Smith v. Concordia Parish

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedDecember 2, 2022
Docket1:65-cv-11577
StatusUnknown

This text of Smith v. Concordia Parish (Smith v. Concordia Parish) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Concordia Parish, (W.D. La. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA ALEXANDRIA DIVISION

VERNON SMITH ET AL CASE NO. 1:65-cv-11577 JUDGE DRELL SCHOOL BOARD OF CONCORDIA MAGISTRATE JUDGE PEREZ-MONTES PARISH

MEMORANDUM RULING Before the court are two motions filed by Intervenor Delta Charter Group (“Delta”): (1) a motion for dismissal from the case, (Doc. 274), and (2) a motion to discontinue the use of race in its process of enrolling students. (Doc. 286). Defendant Concordia Parish School Board (“Concordia” or the “District”) and Plaintiff-Intervenor United States (the “Government”) filed oppositions to Delta’s motion to discontinue the use of race in its enrollment process. (Docs. 293, 294). Delta filed a single reply to both Concordia and the Government’s oppositions. (Doc. 297). For the reasons below, Delta’s motion for dismissal from the case will be DENIED AS MOOT, and its motion to discontinue the use of race in its enrollment processes will be DENIED, but with modifications to existing orders concerning enrollment at Delta Charter School. I RELEVANT BACKGROUND

The facts surrounding Delta’s latest effort to challenge the role of race in its admissions process do not stretch back to the initiation of this lawsuit in 1965. As such, we need only begin our recitation at the founding of Delta Charter School in 2012. Some of the following is undoubtedly repetitive but necessary to confirm the context of these rulings. On October 4, 2012, Delta moved this court for authorization to open the Delta Charter School for Math, Science, and Technology (“Delta Charter School” or “DCS”) in Ferriday, 1.

Louisiana—a town located within Concordia Parish. In its motion, Delta acknowledged that if authorized to open DCS, a Type 2 charter school!, it would operate subject to the existing desegregation plan governing Concordia Parish schools. See also La. R.S. 17:3991(C)3) □□□ charter school shall . . . [b]e subject to any court-ordered desegregation plan in effect for the city or parish school system.”). It asserted that DCS’s presence would “not have a negative impact on [the] Concordia Parish School District’s ability to comply with its desegregation plan.” (Doc. 41). Delta acknowledged this court’s “authority to render a decision as to the authority to open any new public school or charter school in Concordia Parish, Louisiana.” (Doc. 41). In that same motion, Delta proposed an admissions lottery that considered race as necessary to comply with the court’s existing desegregation orders: “[T]o comply with this Court’s desegregation decree, DCS has granted in its lottery system a preference for minority students up to 40% of the student population to assure that particular minimum minority participation in DCS.” (Doc. 41-1). If Delta failed to achieve the 40% “in a given class,” Delta asserted it would admit minority students “on the basis of the highest lottery number assigned . . . until the 40% minority student percentage [was] achieved.” (Doc. 41-2). Delta chose 40% because that percentage “reflect[ed] the demographics of school-aged children around Concordia Parish.” (Doc. 41-1). Following negotiations, the parties reached an agreement and jointly moved this court to approve a consent order, which this court adopted on January 4, 2013 (“2013 Consent Order”). (Doc. 60).

' A Type 2 charter school is a “public school,” La. R.S. 17:3973(2)(a), and “pupils who reside in the state [are] eligible to attend [the school]... .” La. R.S. 17:3973(2)(b)(ii). ? Delta also stated that it was employing this lottery “[t]o ensure that the Delta Charter School is a racially integrated school.” (Doc. 41).

In the 2013 Consent Order, Delta expressly agreed that “it is governed by and that it will comply with the desegregation obligations mandated by this case” and that “it will take no action that will impede [Concordia’s] ability to fulfill its obligations.” (Doc. 60). The 2013 Consent Order also reflects the parties’ agreement that Delta would conduct an admissions lottery that considered race. The 2013 Consent Order provides in pertinent part: Delta Charter Group will amend its at-risk? and final lotteries to incorporate a preference for a student who seeks to enroll at Delta Charter School from a Concordia Parish school where his/her race is overrepresented compared to the overall racial demographics of the [school dlistrict. (Doc. 60). The parties also agreed that in the event Delta’s student enrollment did not “reflect the racial demographics” of Concordia, such that in any “school year the percentage of [B]lack student enrollment in Delta Charter School is 10% or more below the [B]lack student enrollment in [the school district], Delta Charter Group will analyze the causes of this enrollment rate, propose how to modify the enrollment rate, and submit the analysis and proposal to the Court and the parties by July 15 of each year for the upcoming school year.” (Doc. 60). During the 2013-2014 school year—Delta’s first year of operation—only 15.2% of Delta’s 323 accepted students were Black, compared with the 52.2% Black student enrollment across ‘Concordia Parish schools. (Docs. 64, 85-1). Concordia filed a motion in June 2014, asserting that Delta had violated the 2013 Consent Order and had thereby interfered with its ability to comply with its own desegregation obligations. (Doc. 68). Following a three-day hearing, this court ruled

3 The “at-risk” language appeared in Louisiana Revised Statutes 17:3973(1) at the time’ □□□□□ crafted its admissions policy. That language was repealed by in 2017 by Acts 2017, No. 136, § 2 and the term “economic[ally] disadvantage[d]” became controlling with respect to those populations of students originally designated as “at-risk.” See La. R.S. 17:3882(4); 2017 La. Sess. Law. Serv. Act No.136 (H.B. No. 130) (West) (repealing the “at-risk” definition in La. R.S. 17:3973(1) relative to students and providing that economically disadvantaged students to be included as a factor in determining enrollment requirements of at-risk students in certain charter schools).

that Delta had not complied with the 2013 Consent Order and had “not even come close” to reflecting Concordia’s racial demographics—a requirement that “was not an estimate, [and] that was not optional.” (Doc. 171) (“It is obvious to me that the school is not in compliance with the court order.”). We found that Delta’s violation “seriously impacted the Concordia Parish School Board’s desegregation efforts.” (Doc. 172). On June 8, 2017, we issued a memorandum ruling (“2017 Ruling’) concluding that Delta had “deliberate[ly]” violated the terms of the 2013 Consent Order while pursuing its own agenda: “Delta has clearly not complied with the consent order to say the least, and it has attempted to move rapidly forward with its own agenda while only winking at its court-ordered obligations. This will stop.” (Doc. 173). This court retained jurisdiction and had “authority to issue and enforce ancillary orders and judgments necessary for the continued oversight of Concordia’s desegregation efforts” and “enforcement of its prior desegregation order.” (Doc. 173). In 2018, the Fifth Circuit affirmed this court’s finding that Delta had not complied with the 2013 Consent Order, as well as reaffirming this court’s authority to impose further relief to enforce the decree. Smith v. Sch. Bd. of Concordia Par., 906 F.3d 327, 330, 335-36 (Sth Cir. 2018) (“[C]Jonsiderable evidence showed

_ that Delta had violated the consent decree and ‘substantially impacted Concordia’s compliance with ongoing desegregation orders.’”). The 2017 Ruling required certain corrective measures. For example, we limited the number of students DCS could accept from Concordia Parish schools to 350, appointed Dr. Percy Bates as Special Master, and, upon suggestion of Dr.

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Smith v. Concordia Parish, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-concordia-parish-lawd-2022.