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WORD COUNT 656                                                                                                                                                                            MAY 21, 2008

DESEGREGATION NEEDS A NEW ANGLE – by William A. Collins

Integration,

In our schools;

Needs a whole new,

Set of rules.

If America truly believed in desegregation we would all be desegregated by now.  But we aren’t.  And we’re already pushing 150 years since slavery and 60 since Brown v. Board of Education.  That should have been plenty of time.

Unfortunately as a nation we continue to drag our feet.  Indeed the Supreme Court recently ruled against the desegregation we already have.  It said that cities may no longer bus kids for the purpose of racial integration.  It’s unconstitutional, they say.  Who hired those guys, anyway?  While plenty of morally-grounded citizens winced at that decision, the press only treated it very matter-of-factly, as though it were no big deal.  No protesters filled the streets.                                                                                    

And so the defendants, Louisville and Seattle, were ordered to stop assertively mixing races in their schools, and you can bet parent watchdog groups will make sure that similar retrenchment in Connecticut is not far behind.  No doubt inventive and moral school officials will dutifully keep nibbling away at the malign effects of residential segregation, but their sharpest tool, busing, has now been lost.  Not that busing had moved us remarkably far ahead anyway.  Connecticut remains nearly as segregated today as when the Brown lawsuit was originally filed.

Norwalk offers a classic example of how that current inauspicious system works.  A very mixed and reasonably high-minded place, its minority population runs about 28 percent.  But its minority school population runs 50 percent.  The causes of this disparity are no great mystery.  Many white parents of means, fixated on their kids’ education, send them to nearby private schools.  Others, when their offspring reach school age, simply move to suburbs beyond the price range of blacks and Latinos. Presto! – a deeply segregated system.

Progressive cities with large school districts, like Louisville and Seattle, tried to cure this poisonous problem with busing.  Now that’s been overturned.  States that use smaller districts, as Connecticut, have tried inter-town magnet schools.  But not enough suburban white parents sign up to send their kids to the city, no matter how good the school.  And what can you do anyway in huge places like New York and Chicago?  Not much.

We do read from time to time about heroic and inspired teachers, administrators, parent groups, or researchers who make a real difference someplace.  For a while.  But eventually they burn out or retire and the sea closes back in over them.  In any case no large scale systemic solutions have emerged.

Thus it may be time for a strategy change.  Plaintiffs who sue school boards and governors to integrate classrooms might instead want to cast a wider net.  With so many years of disappointing experience in hand, perhaps it’s time to sue instead for the placement of assisted housing in every neighborhood.  If the courts recoil from mixing races in the schools, let’s mix them where we live.  Then the schools will take care of themselves.  Our present housing arrangements must surely constitute purposeful illegal segregation.  Discriminatory zoning rules are plainly the worst of society’s ill-intentioned tools.

Other recent high-profile events also demonstrate the biased result of malevolent government actions.  The response to New Orleans plainly shows racial preference, as does the sub-prime mortgage collapse.  Minorities were, and still are, steered to the most vicious loans.  And we already know that drug law enactment, enforcement and incarceration are aimed at minorities, as are second-rate medical care and voter identification laws.  Further, the average wealth for whites in Connecticut today is $179,000; for minorities, only $7,000.

There’s got to be another lawsuit in there somewhere.  And if all else fails, there’s always the generous application of government money.  Lots of money.  Food, heat, health care, and tutoring need to be provided to kids who lack hem.  Might as well start now.   School integration lawsuits have shown that they simply can’t do the job by themselves.  It’s time to try something stronger.

-- 

Columnist William A. Collins is a former state representative and a former mayor of Norwalk, Connecticut. A photo of Bill Collins is available CLICK HERE

 

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