Parent Ass'n of Andrew Jackson School v. Ambach

451 F. Supp. 1056
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJune 16, 1978
Docket76 C 1212
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 451 F. Supp. 1056 (Parent Ass'n of Andrew Jackson School v. Ambach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parent Ass'n of Andrew Jackson School v. Ambach, 451 F. Supp. 1056 (E.D.N.Y. 1978).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM INCORPORATING FINDINGS of FACT and ORDER

DOOLING, District Judge.

The Andrew Jackson High School is located in Queens about one mile from Nassau County. Preliminary attendance data for the current school year show that the school is utilized to the extent of 76% of its capacity and that at October 31, 1977, there were 2,532 children on the school’s register. Of these, 2,454 are black, 2 are of American Indian, Asian, or Pacific Island origin, 75 are Puerto Rican or other Spanish surnamed children and 1 is classified as “other”.

Andrew Jackson opened in 1937. In 1957, the first year in which ethnic data were reported, the register showed that 82% of the children were classified as “others”, the term used for statistical purposes for children not identifiable as belonging to any “minority”. The percentage of “others” registered for attendance at Andrew Jackson declined steadily from year to year until by 1974 2% of “others” were in attendance. The School Profiles report of 1974-1975 showed that there were 57 Jackson students classified as “others” at October 31, 1974, comprising 2% of those on the register, and the School Profiles for 1975-1976 reported 30 “other” children in attendance or 1%. At October 29, 1976, there were 4 “other” children at Jackson.

*1058 New York City is a single school district. For many statistical and administrative purposes, however, it is administered in five major divisions which correspond to the five boroughs. The School Profiles report for 1975-1976 reported that in that year at October 31, 1975, there were 260,012 academic high school students, 40.9% of whom were classified as “other”, 35.6% of whom were classified as black, 16.6% were classified as Puerto Rican and 4.7% as other Spanish-surnamed, 2.2% as Oriental and Vioth of 1% as American Indian. The data differ from borough to borough. In Manhattan, in 1975-1976, 42.1% of the academic high school students were black, 26% were Puerto Rican, 11.5% were other Spanishsurnamed, 12.8% were Oriental, 2 /ioths of 1% were American Indian and 15.4% were classified “other”. In the Bronx academic high schools, in 1975-1976, 39.7% were black, 34% Puerto Rican, 3.2% other Spanish-surnamed, 1% Oriental, Vioth of 1% American Indian, and 22% were classified as “other”. In the academic high schools in Brooklyn in 1975-1976, 40% of the students were black, 14.4% Puerto Rican, 2.2% other Spanish-surnamed, 2% Oriental, Vioth of 1% American Indian, and 41.4% were classified “other”. In the Queens academic high schools at the same date, October 31, 1975, it appeared that 30.4% of the students in the academic high schools were black, 6.1% were Puerto Rican, 5.8% other Spanish-surnamed, 2.1% Oriental, Vioth of 1% American Indian, and 55.4% were classified as “other”. In the Staten Island academic high schools in the same school year 7.4% of the children in register were black, 3.1% Puerto Rican, 1.1% Spanish-surnamed, Vioth of 1% were Orientals, and 87.9% were classified as “other”.

The 1975-1976 school year data as given in School Profiles, however, show that if the figures are analyzed on a year by year basis, then for all boroughs the percentage of blacks and Puerto Ricans is lowest in the 12th grade and is progressively higher in grades 11 and 10 and 9. The effect of this persistent factor is broadly reflected in all the data furnished; the data by boroughs, by individual schools, and for the district, reflect this trend element in the steadily rising percentage of minorities and declining percentage of “others”. The preliminary data for the current school year, as at October 31, 1977, are illustrative. In the Manhattan academic high schools at October 31,1977, 43% of the students were black (1975-1976, 42.1%) 40% were Puerto Rican and other Spanish-surnamed (1975-1976, 37.5%) 6% were American Indian, Asian, etc., (1975-1976, 5%), and 11% were “other” (1975-1976, 15.4%). In the Bronx academic high schools at the same date 40% of the students were black (1975-1976, 39.7%), 38% Puerto Rican and other Spanish-surnamed (1975-1976, 37.2%), 2% were American Indian, Asian, etc. (1975-1976, 1.1%), and 20% were “other” (1975-1976, 22%). In the Brooklyn academic high schools 44% were black (1975-1976, 40%), 19% Puerto Rican and other Spanish-surnamed (1975-1976, 16.4%), 2% were American Indian, Asian, etc. (1975-1976, 2.1%), and 35% were “other” (1975-1976, 41.4%). In the Queens academic high schools, 33.4% were black (1975-1976, 30.4%), 14.8% were Puerto Rican and other Spanish-surnamed (1975-1976, 11.9%), 3.2% were American Indian, Asian, etc. (1975-1976, 2.2%), and 48.6% were “other” (1975-1976, 55.4%). In the Staten Island academic high schools at the same date 9% were black (1975-1976, 7.4%), 5% Puerto Rican and other Spanish-surnamed (1975-1976, 4.2%), 1% American Indian, Asian, etc. (1975-1976, 0.4%), and 85% were “others" (1975-1976, 87.9%).

In 1957 when the enrollment of “others” at Andrew Jackson High School was 82% of the registration, the percent of “others” in the Queens academic high schools taken in total was 94.2%. At that time the total enrollment in the Queens academic high schools was 48,930 children. The highest the enrollment has been since that date was 72,131 in 1975. In the period from 1957 through 1977 the percentage of “others” in the Queens academic high schools has uninterruptedly declined from 94.2% to 48.6% in the current school year (according to the preliminary figures as at October 31, 1977). Over the years 1957 through 1976, the whole period for which the Board of Educa *1059 tion has been keeping ethnic data on school registrations, the Queens elementary schools have shown a decline from 85.9% “other” in 1957 to 47.5% in 1976. As in the case of the academic high schools, the decline in percent “other” is uninterrupted. The peak elementary school population came in 1965 when there was a total enrollment of 131,608. The enrollment in 1976 was 118,266.

Analyzing the data on the enrollment in all public schools in Queens from kindergarten to grade 12 throws an additional light on what may be expected in the near future. In the school year 1976-1977 the children entering school for the first time in the first year were 43.8% “other”. The children in the graduating class of high school at the same date were 60.6% “other”. In each year from the entering class of six year olds to the graduating class in high school the percent of “others” in attendance at October 29, 1976, was a little higher, again indicating the same uninterrupted decline in “other” percentage in school attendance. The only aberration is in the seventh year which is shown as having 47.3% “other”, which is more than either the eighth or ninth years at the date in question.

Projection of the trends exhibited by the data through 1976 to the school year 1981-1982, it is indicated, forecasts a 36.4% “other” school population in the Queens academic high schools in that year, and will show a 28.3% “other” school population in the Brooklyn academic high schools in the same school year.

Comparison of the ratio of Queens births of “others” to total Queens births in the years 1965 through 1970 with the ratio of “others” entering the Queens public schools 6 years later, when the children would have reached school entry age, shows that the school entrants’ ratio of “others” to total school entrants is radically lower.

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451 F. Supp. 1056, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parent-assn-of-andrew-jackson-school-v-ambach-nyed-1978.