The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

State must end quotas in schools based on race

- By Gwen Samuel Gwen Samuel is president and founder of the Connecticu­t Parents Union.

Connecticu­t parents and education reformers recently marked a major victory after the state, facing a legal challenge by Hartford black and Hispanic parents, announced it would at last end its longstandi­ng policy of race-based quotas that penalize marginaliz­ed children of color in Hartford’s interdistr­ict magnet school system.

For those of us who have been involved in this issue of unjust racial quotas, it was cause for celebratio­n and an illustrati­on of how committed parents and activists can bring positive change in the lives of our most vulnerable children striving for safe, quality educationa­l experience­s. But the demand for educationa­l freedom shouldn’t stop there: it’s time for Connecticu­t to take the next steps to end racial discrimina­tion in public schools statewide once and for all.

It might seem surprising to hear that Connecticu­t schools have a problem with racial discrimina­tion, given the legal and cultural victories achieved since the Civil Rights era. But today’s school discrimina­tion is different: It comes not in the form of openly segregatio­nist policies but in the form of a rigid racial quota system that rations seats in schools based on a student’s skin color.

The bitter irony is that while this system was intended to be fair and equitable, it ended up reinstatin­g segregatio­n under another name — racial quotas.

Here’s how it worked in Hartford, to the tune of several billion tax dollar investment­s: the state had establishe­d a network of high-quality magnet schools over the last couple of decades to address an earlier school integratio­n decision. Before the recent changes, those magnet schools were required by law to limit minority enrollment to 75 percent of the student body, with attendance decided by lottery. The remaining 25 percent of seats had to be reserved for white and Asian students. Magnet schools that failed to meet those proportion­s faced steep financial penalties and could even be forced to close.

So what happened when there weren’t enough white or Asian kids to fill the available seats? Those seats went empty — because adding additional African-American or Hispanic children would have disrupted the 75/25 balance. It was a terrible waste of educationa­l resources, as well as an echo of a shameful past we thought we’d left behind (which was recently illustrate­d in the mini-documentar­y, “Quota“).

The good news is that’s now changing, thanks to the efforts of a group of black and Hispanic parents in Hartford who decided in 2018 to fight back. Seeking improved educationa­l opportunit­ies for their kids, they filed a federal lawsuit challengin­g the state’s race-based quota policy in federal courts as a violation of their children’s constituti­onal rights. (Full disclosure: I have filed a similar federal suit in Connecticu­t along the same lines). In light of the recent changes to Hartford’s schoolenro­llment policies, the plaintiffs dismissed their lawsuit.

While the parents and reformers who pushed for this change have reason to cheer this outcome, the real winners in this settlement are Hartford’s vulnerable black and Hispanic children. Going forward, if there are not enough white or Asian students to fill a classroom, it will open up an opportunit­y for an African-American or Hispanic child. That’s a true victory for educationa­l progress.

It took a lot of courage for those parents in Hartford to step forward to challenge this unjust system and demand that their kids and all kids receive a fair and just opportunit­y to learn. They’ve sent a clear message that discrimina­tion — even when it’s government-sanctioned discrimina­tion — is wrong. To their credit, Connecticu­t’s government officials heard that message and got rid of the racial quotas in Hartford’s interdistr­ict magnet schools.

But work continues. In 2017, the Connecticu­t Legislatur­e adopted a statewide racial quota, and this law still applies to all Connecticu­t interdistr­ict magnet schools outside of Hartford. This policy forced New Haven’s popular and successful Creed High School to close it was facing financial penalties because it had “too many” minority students. Now it’s time to take the next step: the state Legislatur­e should act to extend the values articulate­d in the Hartford settlement to all schools statewide.

Connecticu­t’s racial quota system may have been well-intended and may even have been a viable solution a couple of decades ago. But today, the policy has resulted in unintended injustices against the families who rely on the public education system to provide their children with the best learning opportunit­ies. Let’s urge our state’s elected leaders to put an end to racial discrimina­tion in Connecticu­t’s schools once and for all in the 2020 Connecticu­t General Assembly legislativ­e session.

While the parents and reformers who pushed for this change have reason to cheer this outcome, the real winners in this settlement are Hartford’s vulnerable black and Hispanic children.

 ?? File photo ?? Gwen Samuel, president & founder of the Connecticu­t Parents Union, in 2011.
File photo Gwen Samuel, president & founder of the Connecticu­t Parents Union, in 2011.

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