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NOTE:
Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as
is being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion
is issued. The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the
Court but has been prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the
convenience of the reader. See United States v. Detroit Lumber Co.,
200 U. S. 321, 337.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
Syllabus
MISSOURI et al. v. JENKINS et al. certiorari to the united states
court of appeals for the eighth circuit No. 93-1823. Argued January
11, 1995-Decided June 12, 1995
In
this 18-year-old school desegregation litigation, see, e.g., Missouri
v. Jenkins, 495 U. S. 33, Missouri challenges the District Court's
orders requiring the State (1) to fund salary increases for virtually
all instructional and noninstructional staff within the Kansas City,
Missouri, School District (KCMSD), and (2) to continue to fund remedial
``quality education'' programs because student achievement levels
were still ``at or below national norms at many grade levels.''
In affirming the orders, the Court of Appeals rejected the State's
argument that the salary increases exceeded the District Court's
remedial authority because they did not directly address and relate
to the State's constitutional violation: its operation, prior to
1954, of a segregated school system within the KCMSD. The Court
of Appeals observed, inter alia, that the increases were designed
to eliminate the vestiges of state-imposed segregation by improving
the ``desegregative attractiveness'' of the district and by reversing
``white flight'' to the suburbs. The Court of Appeals also approved
the District Court's ``implici[t]'' rejection of the State's request
for a determination of partial unitary status, under Freeman v.
Pitts, 503 U. S. 467, 491, with respect to the existing quality
education programs.
Held:
1. Respondents' arguments that the State may no
longer chal- lenge the District Court's desegregation remedy and
that, in any event, the propriety of the remedy is not before this
Court are rejected. Because, in Jenkins, 495 U. S., at 37, certiorari
was granted to review the manner in which this remedy was funded,
but denied as to the State's challenge to review the remedial order's
scope, this Court resisted the State's efforts to challenge such
scope and, thus, neither approved nor disapproved the Court of Appeals'
conclusion that the remedy was proper, see, e.g., id., at 53. Here,
however, the State has challenged the District Court's approval
of across-the-board salary increases as beyond its remedial authority.
Because an analysis of the permissible scope of that authority is
necessary for a proper determination of whether the salary increases
exceed such authority, a challenge to the scope of the remedy is
fairly included in the question presented for review. See this Court's
Rule 14.1 and, e.g., Procunier v. Navarette, 434 U. S. 555, 560,
n. 6. Pp. 12-14.
2. The challenged orders are beyond the District
Court's remedial authority. Pp. 14-32.
(a) Although a District Court necessarily has
discretion to fashion a remedy for a school district unconstitutionally
segregated in law, such remedial power is not unlimited and may
not be extended to purposes beyond the elimination of racial discrimination
in public schools. Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Bd. of Ed., 402
U. S. 1, 22-23. Proper analysis of the orders challenged here must
rest upon their serving as proper means to the end of restoring
the victims of discriminatory conduct to the position they would
have occupied absent that conduct, see, e.g., Milliken v. Bradley,
418 U. S. 717, 746, and their eventual restoration of state and
local authorities to the control of a school system that is operating
in compliance with the Constitution, see, e.g., Freeman, 503 U.
S., at 489. The factors which must inform a court's discretion in
ordering complete or partial relief from a desegregation decree
are: (1) whether there has been compliance with the decree in those
aspects of the school system where federal supervision is to be
withdrawn; (2) whether retention of judicial control is necessary
or practicable to achieve compliance in other facets of the system;
and (3) whether the district has demonstrated to the public and
to the parents and students of the once disfavored race its good-faith
commitment to the whole of the decree and to those statutes and
constitutional provisions that were the predicate for judicial intervention
in the first place. Id., at 491. The ultimate inquiry is whether
the consti- tutional violator has complied in good faith with the
decree since it was entered, and whether the vestiges of discrimination
have been eliminated to the extent practicable. Id., at 492. Pp.
14-18.
(b) The order approving salary increases, which
was grounded in improving the ``desegregative attractiveness'' of
the KCMSD, exceeds the District Court's admittedly broad discretion.
The order should have sought to eliminate to the extent practicable
the vestig- es of prior de jure segregation within the KCMSD: a
system-wide reduction in student achievement and the existence of
25 racially identifiable schools with a population of over 90% black
students. Instead, the District Court created a magnet district
of the KCMSD in order to attract nonminority students from the surrounding
suburban school districts and to redistribute them within the KCMSD
schools. This interdistrict goal is beyond the scope of the intradistrict
violation identified by the District Court. See, e.g., Milliken,
supra, at 746-747. Indeed, the District Court has found, and the
Court of Appeals has affirmed, that the case involved no interdistrict
violation that would support interdistrict relief. See, e.g., Jenkins,
supra, at 37, n. 3. The District Court has devised a remedy to accomplish
indirectly what it admittedly lacks the reme- dial authority to
mandate directly: the interdistrict transfer of students. See Milliken,
418 U. S., at 745. The record does not support the District Court's
reliance on ``white flight'' as a justifica- tion for a permissible
expansion of its intradistrict remedial authori- ty through its
pursuit of desegregative attractiveness. See, e.g., id., at 746.
Moreover, that pursuit cannot be reconciled with this Court's decisions
placing limitations on a district court's remedial authority. See,
e.g., ibid. Nor are there appropriate limits to the duration of
the District Court's involvement. See, e.g., Freeman, supra, at
489. Thus, the District Court's pursuit of the goal of ``desegregative
attractiveness'' results in too many imponderables and is too far
removed from the task of eliminating the racial identifiability
of the schools within the KCMSD. Pp. 18-29.
(c) Similarly, the order requiring the State to
continue to fund the quality education programs cannot be sustained.
Whether or not KCMSD student achievement levels are still ``at or
below nation- al norms at many grade levels'' clearly is not the
appropriate test for deciding whether a previously segregated district
has achieved partially unitary status. The District Court should
sharply limit, if not dispense with, its reliance on this factor
in reconsidering its order, and should instead apply the three-part
Freeman test. It should bear in mind that the State's role with
respect to the quality education programs has been limited to the
funding, not the imple- mentation, of those programs; that many
of the goals of the quality education plan already have been attained;
and that its end purpose is not only to remedy the violation to
the extent practicable, but also to restore control to state and
local authorities. Pp. 29-32. 11 F. 3d 755 (first case) and 13 F.
3d 1170 (second case), reversed.
Rehnquist, C. J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which O'Connor,
Scalia, Kennedy, and Thomas, JJ., joined. O'Connor, J., and Thomas,
J., filed concurring opinions. Souter, J., filed a dissent- ing
opinion, in which Stevens, Ginsburg, and Breyer, JJ., joined. Ginsburg,
J., filed a dissenting opinion.
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