Crumpton v. Bridgeport Education Ass'n

993 F.2d 1023
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMay 17, 1993
DocketNo. 879, Docket 92-7763
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 993 F.2d 1023 (Crumpton v. Bridgeport Education Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crumpton v. Bridgeport Education Ass'n, 993 F.2d 1023 (2d Cir. 1993).

Opinion

ALTIMARI, Circuit Judge:

Intervenor-Appellant Bridgeport Education Association (“BEA”) appeals from an order of the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut (Burns, J.) granting defendants’ motion for “clarification” of a 1980 hiring order. The hiring order was intended to help implement a consent decree settling a 1975 class action suit brought by Black and Hispanic students attending public school in Bridgeport, Connecticut, who had sought to desegregate the Bridgeport school system. The 1979 consent decree was designed “to eliminate racial imbalance and to provide equality of educational opportunity in the Bridgeport public schools.” In order to achieve more balance in the employment of teachers, the consent decree required a plan for an affirmative recruiting program. The 1980 hiring order provided for the preferential hiring of minority teachers. No provision was made, however, for layoffs in either the consent decree or the hiring order issued pursuant to the decree.

In the Spring of 1992, the City of Bridgeport sent layoff notices to 17 first-year white teachers. No notices were sent to minority teachers. The BEA filed a grievance, claiming that the absolute preference being given to minority teachers violated the reduction in force provision of the collective bargaining agreement to which both the City of Bridgeport and the BEA are parties. The defendants representing the City of Bridgeport then made a motion before the district court to “clarify” the 1980 hiring order to make clear that Bridgeport should give an absolute preference to the retention of minority teachers in making reductions in force. In an order dated June 16, 1992,- the district court granted the City defendants’ motion.

On appeal, the BEA challenges the clarification, contending that the district court’s order constitutes an impermissible modification of the consent decree and hiring order. The BEA also maintains that even if a modification was permissible, as modified the hiring order violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.

For the reasons set forth below, we vacate the district court’s order and remand the case for proceedings in accordance with this opinion.

BACKGROUND

In November of 1975, minority students attending school in Bridgeport, Connecticut, and their parents, filed suit seeking to have the school system desegregated. The defendants named in the complaint were the members of the Bridgeport Board of Education, the Bridgeport Superintendent of Schools, the Mayor of Bridgeport, the Comptroller of Bridgeport, and the members of the Bridgeport Board of Apportionment and Taxation, in their official and individual capacities (collectively “the City defendants”). Also named were the Connecticut State Commissioner of Educátion and the members of the Connecticut State Board of Education, also in their official and individual capacities (collectively “the State defendants”).1

The matter was never litigated and instead all parties to the suit entered into a consent decree, which was approved by- the District Court for the District of Connecticut (Burns, J.) on July 31, 1979. In the consent decree, the parties stipulated, inter alia, that:

Various acts and omissions of the City Defendants prior to the filing of the eom-[1026]*1026plaint when considered together and cumulatively resulted in racial segregation in and among some of the Bridgeport public schools in violation of the rights of the Plaintiffs and the classes which they represent under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Such acts and omissions have had some impact on the entire school system.

The consent decree was designed “to eliminate substantial racial imbalance and to provide equality of educational opportunity in the Bridgeport public schools.” In order to achieve more balance in the employment of teachers, the consent decree required the City defendants to file with the court a plan for an affirmative recruiting program.

The BEA was not a party to the consent decree. On July 31, 1979, the district court granted the BEA’s motion to intervene as a defendant, but only “in the remedy phase of this litigation so far as it relates to the rights of members of the intervenors in the terms and conditions of employment.”

On July 20, 1979, prior to the approval of the consent decree, the parties submitted a joint Stipulation of Facts to the district court. This document was designed to provide the district court with a concise statement of the facts relevant to many of the issues in the case and to the proposed consent decree. The Stipulation included statistics documenting the steady increase in the percentage of minority teachers as well as a significant downward trend in the total student population. Despite the fact that the Stipulation provided some indication that Bridgeport might eventually need to layoff teachers, given this declining enrollment, no provision was made for this eventuality in the consent decree.

Nor was any provision for layoffs included in the hiring program filed pursuant to the consent decree. The district court approved the plan, and on October 2, 1980, entered an Order On Hiring Minority Teachers and Administrators (“hiring order”), which among other things directed the City defendants:

to use their best efforts to recruit and hire minority teachers in such a manner that, on an annual basis, the total number of minority teachers hired shall at least equal the total number of white teachers hired, until the percentage of minority teachers in the Bridgeport Public Schools approximate the percentage of minority workers in the Bridgeport area labor force.

However, the hiring order made no mention of possible future reductions in force.

The hiring order was appealed by BEA to this Court, which in an unpublished opinion affirmed the challenged aspects of the hiring order while remanding for a clarification of the term “Bridgeport area labor force.” Crumpton v. Chop, No. 80-9101 (2d Cir. November 23, 1981). On remand the district court held that the City defendants should use census data to define this term, and that the hiring order would terminate when the percentage of Black and Hispanic teachers equalled the percentage of Blacks and Hispanics in the Bridgeport work force.

While the BEA’s appeal from the 1980 hiring order was pending, the City defendants were confronted by a budgetary problem for the 1981-82 school year. The City defendants submitted a report to the district court in which they proposed to layoff 32 non-tenured teachers in the same racial ratio as the teaching staff as a whole — that is, 75% of the layoffs would be of white teachers. This was in keeping with a provision for layoffs in the collective bargaining agreement between the BEA and the Bridgeport Board of Education. This provision provides, in pertinent part, that teachers would be laid off in reverse order of seniority, except that:

[tjhese procedures shall not operate with respect to any teacher where it would conflict with the Board’s legal obligation to preserve affirmative action.

(emphasis added). These teachers were laid off and later recalled.

During the 1980s the percentage of minority teachers in the Bridgeport public schools rose steadily. However, the City defendants were unable to meet the ultimate goal set forth in the hiring order, and it remained in effect.

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993 F.2d 1023, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crumpton-v-bridgeport-education-assn-ca2-1993.