The Commercial Appeal

Around the Region: stories from north Mississipp­i and elsewhere in the Magnolia State.

Suit claims Miss. allows disparitie­s in funding

- Emily Wagster Pettus

JACKSON, Miss. – The U.S. Supreme Court said Thursday it will not get involved, for now, in a lawsuit that says Mississipp­i allows grave disparitie­s in funding between predominan­tly Black and predominan­tly white schools.

Southern Poverty Law Center sued the state in 2017 on behalf of low-income Black women who said their children and other Black children attended schools that were in worse condition and had lower academic performanc­e than some wealthier, predominan­tly white schools.

U.S. District Judge William H. Barbour dismissed the suit in 2019. A threejudge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals revived it in April 2020.

Mississipp­i officials, including Gov. Tate Reeves and state Superinten­dent of Education Carey Wright, asked the full appeals court to reconsider the ruling by the three-judge panel. The appeals court voted 9-8 in December to reject that request. The state then asked the Supreme Court to get involved.

Barbour – who died early this year – had said in 2019 that state officials were immune from being sued. The appeals court panel said sovereign immunity “is not limitless” and people may sue a state as long as the suit seeks changes going forward and not compensati­on for past practices.

The Supreme Court’s order Thursday said there are other grounds for dismissal of the lawsuit that have not been resolved at the district court level. The case has been reassigned to U.S. District Judge Henry T. Wingate.

One of the attorneys representi­ng the families, Will Bardwell, said of Thursday’s decision: “It’s a very strong indication that the Supreme Court is going to allow the case to move forward.”

The lawsuit said Mississipp­i has been violating a federal law that allowed the state to rejoin the union after the Civil War. The 1870 law said Mississipp­i could not change its 1868 state constituti­on in a way to deprive any citizen of “school rights and privileges.” The state now has a constituti­on that was adopted in 1890 and has been amended several times.

“From 1890 until the present day, Mississipp­i repeatedly has amended its education clause and has used those amendments to systematic­ally and deliberate­ly deprive African Americans of the education rights guaranteed to all Mississipp­i schoolchil­dren by the 1868 Constituti­on,” the lawsuit said.

The Mississipp­i attorney general’s office argued in court papers in 2018 that the plaintiffs were seeking to “refashion” the 1870 federal law “into a contorted federal mandate that would place the State of Mississipp­i in a straitjack­et so far as the educationa­l provisions of the State’s Constituti­on are concerned.”

 ?? AP FILE ?? Dorothy Haymer, of Yazoo City, is a plaintiff in a lawsuit filed by the Southern Poverty Law Center.
AP FILE Dorothy Haymer, of Yazoo City, is a plaintiff in a lawsuit filed by the Southern Poverty Law Center.

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