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Report: State by State, How Segregation Legally Continues 7 Decades Post Brown

Researchers unveil loopholes, laws & lack of protections allowing Black, brown, low-income students to be excluded from America鈥檚 most coveted schools

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Seventy years after the Supreme Court outlawed separating public school children by race, a new report breathes life into an old question: how the most coveted public schools are able to legally exclude all but the most privileged families.  

In the first of its kind , researchers unveil troubling laws, loopholes and trends that undermine the legacy of Brown v. Board, in which the supreme court ruled 鈥渟eparate educational facilities are inherently unequal鈥 and violate the Fourteenth Amendment.

Public schools today are not required to explain or prove why they are denying a student enrollment. Paired with pressure to stack classrooms with 鈥渆asier to educate鈥 kids, school administrators say this leads to practices of denying Black, brown, low-income students and those with disabilities enrollment to public school, without consequence.

The report argues discrimination has also been made widespread by allowing 鈥 and in four states, requiring 鈥 districts to use and enforce school attendance zones, which often mirror racist housing maps from the , separating children by home addresses. Schools contract with private investigators, prosecute or fine parents who defy zone lines via address sharing. Only one state, Connecticut, has decriminalized the common practice.

Researchers say the need to reform and undermine the weight home addresses have on educational outcomes is more urgent than ever, as many districts start to weigh closures and consolidations, leaving thousands of children, , hanging in the balance.

鈥淵ou can’t be turned away from school because of your race, but if all of the Black people live on one side of the line, all the white people live on the other side of the line, it’s OK to draw the line and assign kids to school based on that,鈥 said Tim DeRoche, coauthor of the report and founder of Available to All, a watchdog organization.

In the wake of Brown, courts took charge, taking on dozens of cases and stamping out explicit racial segregation, particularly in the south. 

鈥淏ut they never came back around to fulfill that promise, that public schools had to be available to all in equal terms,鈥 DeRoche said. 鈥淭here’s all these other ways that we sort kids into schools that give advantages to people who have money or live in the right part of town. The courts have just neglected to take that up and frankly, the legislatures have failed to take that up as well.鈥

The report makes the case for better legal protections, like requiring districts to operate open enrollment zones for families within a 3-mile radius, reserve seats for nonresidents, publish data on enrollment application and denials, and, when schools do reach capacity, require lotteries, common practice at public charter schools.

It also provides a legal profile for each state, outlining their stance on laws that govern public school admissions. In 36 states, for instance, families couldn鈥檛 appeal their public school assignment even if they wanted to; Arkansas and California are among the few to explicitly protect the right to appeal to a neutral party.

See how your state鈥檚 school admission laws compare

In Tampa, for example, a predominantly Black elementary school closed, its grade level reading proficiency rates at 11%. Instead of sending any of the few hundred students to the coveted school where 80% read at grade level minutes away from their homes, they were bused to poorer performing, majority minority schools further away, citing capacity constraints. 

鈥淲hen you see school closures, the politics comes out. You can see the exclusion very clearly,鈥 said DeRoche.

Low-income students, students of color and those with disabilities are those most often excluded. 鈥淭here始s this systemic pressure to sort of stack your school with kids who are easier to educate,鈥 said a former administrator cited in the report.

Certain students 鈥 unhoused, migrant, incarcerated students or those with disabilities or in foster care 鈥 are supposed to be protected from enrollment discrimination by federal law, allowed to continue attending original schools in the event of moves. 

Still, the vast majority of decisions lay in the hands of administrators, whose admission practices fly under the radar, unrequired to publish data or provide written reasoning. 鈥淚n some states with strong open enrollment laws, such as Arizona and Wisconsin, districts are allowed to use unverified claims of capacity constraints to keep children with disabilities from enrolling,鈥 the report states.

As one school psychologist with Los Angeles Unified described to 成人抖阴, 鈥淚’ve seen [zones] weaponized, too 鈥 used more as a tool to get rid of students that are engaging in more problem behavior. 鈥榃ell, their address isn’t even in our residence.鈥欌

The school psychologist, speaking on condition of anonymity, witnessed kids get turned away about 15 times this school year. Some common reasons given to families 鈥 always verbally, never written 鈥 is that their school is full of capacity, can鈥檛 accommodate the student鈥檚 IEP, or, in one case, 鈥渨e don鈥檛 enroll in April.鈥

A few times, students were pushed out after mentioning moves offhand to teachers who said, 鈥渨ell, you cause too much havoc in my classroom. So I’m gonna let somebody know.鈥 Some were able to stay because parents were 鈥渕ore assertive,鈥 in meetings with administrators, who then backed off. 

鈥淎 lot of the parents don’t know their rights – some of them are just trying to survive so they don’t have the time to go fight the district and be like, 鈥榦h, my kid鈥檚 not being enrolled.鈥 These families get taken advantage of more often.鈥

Such was the case in the four counties around Philadelphia, where a public radio investigation revealed the hundreds of kids kicked out of the districts each year for residency fraud were overwhelmingly . Pennsylvania does not have any law or process set for families who want to appeal admissions decisions.

But changing district attendance zone lines is no easy feat.

In , parents flooded houses within the zone for sought-after Lincoln Elementary. When the district considered withdrawing boundary lines, parents were outraged and plans fizzled. Ultimately the state allocated $20 million for the school to build an annex and add more seats, even though hundreds sat empty at schools in the neighborhood. 

鈥淭hey’re trying to protect these families who feel like, 鈥榦h, I’ve already paid for my kids’ school via my mortgage,鈥欌 said DeRoche. 

Available to All presents an alternative: even if attendance zones were redrawn, other protections like laws to require 15% of seats be reserved for nonresident families or using a lottery once seats are filled, wouldn鈥檛 force middle- or higher- income families out of quality schools they鈥檝e invested in via housing. 

Lines were not redrawn; Lincoln Elementary only became more accessible for the wealthy, predominantly white families who could afford to live in the attendance zone.

鈥淸Educational redlining] is a part of the fabric of our lives and we all kind of take it for granted. We’re just trying to call it out and make people look at it straight in the face.鈥 

Disclosure: Stand Together provides financial support to Available to All and 成人抖阴. Andy Rotherham co-founded Bellwether Education Partners. He sits on 成人抖阴鈥檚 board of directors.

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