School district fights ruling on transfers
Jose Paul Corona
High school district trustees will petition the California Supreme
Court to retain a policy that an appellate court struck down as
unconstitutional.
In a closed session meeting last week, the Huntington Beach Union High
School District Board passed a motion to petition the court 4-1. Trustee
Matthew Harper cast the dissenting vote.
The decision comes after an appellate court ruled the district’s
policy of denying student transfers based on race to be unconstitutional
on May 31. In September of 1999 Fountain Valley resident Bruce Crawford
sued the school district for not allowing a student to transfer because
of his race.
The white student was denied a transfer from the Ocean View High
School, which is primarily Latino, to the mostly-white Fountain Valley
High School, based on his race.
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. Administrators introduced
the policy in 1993 as a way to stave off segregation.
Larsen said the petition will be filed by July 10 and expects it will
take 60 to 90 days to be heard. If the court decides to hear the petition
it may take up to a year before a decision is rendered, Larsen added.
Meanwhile the school board has instructed Supt. Susan Roper to allow
any students on the waiting list to transfer.
“Pending the court’s determination, the district is going to comply
with the spirit of the appellate court’s decision,” Larsen said.
If the Supreme Court decides to hear the petition, that will vacate
the appellate court’s decision, but until then the district has to comply
with the ruling.
Roper was unavailable for comment, Tish Cook, superintendent of
business services for the district, refused to comment and referred all
inquiries to the school district’s attorney.
Board members were instructed by School Dist. Atty. Dave Larsen not to
comment.
The ruling surprised Larsen, he said, especially since the district
prevailed when the case was originally tried.
“I think that the appellate court decision was a significant departure
from past precedent,” Larsen said.
That decision will impact school district’s throughout the state,
which is one of the reasons that the district has decided to petition.
“The district felt it was very important to have a definitive
decision,” Larsen said.
Sharon L. Browne, lead counsel and principal attorney for the Pacific
Legal Foundation, the firm representing Crawford, said she did not expect
the district to file the petition.
“The policy was found to be unconstitutional, their decision was very
straightforward and clear,” Browne said.
Crawford expected no less.
“It doesn’t surprise me,” Crawford said, “Nothing they do makes
sense.”
The appellate court’s decision was unanimous and the policy was also
found to be in violation of Proposition 209. The ballot initiative banned
discrimination or preferential treatmentto anyone who attends a public
school based on race or ethnicity.
“The precedents are against them,” Crawford said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.