This case concerns a lawsuit filed by Appellants, residents of a neighborhood in Dallas, Texas, against the Dallas Housing Authority (“DHA”), Appellee, to enjoin it from constructing public housing in their community. The residents allege that ■DHA’s decision to build on this particular property (“the Hillcrest Site”) violates their Fourteenth Amendment equal protection rights. The district court found no constitutional violation and permitted the construction to go forward. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the district court’s ruling.
I. Background
The long saga of this case began in 1985 with a lawsuit filed on behalf of African-American plaintiffs against DHA. 1 It alleged, inter alia, that DHA engaged in systematic racial segregation through its construction and maintenance of public housing in Dallas. In order to settle the claim that it consciously failed to locate public housing in predominantly white neighborhoods, DHA agreed to a 1987 consent decree integrating Dallas public housing. In 1994, after repeated breaches of the consent decree, DHA and the plaintiffs in that case negotiated a remedial order which was then imposed by the district court.
The remedial order required, inter alia, that DHA construct public housing in “predominantly white areas” to remedy past segregation. In compliance with the remedial order, DHA purchased two such sites in Dallas, the McCallum Site and the Hillcrest Site. In 1996, homeowners in these areas sued to enjoin construction, arguing that the remedial order violated their equal protection rights by requiring public housing in “predominantly white areas.” The district court denied the homeowners’ request for an injunction.
The homeowners appealed that decision to this Court in 1999 and we reversed.
See Walker,
II. Discussion
We review the district court’s findings of fact for clear error and its conclusions of law
de novo.
2
Ayers v. Thompson,
Appellants claim that DHA’s decision to construct public housing on the Hillcrest Site violates their equal protection rights under the Fourteenth Amendment. For cases like this, where the challenged governmental action is facially race-neutral, “[p]roof of racially discriminatory intent or purpose is required to show a violation of the Equal Protection Clause.”
Arlington Heights v. Metro. Hous. Dev. Corp.,
The district court found,
inter alia:
“DHA’s present intention to build public housing on the Hillcrest Site is not based on any racial consideration”; “An intent to discriminate on the basis of race is not a substantial or motivating factor in DHA’s present intention to build public housing on the Hillcrest Site, and, in fact, was not a factor at all”; “The Hillcrest Site meets HUD’s and the court’s requirements and is the best site available in the entire city”; and “DHA would have decided to build public housing on the Hillcrest Site absent the ‘predominantly white area’ requirement.” Additionally, it concluded that DHA’s decision is not “traceable” to the prior impermissible race-conscious selec
Appellants also argue that DHA’s actions relating to the Hillerest Site run afoul of the Fourteenth Amendment because its site selection can be traced to its prior unconstitutional activity. They contend that, regardless of DHA’s current intentions, the decision to build public housing on the Hillerest Site is unconstitutional as a matter of law. They base their argument on the Supreme Court’s ruling in
United States v. Fordice.
The
Fordiee
Court found that Mississippi had not “met its affirmative duty to dismantle its prior dual university system.”
Id.
at 728,
It is clear to us that DHA’s current plan to build on the Hillerest Site cannot be reasonably characterized as a continuation of an unconstitutional policy or practice such as that described in Fordiee.
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s decision.
Notes
. For a detailed history of this matter, see our opinions in
Walker v. City of Mesquite,
. Appellants ask us to apply a less deferential standard of review because of the constitutional nature of this case. Contrary to Appellants’ assertions, the proper standard of review for factual findings in equal protection cases like this is clear error.
See Women’s Med. Ctr. of Northwest Houston v. Bell,
