Thursday, December 18, 2014

ACLU sues Ferguson-Florissant School District

(From ACLU Missouri)

The American Civil Liberties Union today filed a federal lawsuit against Missouri's Ferguson-Florissant School District, charging the district's electoral system is locking African-Americans out of the political process.

The case, brought on behalf of the Missouri NAACP and African-American residents, is challenging the district’s at-large system used to elect school board members. The at-large system violates the federal Voting Rights Act by diluting African-American voting strength, the complaint charges.

African-Americans constitute a minority of the district’s voting age population, and under the at-large system they are systematically unable to elect candidates of their choice. The suit seeks to allow voters to cast a ballot for an individual school board member who resides in their district and better represents the community.

“The current system locks out African-American voters,” said Dale Ho, director of the ACLU’s Voting Rights Project. “It dilutes the voting power of the African-American community and severely undermines their voice in the political process.”

The Ferguson-Florissant School District has a history fraught with discrimination against African-American citizens. The district, which spans several municipalities, was created by a 1975 desegregation order intended to remedy the effects of discrimination against African-American students. Yet, 40 years later, there is just one African-American member on the seven-member board in a district where African-Americans constitute 79 percent of the student body.

This systemic lack of representation is why plaintiff Redditt Hudson got involved in this case. He is a former St. Louis police officer who lives in Florissant with his wife and two daughters, both of whom are students in the Ferguson-Florissant School District.

“We’ve seen African-Americans excluded from making decisions that affect our children,” said Hudson, who works for the NAACP. “We need to be able to advocate for an education that will put our kids first and not political agendas.”

The case, Missouri NAACP v. Ferguson-Florissant School District was filed in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri. The complaint can be found on the ACLU of Missouri website at www.aclu-mo.org/voting-rights-lawsuit.

“It is a core American value that everyone has the right to cast a vote that counts,” said Jeffrey Mittman, executive director of the ACLU of Missouri. “This lawsuit is a positive step toward addressing racial inequities in our education system that will affect not only Ferguson, but all of Missouri.”

The ACLU of Missouri is a non-partisan, not-for-profit organization that defends and expands the constitutional rights and civil liberties of all Missourians guaranteed under the United States and Missouri Constitutions, through its litigation, legislative and public education programs. It is an affiliate of the national ACLU.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

The black community is excluded from voting or do they choose not to vote for board members? The same goes for the city council. Also, to become a police officer one has to graduate from the police academy. This might not be discrimination but apathy and a feeling of entitlement from the black community. Perhaps change will be brought from all the Ferguson mess.

Anonymous said...

@10:45 - what does graduating from a police academy have to do with anything? It doesn't give people a leg up or a moral compass or even intellectual responsibility.

Get real ! Discrimination is still part of our society.

Maybe you better crawl out from under that rock with the Confederate flag on it....

Anonymous said...

Probably not that many black registered voters i would say and not many willing to put in the time at the police academy