High school district policy ruled unconstitutional
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Paul Clinton
A panel of state appellate court judges struck down an
anti-segregation policy in place at Huntington Beach high declaring it
unconstitutional.
The district had been denying the applications of white students who
wanted to transfer out of certain high schools in the district in order
to preserve what they said was ethnic balance.
The Fourth District Court of Appeal, on Friday, ruled that the policy
violated Proposition 209, the 1996 statewide initiative that banned
consideration of race in the “operation of public education” in school
districts.
“Huntington Beach is thumbing its nose at the voters of California,”
said Sharon Browne, the attorney handling the case against the district.
“The policy was wrong. No high school should be allowed to decide who
attends it.”
The appellate court sided with a Fountain Valley parent who sued the
Huntington Beach Union School District in 1999 to overturn the policy.
Bruce Crawford sued the district in 1999 after his white son was
denied a request for transfer out of Ocean View High School, which is
primarily Latino.
Browne took up Crawford’s case. She is one of the principle attorneys
with Pacific Legal Foundation, a public-interest firm.
School administrators introduced the policy in 1993 for transfers from
certain schools. Westminster High School was singled out in a 1999
revision, in which board members defended the policy as a way to stave
off segregation.
Board trustee Michael Simons, on Monday, said the district was caught
in a bind because a section of state law allows for the “racial
balancing” practice.
“We didn’t think it was clear,” Simons said. “We were confused.”
State law does allow for racial balancing, Browne acknowledged, but
only on a voluntary basis.
In the 14-page ruling released Friday, the appeals panel agreed with
Browne.
“We do not dispute the evils of segregated schools and we recognize
the potential of attending a racially and ethnically diverse school, but
the people have spoken,” the ruling said.
A lower court had sided with the district.
Board member Michael Harper has been the board’s sole opponent of the
policy. Harper cast the lone dissenting vote during the board’s April
1999 decision to retain the policy.
In a written statement released Saturday, Harper said he would not
comment directly on the case until board members decide whether to
appeal.
“Matthew Harper’s opinion on the racial quota system that limits some
intradistrict transfers . . . is on the public record,” Harper said in
the statement.
White students who wanted to leave Westminster High had to be on a
district waiting list until a white student from another school agreed to
switch places.
The same policy was applied to nonwhite students, the ruling said.
As of April 18, more than 79% of the requests for transfer out of
Westminster were from nonwhite students. Only 59 out of the 285 requests
were from white students, according to an internal district memo.
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