Ricci v. Okin

537 F. Supp. 817, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11970
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedApril 21, 1982
DocketCiv. A. 72-469-T, 75-5210-T, 74-2768-T, 75-3910-T and 75-5023-T
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 537 F. Supp. 817 (Ricci v. Okin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ricci v. Okin, 537 F. Supp. 817, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11970 (D. Mass. 1982).

Opinion

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction 819

I. Factual Background 819

II. The Personnel Decree 822

III. The Law 823

IV. The Defendants’ Efforts at Compliance with the Personnel Decree 828

A) The Proposed Reduction 830

B) The Osborn Report 834

Conclusion 836

Appendix

*819 OPINION

TAURO, District Judge.

The immediate issue in this decade-old litigation concerns the level of staffing necessary to meet the requirements of the Final Decree on Personnel covering five state schools for the mentally retarded (“Personnel Decree”). 1

The Personal Decree is a consent decree, agreed to by the parties on July 10, 1978, and thereafter entered as an order of this court. Under its terms, the necessary level of staffing at the various state institutions is to be determined by agreement of the parties. Any impasse between the parties is to be brought to the court’s attention for resolution. 2

On July 22, 1981, defendants informed the court that, despite opposition from the plaintiffs, they intended to implement significant staffing reductions at each of the institutions. 3 Notwithstanding the clear language of paragraph 10 of the Personnel Decree, the defendants’ original position was that they could implement staffing cuts over plaintiffs’ objections and without court approval. After the issue was briefed and argued, the defendants conceded in open court that disputes between the parties concerning personnel are to be resolved by the court.

That concession brings into focus defendants’ contention that a 408 person staff cut can be implemented without affecting consent decree compliance. The plaintiffs disagree. And so, as both parties now acknowledge, this court must determine what level of staffing is necessary to meet the requirements of the various controlling consent decrees.

To that end, the court held evidentiary hearings through the fall of 1981 and early part of 1982. The case was taken under advisement on March 12, 1982, following the filing of final memoranda by the parties.

I

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

In order to appreciate better the context and import of the issues involved, it is helpful to examine briefly the history of this litigation. A class action was filed in 1972 on behalf of the mentally retarded clients of the Belchertown State School. The basis of the action was plaintiffs’ assertion that conditions at the schbol were so inadequate that they violated the residents’ constitutional and statutory rights. 4 *During the next three years, similar actions were filed on behalf of the clients at Fernald, Monson, Wrentham, and Dever. Named as defendants were various Commonwealth officials with direct and indirect responsibility for the operation of these institutions. 5

*820 Shortly after the institution of the Belchertown suit, this court took a day-long view of conditions there. Similar views were taken of the other institutions. Involved state and federal officials accompanied the court on these views. Many legislators, including the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the then chairman of the Senate Ways and Means Committee, accompanied the court on one or more views.

These views established beyond dispute that “a constitutional level of care [had] not been attained” 6 at these institutions and that conditions there were intolerable. Rather than defend the indefensible, the state defendants agreed to work with the plaintiffs and the court to fashion comprehensive remedial programs that would be memorialized in the form of consent decrees.

During the next several months, the individuals concerned devoted hundreds of hours of study, negotiation, and planning to crafting five interim consent decrees which “embod[ied] the parties’ collective assessment of the needs of the clients at the five state schools and the appropriate means of meeting those needs.” 7 The decrees were signed by various state officials, including then Governor Michael Dukakis 8 and Attorney General Francis X. Bellotti, at a hearing on July 25, 1977.

Along with the Governor and the Attorney General, the July 25, 1977 open court hearing was attended by Speaker McGee of the Massachusetts House of Representatives. The Speaker’s presence prompted the following remarks by this court:

Mr. Speaker, you took the time to see the problem [of the state institutions for the retarded] for yourself. You took the time out of a very, very busy schedule; and after doing so, you told me that the legislature would provide the funds necessary to properly care for our retarded citizens. Your exact words to me were, “If we can’t take care of these people, we ought to fold up our tents and go home.” You are a man of your word, and I commend you. 9

Speaker McGee responded to the court’s invitation to speak by stating,

I just really want to say that in my 15 years in the legislature, a commitment has always been there by the members of the legislature. If one just goes to any one of these institutions and looks at the children there, then I just think — as I just said to you — “If we can’t take care of them, then we had better fold up our tents and go home.”
And we are not ready to do to that. We are committed to the job that you want done; the people involved want done, and we’ll do it. 10

Speaker McGee’s remarks left no room to doubt that the legislature of the Commonwealth, like the executive branch, was committed to providing care and treatment of the retarded in keeping with the mandate of the consent decrees and the laws and Constitution of the United States. The remarks of Attorney General Bellotti that day are telling in this regard. He said,

I made a policy decision with the Governor during the pendency of these cases to, shall we say, ameliorate the adversary system because we made a judgment that the level of care did not reach [a] constitutional level of care....
*821 We cannot tell people what kind of care there should be, but we can say that a constitutional level of care has not been attained and that the case would be indefensible. We made that judgment. I merely made a policy decision. They [the parents of the retarded] did all the work with people from the State agencies, the Speaker, President of the Senate. 11

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Bluebook (online)
537 F. Supp. 817, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11970, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ricci-v-okin-mad-1982.