This action was filed in April, 1985 by the Jacksonville branch of the NAACP (“NAACP”) on behalf of all black schoolchildren in Duval County, Florida. The complaint alleged that defendant, the Du-val County School Board (“Board”), had acted since 1975 to increase racial segregation in its public schools. The district court
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consolidated this action with
Mims v. Duval County School Bd.,
a case which culminated in 1971 with the issuance of a permanent injunction requiring the Board to integrate the school system.
See Mims v. Duval County School Bd.,
I. BACKGROUND
Legal efforts to dismantle Duval County’s segregated school system began in 1960, when a lawsuit was filed seeking to compel the school board to comply with the mandate of
Brown v. Board of Educ.,
In March 1965, plaintiffs objected to the slowness of the desegregation process, pointing out that under the plan only sixty of over 30,000 black children were attending white schools, and that no white student was attending a black school. The school board consented to an acceleration of the desegregation process, but by 1967 it was apparent that the plan was not working. The district court found that the board’s assignment practices and attendance zones effectively prevented unification of the dual system. Consequently, the court directed the school board to establish a nondiscriminatory system of attendance zones, to abolish the “freedom of choice” plan then in effect, and to submit a revised plan contemplating the achievement of total desegregation.
The Board’s formulation of a new plan wаs interrupted by the in banc decision of the former Fifth Circuit in
Singleton v. Jackson Mun. Separate School Dist.,
Since 1971, the school system has been subject to the permanent injunction set forth in former District Judge Tjoflat’s memorandum opinion published at
II. FACTS
The Duval County school district is geographically the largest school district in the United States. Approximately 101,000 children, 65% of whom were white and 35% of whom were black, attended its more than 140 schools in 1984. The black student population has increаsed by 7% since the 1971 Mims order.
A. Administrative Assignments
In the 1984-85 school year, approximately 25% of the system’s administrative staff was black. Of forty schools with administrative staffs composed of three or more persons in 1984-85, eighteen had staffs composed exclusively of members of one race. In the same year, nine of seventeen high schools had all-white administrative staffs; of these nine schools, eight had student bodies which were over 80% white. One high school had an all-black administrative staff and black student population exceeding 98%. Two other high schools had predominantly black administrative staffs and student bodies which were predominantly black.
At the junior high level, seven of twenty-two schools had all-white administrative staffs in 1984-85. All but one of these schools had student populations which were approximately 70% white. The exception was Fletcher Junior High School, whose student population was 94% white. One school, Ribault Junior High School, had an all-black staff; its student population was 73% black.
In 1985-86, twenty of ninety-six elementary school principals were black. Nine of these twenty principals served at schools with a predominantly black student body. During that school year, the Board replaced or transferred twenty-four principals. Twenty-three of the new principals replaced a person of the same race.
B. Faculty Assignments
The Mims injunction required the Board to assign faculty in a manner which reflected the racial composition of teachers in the district as a whole. In 1969, the ratio of white teaсhers to black teachers was seventy to thirty. Accordingly the court ordered the Board to ensure that each school’s faculty was 70% white and 30% black, allowing for a 5% divergence in either direction. In 1984, as in 1969, 70% of the system’s teachers were white and 30% were black. The faculty of thirty schools varied by more than 10% from the seventy/thirty ratio. Thirteen varied by more than 20%. This degree of variance has been consistent since the Mims order was handed down in 1972:
Year Number of schools with over 40% black teachers Number of schools with under 20% black teachers
1972 18 10
1973 19 7
1974 20 11
1975 22 10
1976 21 9
1977 19 6
1978 18 7
1979 24 12
1980 22 12
1981 18 10
1982 20 10
1983 17 11
1984 17 13
In 1984, schools having predominantly black faculties in many instances also had predominantly black student bodies. At Ribault High School, for example, which has a 99% black student body, forty-seven of seventy-five teachers were black. At Raines High School, 98% of the students and 59% of the teachers were black. The pattern was reversed in schools with predominantly white student bodies. At Fletcher High School, 10% of the students and four out of ninety-seven teachers were black. At Wolfson High Sсhool, 9% of the students and 10% of the faculty were black.
*949 C. Department Chairpersons and Athletic Coaches
The race of a school’s department chairpersons and its athletic coaches also tended to correspond to the racial makeup of the student body. In 1984, six schools had exclusively white department chairperson staffs. These six schools had over 80% white faculties and over 75% white student populations. The reverse was true for schools with disproportionately black student bodies. The race of cоaching staffs also tended to parallel the racial composition of the faculties and student bodies.
D. Student Assignments
Prior to the
Mims
injunction ninety-one of one hundred thirty-two schools in Duval County had student populations composed almost exclusively of one race. Eighteen of these were schools that were “black” under the state-imposed system of segregation. The
Mims
order contemplated black high school enrollments ranging from 7% to 40%, noting that the law did not require each school’s student body to reflect precisely the white-to-black ratio in the district as a whole.
Mims
order,
In 1972, the year after Judge Tjoflat’s order, eight schools in Duval County had student bodies that were more than 50% black. In 1985, that number had increased to twenty-seven schools out a total of one hundred forty schools. Eight schools, including Ribault and Raines which were both over 98% black, had a black or white population of over 95%.
Since 1972, without court approval, the Board has used portable buildings and leased additional space to aсcommodate overcrowding at some schools. Other schools were underpopulated. No studies were conducted to assess the potential impact of these practices on the school system’s racial imbalances.
E.Special Programs
The school district offers several programs, including a “gifted” program and educable mentally handicapped (EMH) classes, to accommodate students with special needs. From 1983 to 1985, 6.5% of the students enrolled in the gifted program were black, as contrasted with a 35% black population in the school system. During the 1984-85 school year, forty-two of forty-three teachers in the program were white. 1 None of the elementary schools that operate a gifted center is a majority black school. Students attending other schools who qualify for the program are transported to schools with gifted centers.
The process by which a student qualifies for the gifted program involves several steps. A student is recommended for initial screening by teachers, counselors, principals, parents, students, physicians, or community leaders. The student is given the Stanford Achievement Test, and if he or she scores in the 98th percentile in two subject areas he or she goes on to take the Otis Lennon School Ability Test. If the test confirms that the student has a deviation I.Q. of 125 or more, the student is recommended for at least three more tests which further evaluate his or her intelligence and behavioral characteristics. Finally, а Child Study Team, composed of the district’s Director of Exceptional Student Education or the Director’s representative, a student services representative and the child’s principal, reviews the student’s record and recommends placement.
*950 The criteria employed by the district to determine eligibility for the program are more stringent than the state guidelines. The district’s qualifying scores on the first two tests, for example, are higher than the state’s. No evidence was presented that would give rise to the inference that the tests and methods used to assess a student’s eligibility for the program had a discriminatory effect on black students, other than their statistical underrepresen-tation in the program. The Board has made efforts to increase black enrollment, including attempts to increase teacher and parental awareness of the program and to increase parents’ role in the screening process.
In 1983, 72% of the students in the district’s EMH program were black. The EMH program is operated in accordance with state guidelines. Referrals are usually made by teachers, whereafter the student is given a series of tests to assess intellectual ability and behavioral skills. Due to the overrepresentation of black students in the EMH program, the classification of minority students is subject to an additional level of review.
III. DISCUSSION
The district court found that the Duval County school system has achieved unitary status and accordingly dissolved the injunction under which the school district had been operating since 1969. Appellant urges that we reverse this finding on the ground that the school district has not successfully eliminated the effects of the past system of state-imposed segregation. The critical question thus is under what circumstances judicial supervision must be terminated because the school district has achieved unitary status. The Supreme Court has not addressed this question. In several decisions, however, the Court describes the substantive goals that school desegregation remedies should achieve to redress fully the harms resulting from the prior system of state-imposed segregation. Our analysis of these cases and our review of the record in this case convinces us that the Duval County School Board has not sufficiently eliminated the vestiges of its previously discriminatory system to entitle it to a declaration of unitary status.
In
Brown v. Board of Educ.,
The Court in
Green
confirmed that school distriсts operating segregated school systems were “charged with the affirmative duty to take whatever steps might be necessary to convert to a unitary
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school system in which racial discrimination would be eliminated root and branch.”
Independent of student assignment, where it is possible to identify a “white schоol” or a “Negro school” simply by reference to the racial composition of teachers and staff, the quality of school buildings and equipment, or the organization of sports activities, a prima fa-cie case of violation of substantive constitutional rights under the Equal Protection Clause is shown.
Id.
at 18,
[T]he existеnce of some small number of one-race, or virtually one-race, schools within a district is not in and of itself the mark of a system that still practices segregation by law.... [B]ut in a system with a history of segregation the need for remedial criteria of sufficient specificity to assure a school authority’s compliance with its constitutional duty warrants a presumption against schools that are substantially disproportionate in their racial composition.
Id.
at 26,
Once a prima facie case of continued segregation in a previously dual school system is established, the burden is upon the school authorities to show that such continued segregation is not the result of present or past discriminatory actions.
Id.
“In discharging that burden, it is not enough, of course, that the school authorities rely upon some allegedly logical, racially neutral explanation for their actions. Their burden is to adduce proof sufficient to support a finding that segregative intent was not
among
the factors that motivated their actions.”
Keyes v. School Dist.,
If the actions of school authorities were to any degree motivated by segregative intent and the segregation resulting from those actions continues to exist, the fact of remoteness in time certainly does not make those actions any less “intentional.”
... Intentional school segregation in the past may have been a factor in creating a natural environment for thе growth of further segregation. Thus, ... [the school board] can rebut the prima facie case only by showing that its past segre-gative acts did not create or contribute to the current segregated condition of [the schools].
Id.
at 210-11,
These cases make clear that no previously segregated school system can be declared to have achieved unitary status as long as there is continued segregation, as demonstrated by racial identification in faculty and staff assignments, extracurricular activities and facilities,
see Swann,
The district court’s determination that the Duval County school system has achieved unitary status is clearly erroneous. 3 The evidence showed that the larger schools in the system had administrative staffs composed exclusively of members of one race. The race of the staff in these schools almost without exception matched the predominant race of the student body. In the area of faculty assignments, the evidence showed that the Board has never complied with the 1969 injunction requiring teachers to be assigned according to a 70% to 30% white-to-black ratio at each school. Approximately thirty schools have varied consistently by more than 10% from the target ratio since 1972. Disproportionately black faculties were found at schools with predominantly black students. The same was true for department chairpersons and coaches.
The Board offers several explanations for these deviations from the Mims order. Mr. Herb Sang, the Duval County school superintendent, testified that the reasons for the overrepresentation of black administrators at predominantly black schools were that promotions were usually made within the schools and that consideration was given to administrators’ preference in location when making assignments. As to the Board’s failure to comply with the seventy to thirty ratio with respect tо faculty assignments, appellee’s witnesses testified that principals have the final authority to approve or disapprove any transfer. Teachers’ preference in location was also cited as an explanation.
These “allegedly logical, racially neutral explanation^],”
see Keyes,
The evidence also revealed a failure to comply with the
Mims
order in thе area of student assignments. Segregation in the district as a whole has increased since 1972. In that year, eight schools had majority black populations; in 1985, twenty-seven schools fell into that category. Appellant asserts that the district’s use of portable classrooms and leasing of additional classroom space were partially responsible for this increased segregation. It is unnecessary for us to make a determination as to the actual effect of these рractices, however, in light of the board’s concession that no studies were conducted to assess their potential impact on the system’s racial imbalances. The Board’s failure to consider the objective of desegregation in its efforts
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to alleviate overcrowding violates its affirmative duty to desegregate.
Pitts v. Freeman,
Finally, there is no evidence to suggest that the racial imbalances in the gifted and EMH programs are vestiges of the prior de jure segregation.
4
“[Djespite any resulting numerical racial disproportionality, achievement grouping is permissible in a school district that has not been declared fully unitary ‘if the school district can demonstrate that its assignment method is not based on the present results of past discrimination....’ ”
Georgia State Conference of Branches of NAACP v. Georgia,
In short, we hold that the Duval Cоunty School Board’s consistent failure to comply with the provisions of the Mims injunction and order, as well as its actions and omissions in the areas of faculty and staff assignment, have perpetuated the effects of the prior system of segregation. The district court’s determination that the school district has achieved the objectives of the injunction and order therefore was clearly erroneous. Accordingly, we reverse the finding of the district court that the Duval County school system hаs achieved unitary status, vacate its order dissolving the Mims injunction and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED, VACATED and REMANDED.
Notes
. The district court noted that the list of forty-three teachers appears to be incomplete, as it lists the teachers in alphabetical order and ends with a last name beginning with the letter "r”. Because the exhibit was introduced as a complete list and was received without any objection by the Board we will treat it as a comprehensive list.
. There has beеn some confusion in the lower courts surrounding the definition of “unitary." In
Georgia State Conference of Branches of NAACP v. Georgia,
. A declaration that a school has achieved unitary status is a finding of fact subject to review under the clearly erroneous standard.
United States v. Texas Educ. Agency,
. Appellee asserts that appellant lacks standing to challenge the school system’s exceptional education programs because no members of the NAACP who testified at trial were personally involved or had children who were involved in the programs. This contention is without merit. To have standing, an association is required only to allege injury to its members.
Warth v. Seldin,
