalance problem but also considered improvement in the overall quality of instruction possible, improvement of teaching materials, reduction of class sizes, overcrowding, and a complementing of the Sargent Plan in the construction of new schools. Under the law, the board had the duty of maintaining a sound educational system by furnishing suitable school facilities and equal educational opportunities. There is no constitutional prohibition on the board against taking into account, in addition to other relevant matters, the factor of racial imbalance.Fuller v. Volk,
There is no doubt from a review of the evidence that a substantial factor influencing the decision was the desire to reduce to some extent the racial imbalance existing. Even so, a determination by the board which is otherwise lawful and reasonable does not become unlawful merely because the factor of racial imbalance is accorded relevance. Matter of Strippoli
v. Bickal,
The plaintiffs have not supported their claim of illegality by the more credible evidence and judgment may enter for defendants.