Education

Ruling May Delay Nashville Classes

August 24, 1981 1 min read
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Associate Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens refused last Thursday to reverse a lower-court ruling that bars the Nashville, Tenn., school district from implementing a desegregation plan.

His decision--coming the day before schools were scheduled to open--has led to what local officials describe as a “chaotic” situation.

Justice Stevens rejected an appeal by lawyers of the Nashville Metropolitan County Board of Education to overturn a decision made last Wednesday by the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals to stay the implementation of the school board’s court-ordered plan to improve the racial mix in the area’s public schools.

After an emergency session, a spokesman for the 68,000-student system said that if school board lawyers are unsuccessful in further attempts being made today to get the stay overturned, the Nashville-Davidson County schools will not open until September 14.

The Circuit Court’s decision handed down Wednesday upheld a petition by the N.A.A.C.P. Legal Defense and Educational Fund that contends the proposed plan would in fact resegregate parts of the school system.

Richard H. Dinkins, a Legal Defense Fund lawyer involved in the case, said his organization was opposed in particular to provisions of’ the plan that allow for largely-segregated neighborhood schools at the elementary level and the closing of existing upper-grade schools in black neighborhoods.

Justice Stevens said the claims in the Legal Defense Fund’s petition were of sufficient significance to uphold the lower court decision.

A version of this article appeared in the August 24, 1981 edition of Education Week

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