Addabbo v. Donovan

22 A.D.2d 383, 256 N.Y.S.2d 178, 1965 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5072
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 11, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 22 A.D.2d 383 (Addabbo v. Donovan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Addabbo v. Donovan, 22 A.D.2d 383, 256 N.Y.S.2d 178, 1965 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5072 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinions

Beldock, P. J.

In Matter of Balaban v. Rubin (20 A D 2d 438, affd. 14 N Y 2d 193) a new junior high school was constructed in a fringe area, and the Board of Education fixed the ¡attendance zone for the new school in such a manner as to effect a better racial balance therein. The plan was upheld against an attack by white parents who claimed that their children were being discriminated against by their inclusion within the attendance zone so drawn.

In the case at bar the Board of Education has attempted to achieve a better racial balance by. “ pairing ” two elementary schools in a fringe area. In addition, however, as shown more fully below, by the pairing plan the board has attempted to reduce the overcrowding and to improve the facilities in both schools. The petitioners, who are white, are seeking to invalidate the board’s pairing plan on the ground that it infringes upon their constitutional and statutory rights.

Public School 149 in Jackson Heights in Queens County is located on 34th Avenue between 93rd and 94th Streets. Prior to the determination under review, its attendance zone extended from 84th to 98th Streets and from 37th Avenue to Northern Boulevard—about 14 blocks from east to west and three long blocks from north to south.

Public School 92 in the Corona section of Queens County is located on 34th Avenue between 99th and 100th Streets — about six short blocks away from Public School 149. Before the determination under review, its attendance zone (contiguous to that of Public School 149) extended from 98th to 106th Streets and from 35th Avenue to 32nd Avenue — about eight short blocks from east to west and three long blocks from north to south,

[385]*385Prior to the adoption of the “pairing” plan, both schools liad classes from the kindergarten through the sixth-year grade.

On June 3, 1964 the Board of Education adopted a plan to pair the two schools, Public School 149 and Public School 92, effective September 14, 1964. Pairing in this case meant the folloAving: (1) kindergarten classes were to be maintained at both schools, with the same attendance zones as had existed prior to the pairing plan; (2) grades 1 and 2 were to be maintained only at Public School 92 for a-neAV combined attendance zone; (3) grades 3, 4, 5, and 6 were to be maintained only at Public School 149 for the new combined attendance zone;

(4) the westerly end of the former Public School 149 zone, namely from 84th to 89th Streets, Avas annexed to an attendance zone for a school not here involved; (5) the easterly end of the former Public School 92 zone, namely from 104th to 106th Streets, was also annexed to an attendance zone for a school not here involved; (6) the combined attendance zone for Public School 92 and Public School 149 Avas to comprise the area betAveen 89th and 104th Streets (about 15 short blocks); the northerly and southerly boundaries were to remain as they had been.

This pairing plan has resulted in the transfer from Public School 149 to Public School 92 of some grade 1 and grade 2 children Avho live closer to Public School 92 than to Public School 149, and of some who live equidistant from both schools.

Of 1,425 children transferred from one school to the other, only 29 are entitled to, and receive, busing because they live slightly over a half mile from the school to which they were transferred. Except for these 29, all the other children live Avithin walking distance of the .school Avkich they are now required to attend.

The primary reason for the pairing was to achieve racial balance. Before the pairing Public School 149 was 88% white and 12% Negro and Puerto Bican; after the pairing it will be 75% white, and 25% Negro and Puerto Bican. Before the pairing Public School 92 was 99.5% Negro and Puerto Bican and .5% white; after the pairing it will be 48% Negro and Puerto Bican, and 52% white.

Petitioners are the parents of 11 white children who would have attended grades 1 and 2 in Public School 149 had the plan not been adopted. Ten of the children were transferred to Public School 92 under the pairing plan. The child of one petitioner does not live in the present combined attendance zone and, therefore, does not attend Public School 92. No busing of petitioners’ children is required because they all live less [386]*386than a half mile from Public School 92. However, petitioners’ children all live closer to Public School 149 than, to Public School 92; all of them must pass Public School 149 on their way to Public School 92.

The attack on the plan is that: (1) its motivation was solely on the basis of race; (2) pupils in grades 1 and 2 were transferred from Public School 149 to Public School 92 solely because they were white; (3) pupils in grades 3, 4, 5, and 6 were transferred from Public School 92 to Public School 149 solely because ■they were Negro; and (4) therefore, the children are excluded from the schools they would otherwise be attending, and that such exclusion rests solely on the basis of race, in violation of the Federal and State Constitutions and the Education Law.

In opposition to the petition, Superintendent of Schools Calvin E. Cross states: (1) that the betterment of ethnic balanees in the schools improves the quality of education for all children, not only for those of underprivileged or minority groups; (2) that all children must learn to live in a multiracial and multi-cultural city, country, and world, and the younger they learn to do so the better; (3) that racially imbalschools are educationally undesirable; (4) that all reasonable and feasible efforts should be undertaken to improve ethnic balances in the public schools; (5) that the pairing of these two schools satisfies the several educational criteria governing the zoning of schools; (6) that class sizes will be reduced; (7) that each school will receive many additional educational and professional services; (8) that ethnic imbalances will be substantially overcome; (9) that the close proximity of the two schools ideally suits them for the establishment of a common zone; (10) that in zoning a neighborhood school, distance from home to school is only one of the criteria which the Board of Education must consider when it ultimately establishes the zone; and (11) that other criteria are utilization of school space, convenience of transportation, racial integration, topographical barriers, and continuity of instruction. The pairing plan here, the Superintendent asserts, meets the test of all these criteria.

In dismissing the petition, Special Term held (43 Misc 2d 621) that a plan which is otherwise reasonable and lawful is not rendered invalid because it also attempts to correct racial imbalance in the schools; that although the most important factor in the determination of the Board of Education to . pair these two schools was the reduction of racial imbalance, it was not the only factor; and that the inconvenience to petitioners’ children is not of a measure sufficient to permit the court to say that.the [387]*387determination of the hoard was arbitrary or capricious or contrary to law. __

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22 A.D.2d 383, 256 N.Y.S.2d 178, 1965 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5072, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/addabbo-v-donovan-nyappdiv-1965.