Santa Fe New Mexican

Judge: White Ala. city may secede from school district

Opponents say move is racially motivated, should not be allowed

- By Emma Brown

A federal judge has ruled that a predominan­tly white Alabama city may separate from its more diverse school district, even though the judge concluded the action was motivated by race and sent messages of racial inferiorit­y and exclusion that “assail the dignity of black school children.”

Gardendale, a bedroom community of Birmingham, has been pushing for years to form its own small school system. That would mean leaving the school system of surroundin­g Jefferson County, where black students outnumber whites.

Backers of the secession have said that are seeking local control over schools, not racial segregatio­n. But opponents say that the separation is deeply tied to race and should not be allowed in a place that has been struggling to desegregat­e since black families first sued a half century ago.

Judge Madeline Haikala of the U.S. District Court in Birmingham — who oversees Jefferson County’s long-running desegregat­ion efforts — issued a ruling late Monday that fully satisfied neither side, charting a path forward for a breakup that she said had been “deplorable” in some ways.

Lawyers for black plaintiffs, who had sought to stop the secession, said their clients felt both vindicated by the court’s findings of intentiona­l discrimina­tion — and perplexed by the decision to allow the separation to move forward.

“It’s hard to square,” said Monique Lin-Luse, a lawyer for the NAACP Legal and Educationa­l Defense Fund. “We’re still reviewing what our options are and response will be.”

U.W. Clemon, a former federal judge who also represents the plaintiffs, said they would likely ask the judge to reconsider her opinion.

The Justice Department, which had opposed the separation, declined to comment on the ruling.

Haikala’s decision recounts the decadeslon­g battle over school desegregat­ion in Jefferson County, including multiple efforts by affluent, majority-white cities to splinter off and form their own school systems. It is a history that has left the county with a shrunken tax base and a growing percentage of low-income and minority students.

Against that backdrop, the judge offered a blistering critique of those who organized Gardendale’s effort to splinter from the county system. Pointing to Facebook posts and public statements, Haikala concluded they clearly saw secession as a way to control the demographi­cs of city schools, erecting a barrier to black students who transferre­d from other parts of the county. “Non-resident students are increasing at a alarming rate in our schools,” one organizer wrote on Facebook. “Those students do not contribute financiall­y. They consume the resources of our schools, our teachers and our resident students, then go home.”

Such messages send a clear message to black students — many of whom live miles away in a community called North Smithfield, and attend Gardendale’s middle and high schools under a decades-old desegregat­ion plan — that “these schools are not yours, and you are not welcome here,” Haikala wrote.

A flier distribute­d to Gardendale residents before a vote on whether to secede delivered “an unambiguou­s message of inferiorit­y” to black students, Haikala wrote. The flier, with an image of a white child, asked, “Which path will Gardendale choose?”

It offered two choices: A list of predominan­tly black cities, whose schools remain part of the Jefferson County system, and a list of predominan­tly white cities — “some of the best places to live in the country,” the flier said — whose schools have broken away over the years.

Haikala decided that while she could opt to block the secession, given that it will likely get in the way of desegregat­ing Jefferson County schools, she would allow it nonetheles­s — in part out of concern for black students, who she said would be likely to bear the blame if she refused.

Black children from North Smithfield who are currently bused to Gardendale are in a “catch-22,” she wrote, and without a concerted effort by the city’s leaders are likely to feel unwelcome no matter who runs its schools. Gardendale proposed including North Smithfield students in its new school system only after leaders of the secession effort concluded that it was essential to win court approval. “This is a tragic consequenc­e of the way in which the Gardendale Board attempted to separate,” she wrote.

Under her decision, Gardendale may begin operating the two elementary schools within its boundaries beginning in the fall. If the city shows good faith in carrying out desegregat­ion efforts at those schools over the next three years — including by allowing and paying for transfer students and appointing a black member to the all-white city school board — it may be allowed to take over the middle and high school within its boundaries.

Even then, Gardendale would have to pay Jefferson County for the high school building that sits at the center of town, which cost the county more than $50 million to build. The high school plays a key role in the county’s efforts to integrate, using career and technical education programs to attract students from far more segregated areas.

Patrick Martin, Gardendale’s superinten­dent, did not respond to an email seeking comment. In a statement posted to Gardendale’s website, Chris Segroves, president of the Gardendale Board of Education, said that the board was reviewing the order.

“We know that the community is anxious and ready to achieve its goal of a locally led public school system. We are too,” Segroves said. “While the Court’s order is progress and represents a significan­t developmen­t in that process, we must ask for your continued patience and prayers in the coming days as we work through this together for the betterment of our community.”

 ?? LINDA DAVIDSON/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Retired federal Judge U.W. Clemon, who represents the plaintiffs, said, ‘If this decision stands, it will have a tremendous adverse impact.’
LINDA DAVIDSON/THE WASHINGTON POST Retired federal Judge U.W. Clemon, who represents the plaintiffs, said, ‘If this decision stands, it will have a tremendous adverse impact.’

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