D.P. Marshall Jr., United States District Judge.
The Court has benefited from the testimony and exhibits received at the five-day trial in February. Nudged—one might truthfully say, pushed—by the Court, the parties covered much ground. The Court has also drawn freely on what it has learned in presiding over the detachment-related proceedings since 2013. Whether JNPSD has complied in good faith with these two parts of Plan 2000 turns, in large measure, on the credibility of the witnesses. The Court has made those calls. All material things considered, the Court concludes that, with the exception of incentives for certain teachers, JNPSD is unitary
Before the Court explores that deep issue, two other facilities-related provisions of Plan 2000 can be addressed summarily. Most of § H(2) applies to PCSSD, not JNPSD. The part that does apply—the obligation not to close schools in predominantly African-American areas absent compelling necessity—has been met. There's no evidence that JNPSD has closed such a school. The District has also satisfied its obligation under § H(3) to notify the intervenors about facility-related plans and their likely effects, plus consider any prompt response. The District is unitary in its § H(2) and § H(3) obligations.
Back to the plan for replacing the elementary schools. The combined replacement for the Tolleson and Arnold Drive schools opened in August 2018. There are four others. Dupree and Pinewood are scheduled to be replaced in August 2022. That leaves Taylor and Bayou Meto, both scheduled for replacement in 2034. There are no plans to replace the Adkins pre-K
The intervenors are right. Sixteen years is just too long to make the children attending Taylor, about 70% of whom are black, and Bayou Meto, more than 80% of whom are white, wait for facilities that are equal to other JNPSD elementary schools, especially the new one. The District's 2018 master plan contemplates phase II expansions in 2023-2025 in the new high school and middle school, based on projected enrollment growth. Needing more space will be a good problem to have. But fulfilling JNPSD's Plan 2000 commitment to equal facilities within its District must come first.
To its credit, JNPSD acknowledged and embraced this obligation at the trial. The District pledged to replace Taylor and Bayou Meto as quickly as possible. The District went further: it pledged to prioritize replacing those two elementary schools ahead of any expansions of the new high school or middle school. If JNPSD can't do all this at the same time, then it will build the new elementary facilities first. That commitment puts Taylor and Bayou Meto on track for replacement in about eight years.
JNPSD's plan is extraordinary. Within approximately a dozen years of its creation, the District will have built a new high school, a new middle school, and four new elementary schools. JNPSD's good faith is demonstrated by the plan itself and the progress already made. It's not just paper. The new elementary school has opened and the new high school will open next fall. Multi-purpose buildings have been added at Taylor and Bayou Meto because they're at the back of the line for complete replacement. Those buildings will be integrated into the replacement facilities. The community hitched up with a 7.6 mill increase in real property taxes. Arkansas is in harness, too, with substantial partnership program funding. Continued partnership funding, or some equivalent state assistance, is essential for JNPSD to meet its desegregation obligations through this solid and reasonable facilities plan. Both horses are necessary to pull this wagon home.
The Court is persuaded by the testimony from Mr. Tony Wood, Dr. Charles Stein, and Dr. Bryan Duffie about the finances involved on facilities in particular and in the District as a whole. Schools are much more than buildings, and it's essential to keep JNPSD healthy, financially and otherwise. Teachers and staff must be paid fair and competitive salaries. Equipment must be bought and maintained and replaced in due course. Facilities must be taken care of. Debt must be repaid. The Court is convinced that JNPSD's 2018 master facilities plan, as modified, keeps the District on path to do all these things, while also providing clean, safe, adequate, and—soon—equal facilities to all its students.
The Court therefore approves JNPSD's 2018 master plan with these modifications:
By July 1st each year starting in 2019, JNPSD must file a facilities report to the Court. For good cause, and in light of JNPSD's substantial partial compliance with its Plan 2000 § H facilities obligations, the Court releases the District from those obligations except to the extent provided in this Order. FED. R. CIV. P. 60(b)(5); see also Jenkins v. State of Missouri, 122 F.3d 588, 599-600 (8th Cir. 1997). If JNPSD implements and completes its 2018 master facilities plan, as modified, it will be unitary in facilities in approximately 2026. The Court looks forward to that day.
First, some general points. JNPSD is right about the first round of hiring. PCSSD drove the process for the 2015-2016 year, when the new District stood up. JNPSD Exhibit 9. The intervenors acknowledged in August 2015 that PCSSD, which still included JNPSD at that point, had a racially integrated workforce as a result of Plan 2000's implementation. N
The intervenors also make several counter-points about particular hiring decisions. For example, the dispute about who would initially fill one of the JNPSD assistant superintendent slots. The biracial interview committee recommended Dr. Janice Walker, a PCSSD principal, while then-JNPSD-superintendent Wood favored another top candidate, Bobby Lester Jr., an Arkansas Department of Education official. Walker is black; Lester is white. He is the son of a former PCSSD superintendent, Bobby Lester Sr., who served as JNPSD superintendent after Arkansas created the new District. Then-PCSSD-superintendent Dr. Jerry Guess stood firm for Dr. Walker based on a long-standing PCSSD practice: the biracial committee's recommendation was "the" hire. Wood didn't budge either. Intervenors Exhibit N
What about this specific result—does it, as the intervenors urge, undermine JNPSD's good faith in hiring decisions? No. For his part, Dr. Guess was simply staying in the traces, following the practice PCSSD had developed over many years, part of the larger process that had brought PCSSD very close at that point to agreed unitary status in hiring. On the other side, Woods's testimony convinced the Court: he supported the person he believed was the best overall candidate; race played no part in his decision. This was, it's clear, a logjam between two strong leaders, not race discrimination. Dr. Walker now serves as the founding principal of JNPSD's new Lester Elementary (named for Lester Sr.). And both current JNPSD assistant superintendents, Gregory Hodges and Dr. Tiffany Bone, are black.
Next, the intervenors emphasize that the first hiring process for department heads—transportation, maintenance, child nutrition, and the like—resulted in a mostly white group. The Court was convinced by the JNPSD testimony that experience drove these decisions. After standing up, this new District had to start sprinting toward the fall 2016 opening. The PCSSD-crafted hiring process was followed. Dr. Jeremy Owoh, JNPSD's original assistant superintendent for curriculum, instruction, and desegregation, was involved in all the details. The Court credits his testimony that none of JNPSD's hiring decisions about the first department heads was race-based.
The intervenors also criticize Dr. Duffie's hiring of Ms. Amy Arnone (a white applicant) instead of Ms. Tammy Knowlton (a black applicant) to be his executive assistant. There was, however, a racially diverse
Last, the intervenors emphasize and criticize JNPSD's "three-finalists" procedure for district-level administrators and department heads, and the "preferred candidate plus an alternate" for teachers and other staff—changes from PCSSD's drill. JNPSD Exhibit 1 at 113 & Exhibit 87. This policy apparently grew out of the assistant superintendent conflict. And the intervenors say it's a retreat from Plan 2000's biracial interview committees and the bolded check mark by the candidate recommended by one of those committees for a vacant slot. Both parties have hold of some truth here: Plan 2000 doesn't require either the biracial committees or following one of those committee's recommendation; both practices are embedded, though, in PCSSD's culture from decades of efforts to achieve unitary status in hiring. E.g., Humphries v. Pulaski County Special School District, 580 F.3d 688, 696 (8th Cir. 2009). The whole truth is that JNPSD's change is marginal, not nuclear. JNPSD's adoption of the general framework built over the years by PCSSD is salutary. It shows good faith in complying with Plan 2000. Vesting greater ultimate authority in the superintendent for selecting those who run each school, and the central staff, is also reasonable in a smaller district such as JNPSD. Having an alternate finalist in school-level hires is likewise reasonable. And these changes in the PCSSD-crafted Plan 2000 custom do not break faith with what the Plan mandates.
With these general points addressed, the Court turns to Plan 2000 § L's particulars.
Though the results of all this don't answer the substantial-compliance question, they're illuminating. JNPSD's superintendent is white; both assistant superintendents are black; most of the dozen or so non-academic department heads (the superintendent's cabinet) are white; and the twenty principals and assistant principals are of both races. These circumstances are a long way from the days of white-only school leaders.
In sum, JNPSD is unitary in recruiting a diverse applicant pool for vacant administrative positions.
The JNPSD witnesses spoke as one: there is no upper limit on the number of black teachers. The Court believes this testimony. The Court sees no evidence of any policy, practice, or custom aimed at limiting the proportion of black teachers. The Court sees no JNPSD policy, practice, or custom that effectively does so, either.
Dr. Owoh, Dr. Bone, and those working with them have been vigilant about the hiring process. The applicant pools have been diverse. As JNPSD pointed out, it re-posted three academic positions (gifted and talented teacher, math coordinator, and special education director), as well as a building nurse slot, to get more diverse applicant pools. The biracial committee process has been followed. The intervenors were critical of JNPSD's documentation about recruiting and applicant pools. The Court concludes, though, that the District's records were adequate. Little Rock School District v. Arkansas, 664 F.3d at 747. Documents are helpful. No doubt they facilitate intervenors' monitoring. But they're a means, not an end. The Court credits the testimony of Dr. Owoh, Ms. Williams, Dr. Bone, and Ms. Knowlton about their recruiting and hiring work. It's clear, also, that JNPSD is monitoring the demographics of its teachers and staff and, where needed, promoting diversity in applicant pools. Ms. Knowlton specifically testified about nudging principals during the hiring process. This is precisely the kind of awareness, and resulting consideration of race, that § L requires. There are no quotas and there can be none. But, as the Humprhies case teaches, race has been in the mix—as part of Plan 2000's purpose to remedy the effects of past discrimination. JNPSD has complied in good faith with its obligation to recruit racially diverse pools of applicants for vacant teacher positions. No more Court supervision is required in that area.
The same is true for assigning teachers in these areas. In the first round of hiring, as Williams testified, JNPSD sought at least one black teacher in each primary grade and secondary core area at each school. The District continues to monitor those assignments and prompt principals as needed. JNPSD Exhibit 25. Knowlton's
Where the District has fallen short is on incentives. The testimony from Ms. Williams, Dr. Owoh, Dr. Bone, and Ms. Knowlton established the challenges of recruiting qualified black applicants in these areas and retaining them. Adopting a front-loaded salary schedule was a good step. JNPSD's tuition-reimbursement program for current teachers, which started in 2016-2017, is another commendable commitment. No black JNPSD teacher, though, has taken advantage of it. Four non-black teachers have. Why? The Court doesn't know. But the Court is confident that the District (working through Dr. Duffie, Dr. Bone, Ms. Knowlton, and others) can answer the question and adjust the program to increase minority participation. As best the Court can tell, no other incentives to get and keep black teachers in pre-K, primary, and secondary core areas are in place. To become unitary on this last aspect of staffing, JNPSD must fill this gap. Something like PCSSD's hiring-incentives fund (adjusted down, of course, to account for JNPSD's more modest resources) is one possibility. When you read the word "incentives," money comes to mind. But, in the Court's experience, those who give their lives to teaching our children are motivated by many things other than money. The Court encourages JNPSD to investigate, experiment with creative alternatives, and document what works and what doesn't. These kinds of efforts will demonstrate good faith in substantially complying with the incentive slice of JNPSD's § L(3) obligations. The District will remain under Court supervision solely on this part of § L(3); it is unitary on all the other parts. Based on the good faith JNPSD has shown so far in staffing, the Court anticipates unitary status on this narrow (but important) part of § L(3) within a year or two.
Motion, N
So Ordered.