Anderson v. Canton Municipal Separate School District

232 F.3d 450, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 27815, 2000 WL 1664258
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 6, 2000
Docket99-60846
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 232 F.3d 450 (Anderson v. Canton Municipal Separate School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Canton Municipal Separate School District, 232 F.3d 450, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 27815, 2000 WL 1664258 (5th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

WIENER, Circuit Judge:

Private Plaintiffs-Appellants and Inter-venor Plaintiff-Appellant United States (collectively “Plaintiffs”) appeal the district court’s approval of the location proposed by Defendant-Appellee Madison County School District (“MCSD” or “the District”) for a new high school in that district. Madison County was ordered to desegregate its de jure dual school system in 1969. It has since entered into a number of consent decrees, including one earlier this year. This most recent consent decree has been approved by all parties and by the district court and resolves all disputed issues between the parties — including, significantly, student transportation — save only that of the location of the new high school. Plaintiffs argue that the district court erred in approving the District’s construction plan for the new high school, insisting that it would not meet the District’s obligation, as a former de jure segregated district, to further desegregation. We conclude that the district court did not err in finding that the District’s proposed site satisfies the obligations imposed by law, including all applicable consent decree provisions.

I. Facts and Proceedings

The District is one of the many school districts in Mississippi that were ordered to dismantle their race-based de jure dual school systems. 1 Since then, the District has been the subject of a number of other desegregation orders and consent decrees. Among other things, the District is required to make all decisions regarding the construction of school facilities in such a way as to further desegregation.

The District is U-shaped and surrounds the county seat of Canton, which is not a part of the District. The 1969 desegregation order divided the District into three Zones: Zone I is a rural, sparsely populated area located in the northeast part of the county; Zone II, in which 76% of the District’s students reside, is in the southern part of the District and includes the cities of Ridgeland and Madison; and Zone III, like Zone I, is a rural, sparsely populated area but is located in the western part of the county and includes the town of Flora. Zone I has its own high school (Velma Jackson), and none of the parties have suggested that it be considered or included in plans regarding the new high school. Zones II and III are presently served by a single high school, Madison Central High School (“Madison Central”).

*452 The instant dispute is an outgrowth of the District’s determined need to construct new schools, specifically a new high school, because of the tremendous population growth, largely white, over the last ten years. The District’s enrollment was predominately black until the late 1980s, but since that time the student population has grown dramatically and become increasingly white as a result of the population boom in the vicinity of the predominately white communities of Madison and Ridge-land. This is evidenced by the fact that enrollment in these areas surged by 47% between the 1991-92 and 1997-98 school years. This rapid growth led to the overcrowding of Madison Central: It had a projected capacity of 1,600 students, but its enrollment had reached 1,955 students by April 1, 2000. Population growth around the cities of Madison and Ridge-land is predicted to continue for the foreseeable future; in contrast, the rural areas of the District have experienced, and likely will continue to experience, little or no growth. Thus, the overcrowding problem at Madison Central will be exacerbated in the near future while Velma Jackson High School in Zone I will remain unaffected.

To remedy this situation and address a number of concomitant problems, the District proposed to construct several new schools and renovate other existing facilities, subject to the passage of a bond issue for those purposes. In May of 1998, following preclearance by the United States Attorney General, county voters approved, by the requisite 60% supermajority, a $55 million bond issue for the construction and renovation of school facilities. The bond issue was validated by the Chancery Court of Madison County in September of 1998. The bond proposal, as approved by the voters, included a number of details, specifying in relevant part that the new high school would be located in Ridgeland, a predominately white area (“Ridgeland site”). This new high school (“Ridgeland High” or “the new high school”) would have an initial capacity of 700 students and a build-out capacity of 1200, and would be built on land to be purchased by the District. Like Madison Central, the new high school would serve students from Zones II and III, and its initial enrollment would be taken from among those students currently attending the overcrowded Madison Central.

After passage and certification of the bond issue, the District filed a motion in district court to modify the existing desegregation plan, seeking approval to construct five new schools (one high school, two middle schools, and two elementary schools), renovate existing schools, and make related student reassignments. Plaintiffs opposed MCSD’s plan, claiming that it violated the 1969 desegregation order, a number of consent judgments, 2 and federal law, because, inter alia, it failed to further desegregation and imposed travel burdens inequitably between black and white students. The parties subsequently entered into a consent decree (the “2000 consent decree”) which the district court approved, that settled their disagreement on all points of difference except the location of the new high school. Among other things, the 2000 consent decree resolved the racially inequitable transportation burdens borne by the black students of the District and generally alleviated the excessive transportation burdens borne by other students, both black and white.

Plaintiffs continued to advocate an alternative, more centrally located site for the new high school, on a parcel of land already owned by the district at the intersection of Highways 463 and 22 (“Hwy. 463 site”). Plaintiffs contend that locating the new high school on their preferred site would have reduced the travel burdens on a number of students and ensured that the *453 new school would be less predominately white.

The district court, after a seven-day hearing, entered its Memorandum Opinion and Order granting the District’s motion and approving the plan. It ruled that “the proposed [Ridgeland] site will not negatively affect desegregation in the district, now or in the future.” Despite finding MCSD’s “construction plan ... in some respects short-sighted, inexplicable, and ill-advised” and recognizing that “[constructing a high school half the size of the existing Madison Central which leaves little actual growing room at Madison Central does not seem particularly prudent,” the district court reluctantly approved MCSD’s construction plan “because it [did] not find ultimately that the District’s construction/ renovation plan either negatively affects desegregation in the district, or that there exists at this time a reasonable prospect for further desegregation.” Plaintiffs appealed and filed a motion to stay the order, which was granted by the district court.

II. Analysis

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
232 F.3d 450, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 27815, 2000 WL 1664258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-canton-municipal-separate-school-district-ca5-2000.