OPINION
Before the court is a Motion for Declaratory Judgment, filed on behalf of the Rapides Parish School Board (the “Board”). The Board prays for a declaratory judgment regarding the validity of Article 8, 513 of the Louisiana Constitution, as amended, and Act 973 of 1995, which provide for the creation of an independent school district for Wards 9, 10, and 11 of Rapides Parish (“the North Rapides Independent School District”). In an Order signed on October 24, 1996, we decreed that the statutory requirement of the Rapides Parish School Board to implement the provisions of Act 973 of 1995 be stayed until such time as we could rule on the merits of the Board’s pleading. We also solicited position memoranda from the Attorney General of the State of Louisiana and all other interested parties. Having considered the evidence propounded as well as the authorities presented by counsel, for the reasons set forth below, we grant the Board’s motion for a declaratoiy judgment.
This analysis is divided into two parts: the first part is an analysis of the issue of whether the court should enter a declaratory judg *98 ment in this case, and the second part is an analysis of the validity of the above-mentioned Louisiana constitutional provision and statute. We turn to the first part of the analysis.
The scope of a federal district court’s power to enter a declaratory judgment is defined in the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2201. Where appropriate, a federal court may either grant declarative relief as the sole remedy, or it may grant declarative relief in addition to other coercive remedies.
Nashville. C. & St.L. Ry. v. Wallace,
Where subject matter jurisdiction is proper, the court may issue a declaratory judgment only in “a case
of
actual controversy.” 28 U.S.C.A. § 2201. One purpose for this rule, which is consistent with the constitutional limitations on the power of federal courts
2
, is that it prevents declaratory judgments from being used to circumvent the general prohibition on federal courts rendering advisory opinions on hypothetical fact scenarios.
Rowan Companies, Inc. v. Griffin,
The Board is faced with a constitutional mandate to divide Rapides Parish into two school districts. Like the movant in
Rowan Companies, Inc.,
the Board moves for declaratory judgment as “a means of settling an actual controversy before it ripens into a violation of the civil or criminal law, or a breach of a contractual duty.”
Id.
(citing
Scott-Burr Stores Corp. v. Wilcox,
The Supreme Court has recognized that the declaratory judgment is an equitable remedy.
See Abbott Laboratories v. Gardner,
We now turn to the substantive issue before the court, and the second part of our analysis: whether the constitutionally-mandated plan to sever the North Rapides Independent School District is valid. We conclude that it is not.
On October 21,1995, the electors in Louisiana approved an amendment to Article 8, § 13 of the Louisiana Constitution of 1974, authorizing the creation of a separate public school system to be operated in Wards 9,10, and 11 of Rapides Parish. 4 Act 973 of the 1995 Regular Session of the Louisiana Legislature, which became operative with passage of the amendment to Article 8, § 13 of the Louisiana Constitution, imposed several statutory duties on the Rapides Parish School Board regarding creation of the North Rap-ides Independent School District. The issue before the court, and by which the outcome of this adjudication is driven, is whether the Fourteenth Amendment to the federal Constitution is offended by the creation of the North Rapides Independent School District. 5
In
Brown v. Board of Education (Brown I),
We adopted the Rapides Parish school desegregation plan that is now in effect back in 1980.
See Valley v. Rapides Parish School Bd.,
Moving our analysis to the narrow issue at bar, the rule is that where a state attempts to splinter-off a new school district from a school district that is in the remedial-
*100
mode under a desegregation plan, the splintering-off must be “judged according to whether it hinders or furthers the process of school desegregation.”
United States v. Scotland Neck City Board of Education,
The rule from this
Scotland Neck
case is significant in our analysis. Because we are in the remedial-mode of implementing our desegregation plan, and have not yet attained our goal of unitary status in Rapides Parish, the test is simply whether Act 973 and Art. 8 § 13 of the Louisiana Constitution of 1974 interfere with the process of school desegregation. We need not make a factual inquiry into whether there was a
“de jure
” intent to discriminate on the basis of race when Act 973 and Art. 8 § 13 of the Louisiana Constitution of 1974 were created.
6
We conclude that they do indeed interfere with the process of school desegregation, and are therefore unconstitutional, under the rule from
Scotland Neck.
In its Memorandum in Response to Declaratory Judgment, the Louisiana Attorney General argues that this court cannot judge the validity of Act 973 under the Scotland Neck standard until “the new school board is constituted and the new districting plan is implemented.” We disagree.
The Board propounded ample evidence for the court to determine whether or not the desegregation plan “hinders or furthers the process of school desegregation.” The Louisiana Attorney General’s proposal, that we delay ruling on the validity of the new school district until after the Board spends the money, time, and administrative energy on severing the new school district, is absurd.
We turn to our analysis of how Act 973 and Art. 8 § 13 of the Louisiana Constitution of 1974 hinder the process of school desegregation. As of March 25, 1996, over 8,000 students resided in Wards 9, 10, and 11. Mov-ant’s Exhibit “A”. Of these students in Wards 9,10 and 11, only thirteen percent are black. In other words, severing the north Rapides district would remove a large pool of whites from the Rapides Parish school system.
Over 1,500 students reside in, but attend schools outside of, Wards 9, 10, and 11, and eighty-four percent of these students are non-black. Movant’s Exhibit “C”. Removal of this pool of students from the Rapides Parish school district would have the effect of re-segregating the races, because of the disproportionately high percentage of whites north of the Red River.
Over 1,600 students from south of the Red River attend schools in Wards 9, 10, and 11, and seventy-seven percent of these students are black. Movant’s Exhibit “D”. These seventy-seven percent being bussed north of the Red River make a significant contribution to the overall desegregation plan, and severing Wards 9, 10, and 11 would effect a re-segregation plan if allowed to stand.
The Board also propounds a report prepared by Mr. Earl J. Cooper, Supervisor of Transportation, regarding the average transportation times for students going to Wards 9, 10, and 11 and for students residing in Wards 9, 10, and 11 but attending schools outside these Wards. Movant’s Exhibit H. The upshot of this evidence is that severing Wards 9, 10, and 11 may place a greater burden on some students south of the Red River who may need to be bussed further than before to effect a successful desegregation plan.
*101 As the Board correctly points out in its Memorandum in Support of Motion for Declaratory Judgment, severing Wards 9, 10, and 11 from the Rapides Parish School District would change the racial balance in the district south of the Red River from sixty percent white and forty percent black to forty-seven percent white and fifty-three percent black. In other words, there would be a profound rise in the percentage of whites in school north of the Red River (an area in which a predominant white population resides), and a decrease in the percentage of whites in school south of the Red River (an area with a greater percentage of blacks than north of the river). 7
Where there has been a judicial finding that intentional
de jure
segregation once existed, the lack of sinister intent where segregative effects occur does not save the act in question.
JUDGMENT
For written reasons this date assigned, it is
ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that the defendant School Board’s Motion for Declaratory Judgment is hereby GRANTED; it is further
ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that Act 973 of the 1995 Regular Session of the Louisiana Legislature, which became operative with the passage of the amendment to Article 8, § 13 of the Louisiana Constitution is unconstitutional for reasons set forth in the Opinion above referred to.
Notes
. This case falls squarely within the court’s federal question subject matter jurisdiction, under 28 U.S.C. § 1331.
See Public Service Commission of Utah v. WycoffCo.,
. U.S. Const, art. Ill, § 2, see Lea Brilmayer, The Jurisprudence of Article III: Perspectives on the “Case or Controversy ” Requirement, 93 Harv. L.Rev. 297, 300 (1979).
.The fact that it is the Board, rather than the Plaintiffs, that seeks this judicial declaration is not fatal to the "case of actual controversy" requirement.
. Generally, this is the geographic slice of Rap-ides Parish north of the Red River. Wards 9, 10, and 11 are predominantly white, and less urban than the area south of the Red River, which includes the city of Alexandria.
.
See
U.S. Const, art. VI, § 2 (The Supremacy Clause is, of course, one of the most irreducible ingredients in the recipe for our federal system, and reads “This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; .. shall be the supreme Law of the Land; ... any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding.");
see North Carolina Bd. of Ed. v. Swann,
. See Dayton Bd. of Ed. v. Brinkman,
In other words, the Attorney General of Louisiana's reliance on language in the Swann case for the proposition that “disparity in racial balance alone is not determinative of the validity of the Act in question” is misplaced. Because we are in the mode of remedying prior de jure acts in Rapides Parish, this "disparity in racial balance" is indeed sufficient to invalidate the Act in question.
.
See
