Craggett v. Board of Education of Cleveland City School District

2 Ohio Misc. 7
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedJuly 2, 1964
DocketCiv. A. No. C-64-369
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Ohio Misc. 7 (Craggett v. Board of Education of Cleveland City School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Craggett v. Board of Education of Cleveland City School District, 2 Ohio Misc. 7 (N.D. Ohio 1964).

Opinion

Kalbfleisch, J.

Plaintiffs have moved for a preliminary injunction to halt construction on three new elementary schools in the Cleveland School System. This motion will be denied.

Within the last five years some children in the Cleveland School System were attending double session schools, that is, they were on half school days. Parents of the children who did not have a full day session complained to the Cleveland Board of Education, hereinafter referred to as the “Board.” Letters were written suggesting, among other things, that these children be transported to schools capable of receiving them. During a Board meeting on October 23, 1961, a resolution was adopted directing the Superintendent of Schools to institute a procedure for transportation of children to other schools. On November 9, 1961, the Board approved the plan of transportation submitted by the Superintendent to be effective with the opening of the second semester, January 29, 1962. Pupils were to be transported in class units, with the class teacher accompanying each class. During his testimony, the superintendent gave his reason for doing this and the general policy in regard to transporting children, as follows:

“A. They are kept in what we call an administrative unit, the plan being to send their teacher of the home school to what we call the receiving school. They went as an administrative unit. They were not entirely apart, if apart means they never had associations with the other schools. There were extra activities and things of that nature. But essentially, in their classwork, they were in their own administrative unit, the assumption being that ivhen the new schools were built they were going back into their neighborhood. It would be easier to re-[9]*9institute the administrative development because they were still part of it.” (Emphasis added.) (Tr. 20-21.)

Plaintiff’s case is concerned with the transportation of approximately 1000 pupils from Hazeldell Elementary School to three other elementary schools: William H. Brett, Memorial, and Murray Hill. Apparently the Board had adopted a standard by which it measured the number of pupils that could be educationally accommodated in each of its school buildings, commonly referred to as the school’s capacity. Hazeldell’s enrollment first exceeded its capacity in 1960, and the transportation plan succeeded in reducing Hazeldell to capacity or slightly above it. In 1961 Hazeldell had an enrollment of 1418, of which 578 were Negroes. In 1962 there were 1294 Negro pupils in an enrollment of 1890, and in 1963 there were 2048 Negro pupils in an enrollment of 2388. The superintendent testified he knew most of the transported children were Negroes. (Tr. 21.) The schools to which Hazeldell pupils were transported did not have over 3% Negro enrollment.

Subsequent to initiation of the transportation plan, parents of the transported pupils and other interested groups began protesting to the Board on the ground that these children were being isolated at the receiving schools. Various meetings were held between the Board and interested groups and on September 30, 1962, the Board adopted a resolution providing for “the fullest possible incorporation” of transported pupils into the receiving school organizations consistent with sound educational procedures. At the same time the Board resolved to create an “ad hoc” Citizens’ Council on Human Relations. This council, among other things, was charged to study and make recommendations to the Board on how to devise means to:

“1. Serve as an internal organ to eliminate whatever discriminatory practices may exist in the Cleveland School System.
* * #
“5. Develop and put into effect by September, 1964, a plan concerning meaningful integration of Cleveland classrooms taking into consideration the rights, privileges and interests of all elements of our community.” (Plaintiffs’ Ex. No. 1, p. 366.)

The Council on Human Relations made recommendations on March 31,1964.

[10]*10Upon learning that the Board had provided for “the fullest possible incorporation” of transported pupils the residents in the area of the receiving schools, by petition and by public meetings, requested the Board to revert to the Board’s previous plan regarding transported pupils. Subsequent to the meetings held with representatives of said residents, the Board on November 11, 1963, adopted the following resolution:

“Resolved, that the Board of Education hereby establishes as its continuing policy for the government of the Cleveland schools that each child shall attend the school nearest to his home and that exceptions shall be made in this policy only when facilities are unavailable in the child’s immediate neighborhood in any given case. The Board hereby reaffirms its commitment to the concept of the neighborhood school.” (Plaintiffs’ Ex. 1, p. 418.)

•Plaintiffs claim one of the Board members, on February 4, 1964, while talking to a group of demonstrators, told them not to picket because the Board was about to meet with their representatives and hopefully would reach some accord and would hopefully agree to integrate the bus transported children. Later in the day a tentative resolution was promulgated which was adopted officially on February 10, 1964:

“We the members of the Cleveland Board of Education hereby affirm our policy of establishing and maintaining a full and uniform standard of education for all children in the City of Cleveland.
“Every child will be entitled to participate in every student activity offered by the school he attends.
“The Board will terminate the transportation classes as soon as possible with whatever means the Board has available and deems advisable.
“We hereby direct the superintendent forthwith that all pupils being transported from schools due to overcrowding shall be incorporated in the school organization as though they were in the local school district, and the pupil records and other necessary data will be forwarded to the receiving schools.
“The administration is hereby charged to use all appropriate possible techniques to achieve this end forthwith.” (Plaintiffs’ Ex. 2, pp. 48-49.)

[11]*11During the second semester the transported pupils were substantially incorporated into the receiving schools.

Plaintiffs now are protesting the construction of three new elementary school buildings which are planned in Zone 11, the zone in which Hazeldell is situated, and which will end the need for transporting pupils to other schools. Two new schools are planned on Lakeview and Woodside sites, and an addition is planned at Eosedale, an existing school. The superintendent said he presumes the Lakeview School will be predominantly Negro, considering the residential makeup of the area. The same, in varying degrees, is true of the schools on the Woodside and Eosedale sites. The area to be accommodated by the new construction had not been prescribed by metes and bounds at the time of the trial, but it is apparent that the three new schools will be composed largely of Negro children, according to the testimony of the official in charge of initially drawing the new boundaries.

The land has been cleared on all three sites, and by June 2, 1964, construction was in progress on two of the sites.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Ohio Misc. 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craggett-v-board-of-education-of-cleveland-city-school-district-ohnd-1964.