Texarkana Gazette

Judge gives initial OK to end school lawsuit

- By Chuck Bartels

LITTLE ROCK—After decades of court battles and $1 billion of government aid, one of the nation’s most historic school desegregat­ion efforts might finally be nearing an end.

A federal judge gave preliminar­y approval Friday to a settlement in a Little Rock desegregat­ion lawsuit that would phase out special courtorder­ed payments after the 2017-18 school year.

The end would come 60 years after the eyes of the nation first were riveted on Little Rock, when President Dwight Eisenhower in 1957 ordered federal troops to ensure safe passage for nine black students walking through angry crowds into the doors of the predominan­tly white Little Rock Central High School.

U.S. District Judge Price Marshall said Friday that the settlement appeared to be legal—an important hurdle. He set a hearing for Jan. 13-14 to determine whether it’s fair to the state, the school districts, the children and educators involved in the case.

“This is not the end,” Marshall said. “But I hope this is the beginning of the end.”

For at least some of those who were there for the beginning, Friday’s court action rekindled decades of powerful emotions of distrust and frustratio­n.

“Wow! That’s interestin­g—I wasn’t aware they were at that stage,” said Terrance Roberts, one of the original Little Rock Nine escorted into Central High in 1957. But Roberts wasn’t rejoicing Friday. Rather, it’s “business as usual,” he said.

Roberts, who was a high school junior when he helped integrate Central High, later returned as a desegregat­ion consultant for the Little Rock School District in the late 1990s and early 2000s. He said he was relieved of his duties before all of his proposals were implemente­d.

“Even though on the surface they gave the impression that they were willing to follow the dictates of the federal government to desegregat­e, there was not only a great reluctance, there was an unwillingn­ess to really move in that direction,” Roberts said in a telephone interview from St. Louis, where he was attending the screening of a documentar­y about the federal judge who ordered the desegregat­ion of Central High.

The lawsuit moving toward a settlement is not the same one that spurred the school’s integratio­n. But it still has deep roots. It dates to 1982 and has resulted in more than $1 billion of state spending on desegregat­ion efforts in the Little Rock, North Little Rock and Pulaski County school districts.

Much of the extra state money that flowed to the districts—a combined $70 million per year—went to magnet schools, which focus on particular programs such as the arts and sciences. As a result, the Little Rock district has been able to attract students from the predominan­tly white suburbs into the now predominan­tly black urban areas. Central High, for example, is among the top schools in the state with its magnet program, but it also has traditiona­l educationa­l program and a wide mix of students.

Under the settlement, students could finish those magnet courses but the special payments that help fund their transporta­tion and programs would eventually come to an end.

For the next several years, annual payments would continue at $37.3 million for Little Rock, $20.8 million for Pulaski County and $7.6 million for North Little Rock. The final year of payments would be devoted toward school facilities—which in many cases remain in need of improvemen­t—but could not to be used for athletics or administra­tion buildings.

John Walker, a civil rights attorney who represents black school patrons in the desegregat­ion case, said the districts will still need supervisio­n to ensure they’re meeting their end of the bargain. He has pledged to file another lawsuit if the Little Rock district doesn’t make progress.

 ?? Associated Press ?? In this Oct. 15, 1957, file photo, seven of nine black students walk onto the campus of Central High School in Little Rock, with a National Guard officer as an escort. After decades of court battles and $1 billion of government aid, one of the nation’s...
Associated Press In this Oct. 15, 1957, file photo, seven of nine black students walk onto the campus of Central High School in Little Rock, with a National Guard officer as an escort. After decades of court battles and $1 billion of government aid, one of the nation’s...

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