By VICKI GERSON
A former history teacher in the Chicago high schools, she is a free-lance writer and author of the Chicago Sun- Times column, "Sunday's Child."

Chicago's 4-ring circus

The School Board's fight to keep federal funds

Chicago's 4-ring circus

UNTIL it surprised everyone by coming up with a plan to end teacher segregation, the Chicago School Board was on the verge of losing more than $70 million in federal funds by September. The potential loss was due to major violations of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 as well as violations of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

On May 25 the Chicago Board of Education announced a plan for staff desegregation that will, if accepted and implemented, prevent the cutoff of the crucial federal money. By a 10-1 vote the Board agreed to transfer 2,212 teachers and 80 principals in a new staff integration plan. The plan specifies 1,686 regularly assigned teachers and 526 full-time substitutes will be moved by September 1977. Each school will achieve a racial balance from 35 to 60 per cent minority teachers. Transfers will be made on the basis of seniority, using a computer to match white and minority teachers in each grade and subject. A spokesman for the Office of Civil Rights (OCR) of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) said he will recommend that the plan be accepted. Robert Healey, President of the Chicago Teachers Union commented, "It's acceptable because you have no choice."

The proposed plan is the result of a series of battles dating back to 1965 between OCR, the Chicago Board of Education, the Illinois Office of Education and the Chicago Teachers Union. The issue has been desegregation, and the controversies have resulted in threatened and sometimes actual withdrawal of federal funds from Chicago schools. Involved are the 25,868 teachers employed by the school district and some 524,221 students, whose education has not been enhanced by the dispute and who will certainly be affected by future skirmishes.

What is the background on the long struggle over teacher desegregation? What role did the various parties play? These are important questions, not only in understanding how the proposed plan for teachers finally came about but in looking to the future. The root of the problem is segregated schools. Only a small fraction of Chicago's public schools are racially balanced, and, as of this date, the School Board has announced no plans for further desegregation. More controversy and more bitterness can be expected unless the parties involved have learned from the struggles they have already been through. The causes of the dispute reach back to the early sixties and, ultimately, to the U.S. Supreme Court's 1954 desegregation ruling (Brown v. Topeka Board of Education).

Illinois, like other states, provides programs and services which are parlor in whole under contracts administered by the Division of Equal Educational Opportunities of the U.S. Office of Education. This division derives its authority from the Civil Rights Act of 1964. It is the state, however, which must take on the task of desegregating the schools. The Chicago School Board must meet state as well as federal standards,

Chronology of controversy
September 1961: Alleged violations of the Fourteenth Amendment were brought by a group of parents (Webb v. Board of Education of the City of Chicago) who believed that Chicago schools were segregated. There was an out-of-court settlement after the Chicago School Board agreed that a panel of five experts, chaired by Philip Hauser would conduct a study of the Chicago schools to decide if they were segregated.

November 1961: Because there were so many grievances concerning the Chicago School Board, the Board authorized another survey, this time to examine the quality of public education in the city of Chicago. The Havighurst Survey (named after its chairman, Robert Havighurst) did not specifically explore the segregation question of the Chicago schools. The panel was concerned with the question of whether there was quality education in the Chicago schools, while the earlier Hauser Study concentrated on the question of segregation.

March 1964: The Hauser Study found the schools to be segregated. The quality of education in black schools was inferior to that in white segregated schools. Between April and November 1964, the Board adopted the Hauser Study "in principle." It also opened enrollment for all its trade and vocational schools on a citywide basis. It issued statements such as "we will continue to be guided by, and comply with, state and federal laws in the spirit of the 1954 Supreme Court decision on desegregation."

November 1964: The Havighurst Survey was submitted to the Board. It contained 22 major recommendations; several of them dealt with the problem of desegregation.

May 1965: In a public statement, Chairman Havighurst stated that no major commitments had been made on the major recommendations of his report.

July 1965: The Coordinating Council of Community Organizations of Chicago

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(CCCO) filed a complaint with the U.S. Office of Education which ultimately led to an investigation of Chicago schools by the U.S. Department of Justice. This complaint marked the beginning of the Chicago School Board's problems with the federal government over alleged segregation in the schools.

August 1965: HEW appointed a team to study the question of segregation of the Chicago schools to see if they were in violation of Title VI of the federal Civil Rights Act.

October 1965: The Chicago School Board and HEW reached an agreement which reinstated federal funds which had been suspended in September 1965. The Chicago School Board promised there would be no discriminatory practices in apprenticeship programs at either the city's trade or vocational schools.

January 1967: A report from the U.S. Office of Education, entitled "Report on Office of Public Education Analysis of Certain Aspects of Chicago Public Schools under Title VI of Civil Rights Act of 1964" was issued. This report identified serious violations of the law in the following areas:

August 1967: A report issued by Dr. James Redmond, Chicago school superintendent, was adopted by the School Board. This report, known as the Redmond Plan, recognized that there were schools which teachers tend to leave. The plan mandated the same percentage of certified teachers for each school. Teachers would be allowed to request a transfer for integration purposes.

October 1967: The U.S. Commissioner of Education requested time lines for implementation of the Redmond Plan. He further demanded the right to review the development of the plan to make sure it was in compliance with Title VI.

July 1969: The Department of Justice sent a letter to the Board regarding their faculty assignment and transfer policies. The Redmond Plan was criticized for being more of a prospective plan than one which addressed the present problems. The Board responded by outlining a new plan changing the pattern of faculty assignment and transfer policies. It issued a three-phase equalization plan stressing faculty desegregation, equalization of faculties and the assignment of substitute teachers.

October 20, 1969: The Department of Justice rejected the School Board's plans and suggested the Board cooperate with HEW.

November 25, 1969: The School Board requested assistance. The Office of Education appointed an outside panel of consultants to establish a feasible faculty desegregation plan.

June 30, 1970: The Office of Education sent a report to the School Board with the following recommendations: "assign, reassign and exchange the teachers of one race with the teachers of another race in all schools and the instructional units of the Chicago Public Schools where the percentage of white and black teachers differs from the present system-wide percentages by more than ten percent." The report also noted that 93 per cent of all school principals were white. The Chicago Board of Education did not accept all of these recommendations and, consequently, did not meet the requirements of the Justice Department.

March 1972: The Justice Department rejected yet another School Board plan entitled "Chicago Board of Education Plan to Integrate School Faculties and Equalize Per Pupil Costs." This plan, adopted by the Board in 1971, was ratified by the Chicago Teachers Union. However, the Department of Justice stated in its rejection letter that "it is our view that the plan adopted by the Board is not in conformity with the requirements of federal law regarding school desegregation. Nor does it appear the plan promises to achieve compliance with the law in the future."

The Chicago Board did not agree that its plan was not in compliance with the requirements of federal laws and sent questions to the Justice Department rebutting the plan's rejection. The Justice Department answered each question and requested a final plan. The Board decided to resubmit the same plan to the Justice Department saying it "is the best thinking of this Board. This is our plan."

June 1973: This action almost cost the Chicago schools $2.3 million. The federal government, however, reconsidered its decision and gave the Chicago Board a second chance. HEW informed Supt. Redmond that the regulations for faculty integration were being rewritten. Redmond believed the school system would qualify for funds under the new relaxed guidelines. The key revision in the guidelines was to make school districts eligible if they had a "promising plan" to end faculty segregation. Because of the new guidelines, funds which had been cut off June 12 were reinstated and were received by mid-August.

October 1975: HEW's OCR formally charged the Chicago School Board with practicing racial discrimination in the assignment of teachers and the Board had 60 days to submit an acceptable plan for faculty integration (to be implemented in September 1976). The Board asked for and received a 60-day extension to determine what it would do.

OCR's action of October 1975 resulted from its final rejection of the 1971 Faculty Integration Plan, which the Board and Union had been working on for years. OCR held that the Board of Education consciously discriminated in the assignment of faculty in both secondary and elementary schools. Faculty members were assigned to schools, OCR said, on a racial basis, blacks to black schools and whites to white schools. OCR also charged that minority group students had a higher percentage of teachers with less than one year experience than white students, and that white schools had a higher percentage of teachers with 13 or more years experience. Furthermore, black schools had fewer teachers with advanced degrees and regular certificates. Finally, OCR said that the Board had failed to provide students who spoke a language other than English with educational services which allowed them to equally participate in the schools' instructional program.

February 1976: By referendum, Chicago teachers approved a plan to increase faculty integration. Written with the cooperation of the Board, it included provisions to:

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In 1971, the Chicago Teachers Union gave up the right of teachers to transfer to another school in order to improve faculty integration in Chicago schools to avoid having buildings that were labeled either all white or all black.

Twelve years after the Hauser Report and four years after the rejection of the 1971 Plan for Integration, the Chicago Board of Education was informed by OCR that this plan "does not provide adequate, timely solutions for the violations which this Office has found to exist in the Chicago School System." OCR would now begin formal hearings on his case.

$70 Million

The state's position
Like the federal government, the state of Illinois has been grappling with the segregation problem since the early 1960's. In 1963 state Rep. Charles Armstrong (D., Chicago) won passage of House Bill 113 directing public school authorities to eliminate and prevent racial segregation {Illinois Revised Statutes, 1975, Chapter 122, Section 10—21.3). However, the law did not have a direct impact on the state school system until 1968 when it was upheld by the Illinois Supreme Court in a test case, Tometz et al v. Board of Education, Waukegan School District 61. The court stated such a law is permitted by the U.S. Constitution. The law was further amended in 1973 (Public Act 78-811) to address the issue (Ill. Rev. Stat., 1975, Ch. 122, Sec. 10—22.5).

When Michael J. Bakalis became state superintendent of public education in 1970, the state's first formal desegregation enforcement program was established. School districts were required to report enrollment data and state what steps had been taken in previous years to either eliminate or prevent racial isolation. By 1972-1973, Chicago District 299 was among the districts being cited for non-compliance with state rules. When Joseph M. Cronin became state superintendent in 1975, he continued the desegregation enforcement program.

HEW's position
Since OCR believes that the Chicago School Board has not complied with the Civil Rights Act of 1964, it has sought to cut off all federal funds to the Chicago schools. This loss of federal funds would cost the Board somewhere between $70 to $150 million dollars a year, and all federally funded programs in the Chicago schools would be eliminated. Since the Chicago School Board's "promising plan" never materialized, HEW decided a court hearing was necessary to determine what charges would be brought against the Board. OCR concluded that this alternative approach would motivate the Board to submit a plan which was consistent with the requirements of Title VI. This case (#S-120) was brought before Administrative Law Judge Everett Hammarstrom in Minneapolis, Minn., under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

The Union's position
Because of the devastating effect the loss of federal funds could have upon the Chicago schools, the Union and Board have worked together to come to terms with OCR. The Chicago School Board, of course, is legally responsible for the education of the children of Chicago. Yet as a recipient of federal funds, the Board has a statutory and contractual agreement with the federal government. The position of the Teachers Union is much different since it has not entered into an agreement with the federal government. It still retains the legal right to intervene to protect the civil rights of its teachers.

The Union was not involved in formulating any new plans. However, it wanted to be kept informed of interaction between the Board and the OCR, and did not want the board to modify the plan that the Union approved in February 1976 "unless a court order mandates this."

The Union has gone to Court to attempt to protect its members' seniority and civil rights and has filed five different briefs as amicus curiae (friend of the court) to determine if the plan complies with the law. It contends that determining whether a school is black or white by the faculty racial composition is only one factor in determining whether de jure (by design) segregation has occured. The Union claims that the present racial imbalance is only due to de facto segregation, that is, it is not a designated School Board plan. This type of segregation, it argues, bars government intervention. "The Union is committed to the idea that faculty integration is an idea whose time has come," says Lester Davis, editor of the Union newspaper. "We'll have to live with it; we'll have to achieve it; we'll have to do it. The question is when, how long, and by what means."

In presenting their legal case. Union leaders have cited the U.S. Supreme Court's June 1976 decision of Washington v. Davis which defined de jure and de facto segregation. Relying on this decision, the Supreme Court vacated a decision by the Chicago Court of Appeals regarding the Indianapolis schools, U.S. v. Board of School Commissioners Indianapolis, Indiana; a decision which involved busing students across district lines and changing school districts. The Union has tried to prove that not one court decision since 1964 has demanded a movement or distribution of experienced teachers. "What the Union is opposed to," said Davis, "is the immediate disruption of the schools. If we get past September 1977, tremendous strides will be made toward integration." The Union hoped that if the administrative law judge ruled a large movement of teachers would be necessary, it would not take place until school had begun. No changes in teacher assignments, therefore, would

July 1977 / Illinois Issues / 15


occur before September 1978.

The Board's position
The Board does have many factors to contend with. First, the policy of neighborhood schools has always been a Board policy, as Chicago has always had strong ethnic neighborhoods. Parents have never wanted their children to go to school outside of their neighborhood. During the Redmond years, even many blacks in Chicago favored keeping their own children in their own schools with black teachers to teach them. Secondly, the Board has had to contend with a strong Teachers Union. Chicago's teachers do not want to give up their present positions for new locations. Furthermore, the Board does have a contract with the teachers, that if broken, could result in a strike.

So the Board walked softly, hoping it could wait just a little longer before it was forced to make any changes. But time ran out. The Board had to come up with a plan, and it did.

The decision
All evidence on Case S-120 had to be submitted by January 31, 1977. On that date, the Administrative Law Judge Everett Hammarstrom closed the case. The questions the judge felt he had to decide were:

On February 15, 1977 Judge Hammarstrom reached his initial decision. He said that the Chicago School District had failed to provide proper instructional programs to its non English-speaking minority students. This was in violation of Lau v. Nicholas (students of Chinese ancestry who did not speak English and received no special lingual services: San Francisco, Calif., 414 U.S. 60 (1974)). The School District, therefore, was also in violation of Title VI and the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The School District had failed to identify its national minority students. Non-English-speaking or limited English-speaking students are not able to benefit from the School District's educational programs. This noncompliance involved approximately 31,000 students.

Students cannot be separated by race, according to Brown v. Board of Education. 347 U.S. 483 (1954). "The School District consciously consummated actions with regard to teacher assignment," stated Judge Hammarstrom. "This has resulted in racially identifiable faculties." Therefore, the School District purposely assigned teachers to certain schools on the basis of race. The effect of these policies has been to isolate black teachers and black administrators in some schools and white teachers and white administrators in others. The School District, Hammarstrom decided, is not sending its children to schools where the faculty is racially balanced.

The board played for time — the teachers for position. HEW held the line — and nobody wanted to lose $70 million

On the basis of the above violations, the Chicago School District was found guilty of violating the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and of violating the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. However, the School District was not found to be in violation of assigning teachers to different schools according to their teaching ability. There was no violation of the quality of educational services as determined by teaching experience. Therefore, on these two issues, the School District was not in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment or the Civil Rights Act. Judge Hammarstrom allowed either the School District or HEW to appeal his ruling with a 20-day period if either disagreed with his findings.

In addition to the HEW money, all financial assistance given by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to the Chicago School District would also be terminated. HUD joined in the lawsuit since it gives the Chicago district from $4 to $5 million, Finally, the Illinois Office of Education would not be allowed to grant any federal money to the School District until it complies with this order.

Now what?
Both the Chicago School Board and HEW's OCR have appealed Judge Hammarstrom's decision. Lawyers for the Chicago School Board and OCR Attorney James R. Goeser sent their appeals on March 7 to the Civil Rights Reviewing Authority, organized under the Civil Service Commission and independent of the Justice Department, This Reviewing Board is composed of three to five lawyers or law school professors and is independent of HEW, The Board usually takes three months to reach a decision on appeal.

Once the Reviewing Board reaches a decision, it notifies all the parties involved. Within 20 days after the decision has been reached, either party may request HEW Secretary Joseph H, Califano to review the final decision, The secretary for "special and important reasons" may grant such a request in part or in whole. For all practical purposes, the general practice has been that the decision of the Reviewing Board is final. In that case, the secretary of HEW sends a report to the committees of Congress. Congress has no role in either reviewing or changing the decision but must be notified. After Congress is notified, federal funds will be terminated after 30 days.

According to Al Sumner, project director at OCR, in order for the Chicago School Board not to lose any money it would "have to have a plan that is likely to work. The plan must spell out what is right and how the Board will achieve its goals. If not they could lose approximately $70 million." According to OCR Attorney Goeser, "Most important of all, the monies will be terminated. The amount doesn't

16 / July 1977 / Illinois Issues


matter. What matters is the programs 8 will end. If the Chicago School Board fails to accept an impartial ruling, the only sanction left is to cut off federal funds. It will hurt the school children, and that's not what the department wants." If the Board did not comply, OCR would start civil proceedings.

Davis of the Teachers Union said, "It is our hope that by the time the appeal process ends that we will have achieved a measure of integration that will negate the necessity of any large movement of teachers." If HEW wins its point on the experience factor before the Review Board, "that would merely require a greater number of teachers — you're talking almost double." If the Reviewing Board confirms the administrative law judge's decision, "further movement may be needed but nowhere on the massive scale envisioned in 1971." When asked if the Union would ever consider a strike over this issue, Davis added, "I couldn't categorically say. I think it is very unlikely in light of the statement and the policies that had been established that we were in favor of integration. We'd abide by the law at all times. We'll abide by the final decision of HEW."

Dr. Joseph P. Hannon, Chicago's general superintendent of schools, issued a statement on February 17,1977 which said, in part: "The Chicago Public Schools are not in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution or Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act in regard to the quality of educational services delivered to minority students. The Board is in compliance with regard to the experience factor of teachers. This substantiates the efforts which have been made to provide equal educational opportunity to all of our students in all of our schools. The Board of Education is in continuing negotiation with the U.S. OCR, and the most current negotiations were not a part of the initial decision rendered by the Law Judge."

Now the Board has a plan, but desegregation problems will continue. On Tuesday, April 5,1977, at a meeting of the Illinois Board of Education, Chicago Supt. Hannon made a report that admitted for the first time that only 83 Chicago schools with an enrollment of 66,362 students are racially balanced. This means that only 12.5 per cent of Chicago's public schools are racially balanced.

July 1977 / Illinois Issues / 17


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