Category: Uncategorized

  • Archive: March 2004 Cover Story

    Published at

    Counterpunch

    The War on Civil Rights
    What Gives Texas A&M the Right?

    By GREG MOSES

    [Editors’ Note: During February the Texas Civil Rights

    Review uncovered documents from a specially appointed task force at Texas A&M that recommended strongly

    in favor of affirmative action on Aug. 29, 2003. That finding was over-ruled by the President and

    buried from public view. Following is the cover story that will appear for the next month at the Texas

    Civil Rights Review.] During the Fall Semester of 2003, Texas A&M University President Robert Gates

    put the Civil Rights Act in his pocket and he left it there until people thought it was his. And when

    he refused to take it out of his pocket ever again, people said, okay, he can do that. But can he?

    Can the President of a University pocket-veto the Civil Rights Act? Ultimately this is

    a question for the federal government to decide. It would make a fine question for our Presidential

    candidates. If elected president, Mr. Kerry or Mr. Edwards, will you enforce the Civil Rights Act in

    College Station, Texas?

    It was because of the Civil Rights Act that the Office of Civil

    Rights visited Texas in 1978 to determine if de-segregation had been accomplished. But de-segregation

    had not been accomplished in the higher education system of Texas.

    At that point the OCR

    had the power to make an adverse ruling against the state of Texas, which would have caused serious

    difficulties with federal funding. And so, once again, because of the Civil Rights Act, Texas was

    feeling some heat.

    It is well documented in records kept by Texas A&M, and by analysis

    that was produced at the time, that Texas A&M University Regents adopted affirmative action as a way to

    show federal authorities that the Civil Rights Act has a meaning they were bound to

    respect.

    It made plain sense in 1980 that affirmative action in admissions was one

    necessary means that a University under federal supervision for de-segregation should adopt. The state

    of Texas then entered into a series of agreements, under federal supervision, for de-segregation. These

    facts are plain as one can find. They are also plainly evaded.

    In 1997, OCR returned to

    Texas, found de-segregation still a work in progress, and in the summer of 2000 received from Governor

    Bush assurances that all available means would be used to advance the de-segregation process. Then in

    the summer of 2003 the Supreme Court restored the Constitutionality of affirmative action in Texas with

    the Grutter ruling.

    Where it is plainly agreed that a University should undertake every

    means necessary for de-segregation, where that same University has previously agreed that affirmative

    action serves as a baseline commitment of good faith toward de-segregation, and where affirmative

    action is clearly vindicated by the Supreme Court as a Constitutional means to de-segregation, there

    can be no plainer conclusion at hand as to what a University should be doing. But the conclusion is not

    at hand. It is in the pocket of President Gates.

    Soon after the Grutter ruling,

    President Gates called together his best and brightest, and he asked them to consider what should be

    done. By the end of the summer, his own hand-picked committee strongly recommended a return to

    affirmative action.

    Not only did President Gates put that report in his pocket, but he

    failed to consult with state regulators about his responsibilities under the Civil Rights Act. Folks he

    asked he ignored, folks he should have consulted, he did not.

    If during this Black

    History Month we are going to share platitudes about the meaning of America, if during this traditional

    month of celebration for Lincoln’s birthday we are going to speak of one nation, and if the Civil

    Rights Act actually happened and is really law in America, and in Texas, too, then, we have to say:

    give back the Civil Rights Act President Gates, or step aside and give us a University President who

    respects the laws and Constitution of the United States.

    There are perhaps a thousand

    ways to cut the argument for affirmative action in admissions. But given the peculiar circumstances in

    College Station, Texas, crucial considerations have not yet been addressed. What is the meaning of the

    Civil Rights Act? Is the federal Constitution still a framework that a Texas University President is

    bound to respect?

  • Painted Windows Aren’t Good Enough:

    MALDEF Stands its Ground in Texas School Funding Trial

    By Greg

    Moses
    Texas Civil Rights Review
    http://la.indymedia.org/news/2004/08/116354.ph

    p

    On a recent Friday, when Texas judge John Dietz summons attorneys “to the bench” in his

    Austin courtroom, thirteen well-suited lawyers come forward. There are lawyers for the state, who

    argue that the school funding system adopted by the legislature in 1993 is working as best it can.

    There are lawyers for wealthier school districts, such as West Orange Cove or Highland Park, who want

    the 1993 system shut down. And there are lawyers for the state’s impoverished school districts, such

    as Edgewood or Alvarado, who at first tried to stop this fight altogether, but who are now looking for

    ways to preserve, enforce, and extend the constitutional framework that the 1993 laws represent.

    The public file for this school funding case (soon to be known as Edgewood Five?) approaches the

    two foot mark. But on a day when parts go missing, the district clerk’s office is equipped with

    something called DMS, or document management system, into which all the public documents for this case

    have been scanned. And I am told there are, in addition, at least ten cd’s that the various attorneys

    have made with all their exhibits in pdf, excel, powerpoint, and whatnot formats, that they can export

    from their Dell laptops to bright-screen displays in court.

    With all the lawyers,

    paperwork, and documentary intrigue, the spectacle surrounding the school funding trial is Texas-sized

    and more to my wire-rimmed taste than the Sandra Bullock mansion dispute going on somewhere in the

    vicinity. Not that I wouldn’t mind seeing the movie star, or treating her to some sympathy about what

    it feels like to have your life occupied by (alleged) runaway contractors, but I’m more interested in

    how her vacant mansion works as a metaphor these days for where the whole story of Texas school funding

    begins.

    School history in Texas begins during the bad old days of statutory segregation,

    followed by the rising hopes of civil rights, fading now into ever-so-nuanced cycles of postmodernized

    vestiges, in which glaring inequalities between rich and poor neighborhoods become sites of

    administrative analysis, consulting contracts, and formulas for funding so arcane that in order to

    compute them, dude, you gotta get a Dell.

    The first three Edgewood rulings by the Texas

    Supreme Court (in 1989, 1991, and 1992) said that Texas had not yet come up with a constitutional

    method of funding education—a method that should be at once “adequate, suitable, and efficient.” The

    fourth Edgewood opinion by the Texas Supreme Court in 1995 said, finally, okay, the Texas Legislature

    in 1993 had finally passed a constitutional plan.

    Which brings us to the fifth Edgewood

    suit, more properly styled West Orange Cove v. Nelson, named for a school district and a commissioner

    of education. The school district is first among a list of almost fifty districts (hereafter referred

    to as richer districts) who claim that the state has so poorly assisted public education in Texas that

    local property taxes are doing all the state’s work and, therefore, that local property taxes have

    become state property taxes. Since state property taxes are unconstitutional in Texas, the richer

    districts want the very laws abolished that it took four Edgewood opinions to

    produce.

    The 1993 laws, known as Chapters 41 and 42 of the Texas Education Code, make it

    somewhat possible for school districts to take money raised from a mansion in one district and spend

    that money for education in another. Nearly fifty of these richer districts, in the precious language

    of legalese, pray to the court, to prevent the state from enforcing Chapters 41 and 42. If these

    districts succeed in shutting down the statewide system of re-allocation, they can go back to taxing

    and spending as they please, keeping their mansion taxes closer to home.

    I would be

    surprised and disappointed if this so-called “recapture” of mansion taxes bothered a wealthy Hollywood

    star, but it bothers enough other people in Texas, especially those who feel that children are born

    where they deserve to be born, whether in mansions or manufactured homes. For such people it is

    difficult to break the habit of thinking that neighborhood schools should rightfully mirror the ability

    of neighborhoods to pay. And when they see taxes raised in one place being “recaptured” and sent to

    another, they tend to think, like the Sheriff of Nottingham, that something has been

    stolen.

    On Friday morning, lead attorney for the Mexican American Legal Defense Fund,

    David Hinojosa, was so tired he could barely read his own questions from a page of prepared notes. He

    was speaking to the superintendent of the Edgewood school district, Richard Bocanegra. In the tableau

    of the closing hours of week three, as Judge Dietz mercifully called a five minute break, the MALDEF

    attorney and Edgewood superintendent were trying to hold onto a tenuous legal framework that had been

    more than 30 years in the making. Of course it was neither this MALDEF attorney nor this Edgewood

    superintendent who began the struggle way back then, but it is the MALDEF-Edgewood alliance that has

    tenaciously over the years moved Texas education through the series of Edgewood lawsuits into the

    equalizing practices of Chapters 41 and 42.

    Neither crisply nor with brightening eyes,

    Hinojosa and Bocanegra review their powerpoint slides, one by one. Here is a photograph of windows

    painted over, to keep the sunlight out and the cooling costs down. There is a parking lot splotched

    with standing water. Here is a portable classroom at Burleson Elementary. There is a photo of broken

    sills and mold at Cenizo Park. Cinderblock walls of a 50-year-old gymnasium are shown split open by

    shifting foundations. Here’s another photo of Coronado Elementary School’s gymnasium. Here are window

    air conditioning units spaced motel-style at Edgewood Middle School. There is a sump pump in the slab

    at Memorial High, because the school was built upon a landfill. Truman Middle School, Wrenn Middle

    School, deteriorating blacktop, ceiling tiles stained and broken from roof leaks, garbage cans catching

    water…

    “Mr. Bocanegra?” Hinojosa is circling toward a question that I hope he finishes

    before he falls out. “Given the insufficiencies of the resources, the challenging demographics of the

    students, and the inequities of funding, what prospects do you hold for the parents of your children

    and the children themselves?”

    After Bocanegra finishes his answer, I notice that the

    benches on the state side of the room look pretty empty. Gone are some of the heavyweight lawyers I’m

    used to seeing there. They have assigned this cross examination to what looks like the youngest lawyer

    on staff. She treads lightly with bouncing inflections. This is way different from some of the

    barracuda attacks that I’ve seen. When the witness is given back to Hinojosa, he mops up the day’s

    testimony by asking Bocanegra to explain what it’s like to take his prospective teachers on a campus

    tour.

    In the summer of 2001, MALDEF helped to convince Judge Dietz’s predecessor Scott

    McCown, to dismiss the West Orange Cove lawsuit. In a sparkling opinion, McCown guarded the gates to

    the state funding system, emphasizing the overwhelming practical value of the “recapture provisions”

    for the history of Texas education. In a concluding flourish, McCown declared that, “history is

    truth—Until equity was required, the State shamefully treated and woefully underfunded the property

    poor districts.” He did not see that the richer districts were as yet so stressed out by the funding

    system that they had lost t
    he
    ir ability to exercise local discretion over their tax policies. And he

    seemed worried that the logic of the plaintiff’s attack might undercut completely the hard won

    framework that the Edgewood era has produced for Texas (a state which Friday morning’s papers declared

    was now officially no longer mostly white.)

    An appeals court also dismissed the West

    Orange suit. But the Texas Supreme Court on May 29, 2003 remanded the case back to trial and demanded

    a thorough inventory of facts and issues. Furthermore, the court seemed to suggest that, if only one

    district can show that its funding has become so bound up by state priorities as to deprive that

    district of “meaningful discretion” in its tax policy, then school funding may well have turned into an

    unconstitutional state property tax.

    This time around, MALDEF is agreeing somewhat with

    the richer districts. Texas does not provide sufficient funds or meaningful discretion, especially to

    impoverished school districts. But unlike the richer districts, MALDEF pleads with the courts to find

    some way of preserving the hard-won Edgewood principles of equalization. In fact, MALDEF is asking the

    courts to place pressure on the state to increase its formulas for “special needs” and to make

    equalization an even more robust practice, especially when it comes to paying for facilities. When it

    comes to paying for buildings—as the slides from the Edgewood district were trying to show—there are

    still glaring disparities.

    There is some evidence that the Texas Supreme Court is not

    happy with the bad faith practices of state policy makers who have retreated from Edgewood more than

    they have built upon it. In its ruling of May 2003, the court quoted passages from its own majority

    opinion of 1995, written by Republican John Cornyn, who is now a US Senator: “Surely Texas can and must

    do better.” And then the court added, “Little change has been made.” Even Republican judges, it

    seems, can be ashamed at this level of injustice.

    What’s not so clear is how the Court is

    leaning with respect to the richer districts. In the early years of Edgewood the court had to strike

    down three funding regimes in three years’ time in order to impress upon lawmakers the importance of

    equalization and improvement in education policy. Now that they are facing the third challenge in a

    row from richer school districts trying to evade equalization, the court may want to draw a big, bright

    line for them, too. The court may be in a mood to say both to the state and to richer districts, look,

    we gave you some very clear principles, now get busy trying to build on them. But, somehow this

    scenario seems too good to be true.

    In plainer language, the court may find a way to say,

    why not try helping MALDEF and Edgewood in school instead of wearing them out in court? At any rate,

    it would be a perverse turn in history to punish the state by turning back the equity clock.

    Politically, such a ruling would signal to state policy makers that any time they want to break down

    the court-ordered enforcement of equity, they simply need to starve the total system of funds. Just

    because the state has adopted a passive-aggressive posture, doesn’t mean it can’t be klanlike.

    On the crucial issues of equalization and progress, MALDEF has found an ally in another

    set of players known as the Alvarado Intervenors, who claim that their commitment to “maintaining

    Edgewood mandates is intense and undisputed.” Like MALDEF also, the Alvarado Intervenors argue that

    the legislature has retreated from equalizing facility funds. As a result, impoverished districts find

    themselves “trapped in the vice” where the state demands more performance on one side and delivers

    insufficient resources on the other.

    On Tuesday the Alvarado Intervenors argued in a

    “bench brief” that the State’s bad faith could be proved in the difference between the standards it

    sets for students, on the one hand, and the standards it sets for districts on the other. While the

    state hands out tests that students must pass, it accepts from districts very low passing rates. And

    why does the state do this? Because policy makers know very well that if they demand higher passing

    rates, they will have to spend more money for teachers, materials, facilities, and support. It is

    time, argued the Alvarado Intervenors, that standards set the pace for state budgets rather than state

    budgets starving the appetite for standards. “What the constitution requires of the legislature with

    respect to education is to place it in a different and higher position than other budget items.”

    During a Friday morning recess, Alvarado attorney Randall B. Wood picks up his copy of

    the day’s Dallas Morning News, carefully folded into a tight rectangle. “Look at this,” he says,

    exasperated, pointing to a story about a South Dallas school district that keeps behaving scandalously

    and keeps getting away with it. “There is no accountability here. The state keeps doing nothing.”

    Faced with a state that says things are good enough today and with a coalition of richer districts who

    say it would be okay even to turn back the clock on equity, the Alvarado and Edgewood attorneys will

    return next week to try once again to keep the Texas courts moving in a forward

    direction.

  • Portales Statement favoring Grutter, Dec. 18, 2003

    English Professor Marco Portales, who was active in the Faculty Senate

    debates, read the following statement to Texas A&M University Presdient Robert Gates on Dec. 18, 2003

    during an audience with “minority faculty”. Portales was not aware that the president’s own

    taskforce on admissions had recommended affirmative action on Aug. 29, 2003. December 18, 2003

    Why Texas A&M Should Accept the Grutter Supreme Court Decision

    On June

    23, 2003, the U.S. Supreme Court allowed the use of race in college admissions policies in a Michigan

    case precisely to help universities like Texas A&M recruit more minority students. Like the University

    of Michigan and other top-ranked campuses, Texas A&M has been struggling for more than 20 years to

    attract more qualified minority students. Today minorities comprise nearly 50% of the population of

    Texas (33% Latinos, 12.8% African Americans, and 3.5% Asian American) and demographers predict

    continued growth. Despite this phenomenal growth among minorities, Texas A&M only has an 8% Latino and

    a 3% African American student population.

    The Grutter verdict surprised many

    people who continue to believe in a color-blind, race neutral society. The legal decision surprised

    people because instead of embracing the color-blind Hopwood 5th Circuit Court of Appeals 1996 opinion,

    the Supreme Court reasserted the 1978 Bakke decision. Bakke had allowed the use of race in college

    admissions in that University of California/Davis case.

    For this reason, Texas A&M’s

    recent decision not to take advantage of the Grutter allowance is contrary to the Court’s intention.

    That intention effectively nullified Hopwood, which legally prevented college admissions officials from

    admitting more minority students. What universities have discovered over the years is that when race

    cannot be weighed as a plus factor, it is nearly impossible to admit qualified minorities. Select

    college admissions policies are designed to admit students with the best K- 12 educations and since

    most minorities do not have access to the best schools or long-term financial support and parental

    guidance, securing a first-rate K-12 education is extremely difficult for most minority

    youngsters.

    Hopwood (1996-2003) required color-blind, race neutral college admissions

    criteria that Grutter now supersedes. This statement means that public universities such as Texas A&M

    are expected to take advantage of Grutter, just as Rice and the University of Texas have done. As the

    state’s public land-grant institution, Texas A&M cannot and ought not to be out of step with the legal

    parameters that Grutter now affords.

    Texas A&M’s new admissions policy, however,

    embraces Hopwood’s color-blind criteria because our administration believes that including race in

    admissions stigmatizes minority students. But the Faculty Committed to an Inclusive Campus believe that

    qualified minority students admitted to Texas A&M would not be stigmatized if the university were to

    undertake a campaign to explain to the general public the stringent criteria that each student admitted

    has to meet.

    Since the criteria that determine whether an applicant is admitted have not

    been sufficiently promulgated to dispel “race-based” language and thinking, I call upon the campus

    administration:

    (1) to embrace race in its admissions policy, as the Supreme Court

    provides in Grutter; and,

    (2) to spell out admissions criteria so that the general

    public can learn just how competitive students must be to enter Texas A&M. No one is admitted only

    because of race, as some people may think.

    Finally, I respectfully request that race be

    included in admissions so that we can facilitate inviting, accepting and enrolling more minority

    students at Texas A&M. Otherwise, it will be difficult.

    Marco Portales
    Professor

    of English
    Texas A&M University
    College Station, Texas 77843-4227
    (979) 845-

    8305
    mportales@tamu.edu

  • Excerpts: Texas School Funding Docs

    A key question in the school funding trial revolved around the definition of an

    adequate education, with state’s attorneys arguing that minimal funds could only be demanded for a

    narrow range of instructional purposes. In the following Conclusion of Law, Texas District Judge John

    Dietz says that education is a more expansive concept:

    (COL 10) This Court rejects

    the notion that the general diffusion of knowledge requires expenditures only in the instructional

    program described in Section 39.023 of the Education Code and that other expenditures are merely

    “extraneous.” A district cannot provide a constitutionally adequate education without a sufficient

    support network, which may include, but is not limited to, (a) adequate and well-maintained facilities;

    (b) remedial and literacy programs to help Limited English proficiency, economically disadvantaged, and

    other special needs students, (c) sufficient numbers of qualified teachers; (d) small class sizes, (e)

    preschool programs to give a “head start” to special needs students; (f) dropout prevention programs;

    (g) extracurricular activities to keep students in school and assist them with getting into colleges;

    (h) nurses to keep students healthy; (i) security guards in certain schools to keep students safe; and

    (j) guidance counselors to help students with course selection and with planning for college or

    careers.

    More key excerpts at “Read More” below.

    What

    does it mean to have enough local money or “meaningful discretion” in a school budget? For Judge

    Dietz, it means that local districts can dedicate ten percent of their available tax revenues toward

    “enrichment.”

    (COL 14) The Texas Supreme Court has held that a district must have

    “meaningful discretion” in setting its property tax rates for a local ad valorem tax to remain

    constitutional under Article VIII, section 1-e of the Texas Constitution. The Court concludes that a

    district has meaningful discretion only when it can devote, at a minimum, 10% of its taxing capacity,

    or approximately 15 cents of tax effort to raise additional revenues to enrich its programs beyond what

    is required to provide a “general diffusion of knowledge” and comply with state and federal

    mandates.

    Adding together the broad definition of education and the ten percent

    test for “enrichment” funding, Judge Dietz rules that schools cannot systematically raise enough

    money under the tax limit imposed by the state of $1.50 per $100 of taxable

    property.

    (COL 17) Because the West Orange Cove Plaintiffs have also

    established a systemic/statewide violation, this Court declares that the Texas school finance system is

    presently in violation of Article VIII, section 1-e of the Texas Constitution

    (COL 20)

    Because the West Orange Cove Plaintiffs have established that the school finance system fails to

    recognize or cover the costs of meeting the constitutional mandate of adequacy, or the Legislature’s

    statutory definition of a comprehensive adequate program, this Court declares that the State’s school

    finance system is financially inefficient, inadequate and unsuitable, in violation of Article VII,

    section 1 of the Texas Constitution.

    “Robin Hood”

    lives.

    (COL 22) The disparate property values among Texas public school

    districts, coupled with the State’s continued reliance on local property taxes for the majority of

    funding for the Texas school finance system, requires the State to maintain equalization provisions

    similar to those at present, in order to ensure an efficient system among public free

    schools.

    In fact “Robin Hood” needs to do a better job equalizing funds,

    especially to pay for facilities.

    (COL 23) The prohibition on the use of Tier 2

    funds for facilities, combined with the Legislature’s failure to make the IFA and/or EDA programs

    statutorily permanent and the Legislature’s inadequate funding of the IFA program, means that property

    -poor districts do not have substantially equal access to facilities funding in violation of the

    efficiency and suitability provisions of article VII § 1 of the Texas

    Constitution.

    And the state needs to increase its financial support for districts

    that serve bilingual, impoverished, and other special needs students.

    (COL 24)

    The current funding capacity of the Texas school finance system fails to provide Intervenor districts

    with sufficient access to revenue to provide for a general diffusion of knowledge to their students, in

    violation of the efficiency, suitability and adequacy provisions of Article VII § 1 of the Texas

    Constitution, particularly when taking into account (1) the inadequacy of the weight adjustments for

    bilingual, economically disadvantaged, and other special needs students and (2) the greater burden

    borne by Intervenor districts of the inadequacy of those weights, given their student populations,

    which are disproportionately LEP and economically disadvantaged.

    The Legislature

    has until Oct. 1, 2005 to fix the system.

    1. In addition to the declaratory

    relief described … above, this Court hereby enjoins the State Defendants from giving any force and

    effect to the sections of the Education Code relating to the financing of public school education

    (Chapters 41 and 42 of the Education Code) and from distributing any money under the current Texas

    school financing system until the constitutional violations are remedied. The effect of this

    injunction shall be stayed until October 1, 2005, in order to give the Legislature a reasonable

    opportunity to cure the constitutional deficiencies in the finance system before the foregoing

    prohibitions take effect.

    Posted at IndyMedia Houston / Austin / North Texas
    /
    LA / NYC