United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 03-2415
SAMANTHA J. COMFORT, ET AL.,
Plaintiffs, Appellants,
v.
LYNN SCHOOL COMMITTEE, ET AL.,
Defendants, Appellees.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
[Hon. Nancy Gertner, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Boudin, Chief Judge,
Torruella, Selya, Lipez, and Howard, Circuit Judges.
Michael Williams, with whom Robert J. Roughsedge, Chester
Darling, and Citizens for the Preservation of Constitutional Rights
were on brief, for plaintiffs.
Sharon L. Browne on brief for Pacific Legal Foundation, amicus
curiae.
Richard W. Cole, Assistant Attorney General, with whom Thomas
F. Reilly, Attorney General, and John R. Hitt, Assistant Attorney
General, were on brief, for state defendants.
James P. Lamanna, Assistant City Solicitor, and John C. Mihos
on consolidated brief for municipal defendants.
Edward J. Barshak and Sugarman, Rogers, Barshak & Cohen, P.C.
on brief for Asian-American Lawyers Association of Massachusetts,
Boston Bar Association, Community Change, Inc., Fair Housing Center
of Greater Boston, Jewish Alliance for Law and Social Action, New
England Area Conference of the NAACP, and Greater Boston Civil
Rights Coalition, amici curiae.
Patricia A. Brannan, Maree Sneed, and Hogan & Hartson, LLP on
brief for Council of the Great City Schools, American Association
of School Administrators, National Association of Secondary School
Principals, National Education Association, National School Boards
Association and Public Education Network, amici curiae.
Nathalie F.P. Gilfoyle, General Counsel, Lindsay Childress-
Beatty, Deputy General Counsel, David W. Ogden, and Wilmer, Cutler,
Pickering, Hale and Dorr, LLP on brief for American Psychological
Association, amicus curiae.
Theodore M. Shaw, Director-Counsel, Norman J. Chachkin, and
Chin Quang Le on brief for Northshore Branch of the NAACP, NAACP
Legal Defense & Educ. Fund, Inc., Lawyers' Comm. for Civil Right of
the Boston Bar Association, and various individuals, amici curiae.
Donna Brewer MacKenna and Casner & Edwards, LLP on brief for
Lynn Business Education Foundation and Lynn Business Partnership,
Inc., amici curiae.
Thomas Miller, Attorney General (Iowa), Eliot Spitzer,
Attorney General (New York), Caitlin J. Halligan, Solicitor General
(New York), Michelle Aronowitz, Deputy Solicitor General (New
York), Natalie R. Williams, Deputy Bureau Chief, and Hilary B.
Klein, Assistant Attorney General (New York), G. Steven Rowe,
Attorney General (Maine), and Mark L. Shurtleff, Attorney General
(Utah), on brief for States of Iowa, New York, Maine, and Utah,
amici curiae.
Thomas J. Henderson, Derek Black, Harris J. Yale, Bernadette
McCann Ezring, Samantha G. Fisherman, Virginia Johnson, and Weil,
Gotshal & Manges, LLP on brief for Lawyers' Comm. for Civil Rights
Under Law, amicus curiae.
David B. Broughel and Day, Berry & Howard, LLP on brief for
Mass. Coalition for Equitable Educ., Mass. Teachers Ass'n, Mass.
Fed'n of Teachers, Mass. Ass'n of Sch. Superintendents, Metro
Council for Educ. Opportunity, Inc., Center for Law and Educ.,
Citizens for Pub. Sch., Mass. Ass'n of Hispanic Attorneys, League
of Women Voters of Mass., Mass. Law Reform Inst., Alliance for High
Standards NOT High Stakes, Schott Center for Public and Early
Educ., Nat'l Center for Fair & Open Testing, and Progressive Jewish
Alliance, amici curiae.
Angelo N. Ancheta on brief for Civil Rights Project at Harvard
Univ., amicus curiae.
June 16, 2005
Opinion En Banc
LIPEZ, Circuit Judge. This appeal requires us to review
certain features of a voluntary plan designed to achieve the
educational benefits of racial diversity in the public schools of
Lynn, Massachusetts ("Lynn Plan" or "Plan"). The Plan addresses
resource allocation, curricula, and other aspects of the classroom
experience. Relevant to this appeal, it also controls school
assignments and transfers. Under the Plan, each student is
entitled to attend his or her neighborhood school. Students who do
not wish to attend their neighborhood school may apply to transfer
to another school. Approval of a transfer depends, in large part,
on the requesting student's race and the racial makeup of the
transferor and transferee schools.
Parents whose children were denied transfers on race-
conscious grounds challenged the transfer provisions of the Lynn
Plan, claiming, inter alia, that the provisions violate the
Fourteenth Amendment Equal Protection Clause. The district court
rejected the parents' challenges and upheld the Plan. A panel of
this court reversed, finding that the Plan was not narrowly
tailored to the defendants' compelling interest in achieving the
benefits of educational diversity. We granted review en banc and
now affirm.
Our review of the equal protection challenge is informed
by the Supreme Court's recent decisions regarding affirmative
action in higher education, Grutter v. Bollinger, 539 U.S. 306
-3-
(2003), and Gratz v. Bollinger, 539 U.S. 244 (2003). We conclude,
based on those cases, that Lynn has a compelling interest in
securing the educational benefits of racial diversity. Applying
the analytic framework set forth in Grutter and Gratz to the
context of a K-12, non-competitive transfer plan, we hold that the
Lynn Plan is narrowly tailored to meet this compelling interest.
The plaintiffs assert a number of other claims as well.
We do not reach the merits of their facial challenge to the
Massachusetts Racial Imbalance Act, which fails for lack of
standing. We treat the plaintiffs' federal statutory claims as
foreclosed by our equal protection ruling and reject their
challenge to the Plan under Article 111 of the Massachusetts
Declaration of Rights. Finally, we conclude that the district
court properly denied the plaintiffs' motion for recusal.
I. Background
This case comes to us with a rich factual background,
described in detail in a series of district court rulings. See
Comfort v. Lynn Sch. Comm., 283 F. Supp. 2d 328 (D. Mass. 2003)
(Comfort IV); Comfort v. Lynn Sch. Comm., 150 F. Supp. 2d 285 (D.
Mass. 2001) (Comfort III); Comfort v. Lynn Sch. Comm., 131 F. Supp.
2d 253 (D. Mass. 2001) (Comfort II); Comfort v. Lynn Sch. Comm.,
100 F. Supp. 2d 57 (D. Mass. 2000) (Comfort I). We set forth only
those facts necessary to put this case into context, drawing upon
the largely unchallenged findings of the district court.
-4-
A. Lynn Public Schools
Lynn is the ninth-largest city in Massachusetts, with a
population of approximately 89,000. At all relevant times, its
school system has been neighborhood-centered, entitling students to
attend their local schools as a matter of right. By the mid-1970s,
several of Lynn's schools were experiencing significant racial
imbalance. In 1977, for example, the Washington Community
Elementary School had a nonwhite student population of 57%, more
than six times the nonwhite percentage in the school system as a
whole. Predominantly nonwhite schools suffered disproportionately
from resource shortages, overcrowding, discipline problems, and
teacher apathy. The school system was plagued by high absentee
rates, racial tension, and low test scores.
In an effort to combat these problems, Lynn established
its first magnet school in 1979. At the same time, it inaugurated
a voluntary transfer program aimed at attracting white students to
that school (which apparently was located in a predominantly
nonwhite area of the city). The magnet school was only modestly
successful in alleviating racial imbalance.
In the meantime, Lynn was undergoing a demographic shift.
Between 1980 and 2000, the city went from being 93% white to 63%
white, with the school-age population becoming more than half
nonwhite by 2000. Residential segregation by race increased during
-5-
this period as whites clustered in the northern and western areas
of Lynn and nonwhites concentrated in its south-central region.
Because of the neighborhood school system, these
residential patterns heightened the racial imbalance of Lynn's
schools. By 1987, seven of eighteen elementary schools had white
enrollments of 90% or more, while four others had predominantly
nonwhite student bodies. Lynn responded by developing a plan to
launch ten magnet schools,1 but city leaders did not believe that
the magnet program, on its own, would effectively combat the
growing racial imbalance. In September 1989, the Lynn School
Committee ("Lynn") adopted the Plan that is the subject of this
litigation.2
B. The Lynn Plan
The defendants describe the Lynn Plan as a voluntary plan
for school improvement and the elimination of minority isolation.
The Plan begins with the premise that every child is entitled to
attend his or her neighborhood school. Race is taken into account
1
Ordinarily, the label "magnet school" describes an elite
public school with a competitive admissions policy. Lynn's magnet
schools, however, do not use a competitive admissions policy.
Rather, Lynn uses the term for schools that feature an educational
theme beyond the standard curriculum, designed partially to attract
cross-neighborhood transfers. Examples of such themes include
"Life Science" and "Reading and Writing Literary and Whole
Language." Despite this specialization the parties have stipulated
that "the education provided . . . in each of the elementary,
middle, and high schools in Lynn is comparable in quality,
resources[,] and curriculum."
2
The Plan was amended in 1990 and again in 1999.
-6-
only when a student seeks to transfer to a school other than his or
her neighborhood school.
Lynn operates eighteen elementary schools (six of which
are magnets), four middle schools (three of which have magnet
programs), and three high schools.3 In the 2001-02 school year,
15,444 students were enrolled in the Lynn public schools. Out of
this group, approximately 42% of students were white, 15% African-
American, 29% Hispanic, and 14% Asian (for a total "minority" or
nonwhite population of roughly 58%).
For purposes of the Lynn Plan, schools are placed in one
of three categories. A "racially balanced" school is one in which
the percentage of nonwhite students falls within a set range of the
overall proportion of minorities in Lynn's student population. The
range is +/- 15% for elementary schools and +/- 10% for other
schools. For example, an elementary school with between 43% and
73% nonwhite students during the 2001-02 school year was considered
racially balanced, as was a middle or high school that had a
nonwhite enrollment of 48% to 68%. In the 2001-02 school year,
nine of Lynn's elementary schools, one of its middle schools, and
all three of its high schools were racially balanced.
3
Lynn also operates six alternative schools, offering such
things as special needs education and vocational training. These
schools are not subject to the transfer provisions of the Lynn
Plan.
-7-
If a school's nonwhite population falls below the
racially balanced range (i.e., if the percentage of nonwhite
students in 2001-02 fell below 43% for an elementary school or 48%
for a middle or high school), it is "racially isolated."
Conversely, a school whose nonwhite population rises above the
racially balanced range (i.e., over 73% for an elementary school or
68% for a middle or high school) is considered "racially
imbalanced." In 2001-02, five of Lynn's elementary schools and one
of its middle schools were classified as racially isolated, while
four elementary schools and two middle schools were racially
imbalanced.
The transfer policy is straightforward. Space
permitting, a student whose neighborhood school is racially
balanced may transfer to another racially balanced school without
regard to race. Because all three of Lynn's high schools are
currently racially balanced, for example, students may transfer
freely among them. Students are also permitted to make
"desegregative" transfers. That is, a white student may transfer
out of a racially isolated school and into a racially imbalanced
school (i.e., to a school with a lower percentage of white
students), and a nonwhite student may transfer out of a racially
imbalanced school and into a racially isolated school (i.e., to a
school with a lower percentage of nonwhite students). By contrast,
absent certain exceptions, students may not make "segregative"
-8-
transfers. A segregative transfer is one that would exacerbate
racial imbalance in the sending or receiving school (i.e., a white
student may not transfer to a racially isolated school, and a
nonwhite student may not transfer to a racially imbalanced
school).4
A student whose transfer request is denied is entitled to
appeal. Roughly half of all appeals are granted. Common grounds
for successful appeals are medical and safety concerns, daycare
issues, and other types of hardship. Appeals will also be granted
when the denial would result in siblings attending different
schools. The Plan is implemented by the Parent Information Center
("PIC"), which processes all admissions and transfers, works with
parents on appeals, and monitors enrollment and racial composition
of individual schools and the district in general.
As the plaintiffs point out, the Lynn Plan can result in
unequal treatment based on race. Consider, for example, two
children, one white and one African-American, who are initially
assigned to the same neighborhood elementary school for the 2001-02
school year. The school is racially isolated (i.e., less than 43%
minority). Both children request a transfer to a nearby school
that is racially imbalanced (i.e., greater than 73% minority).
4
Any student who qualifies as "multi-racial" is not subject to
the race-conscious transfer limits.
-9-
Under the Plan, the white student will be permitted to transfer,
and the African-American student will not.
Although the race-conscious transfer policy is the focus
of this appeal, the Lynn Plan also includes numerous other
provisions aimed at improving the quality of all schools in the
district. It calls for curricular programs and teacher training
designed to foster cross-racial understanding and reduce racial
tension. It also implemented a standardized curriculum throughout
Lynn's schools; developed performance indicators for schools,
programs and students; took measures to improve student attendance;
and created business/college partnerships with schools to improve
the quality of instruction. Finally, the Plan envisions a
construction program to upgrade school facilities and alleviate
overcrowding.
All parties agree that Lynn's public schools have
improved markedly since the Plan's inception, although they dispute
which aspects of the Plan are responsible for this improvement. In
any event, students' standardized test scores have increased,
absentee levels have decreased, and racial tensions have diminished
under the Plan.
C. The Racial Imbalance Act
The Racial Imbalance Act ("RIA"), Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 15,
§§ 1I, 1J, 1K; id. ch. 71, §§ 37C, 37D, directs the Massachusetts
Board of Education to remedy de facto segregation in the public
-10-
schools throughout the state. See Sch. Comm. of Boston v. Bd. of
Educ., 227 N.E.2d 729, 732 (Mass. 1967). The legislature enacted
the RIA in response to findings that dramatic levels of racial
imbalance in the public schools threatened to harm students'
educational opportunities. See id. at 733-34. The RIA has two
main effects: it authorizes the Board to fund voluntary efforts to
improve racial balance, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 15, § 1I, and it allows
the Board to require that school districts adopt integration plans
in certain circumstances, id. ch. 71, § 37D.
The Lynn school system has received significant state aid
under the voluntary provisions of the RIA. These funds have helped
pay for new construction and school renovations.5 Lynn also
receives a state stipend of $500 for each desegregative student
transfer, and the state defrays certain costs associated with
cross-neighborhood transportation and the creation of magnet
schools.
D. Procedural History
In 1999, the parents of children who had been denied
transfers under the Lynn Plan ("Comfort plaintiffs") brought a
civil action against the Lynn School Committee, its individual
members, and several governmental officials. They claimed that the
5
Before 2001, the RIA provided reimbursement for school
construction and renovations undertaken for the purpose of reducing
racial imbalance. The law has been amended to change this funding
structure, but that amendment applies prospectively and does not
affect Lynn's state funding.
-11-
Lynn Plan and the RIA violate the Fourteenth Amendment Equal
Protection Clause, several federal civil rights statutes, and
Article 111 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights. The
Commonwealth intervened as a party defendant for the limited
purpose of defending the RIA. See 28 U.S.C. § 2403(b). The
district court denied a motion to preliminarily enjoin the race-
conscious aspects of the Lynn Plan, see Comfort I, 100 F. Supp. 2d
at 59-60, and dismissed several of the plaintiffs' claims, see
Comfort III, 150 F. Supp. 2d at 289, 296-97, 302; Comfort II, 131
F. Supp. 2d at 254, 256. Only one of the original Comfort
plaintiffs remains in the case. Other parents ("Bollen
plaintiffs") then filed a second action that included the Comfort
plaintiffs' claims, as well as other statutory claims. The Bollen
plaintiffs also added as defendants the members of the Board of
Education in their official capacities. The district court
consolidated the two cases.
Following an eleven-day bench trial, the district court
issued a lengthy opinion dismissing a number of the Bollen
plaintiffs' claims on standing grounds. Comfort IV, 283 F. Supp.
2d at 361-63. It rejected the facial attack on the RIA, id. at
366-68, and determined that the Plan's transfer provisions are
narrowly tailored to several compelling state interests, and thus
constitutional. Id. at 375-92. The court also rejected the
plaintiffs' remaining federal statutory claims, treating the
-12-
statutory provisions as co-extensive with the Equal Protection
Clause. Id. at 392-93. Finally, the court held that the transfer
provisions of the Lynn Plan did not violate Article 111 of the
Massachusetts Declaration of Rights. Id. at 393-400.
A panel of this court reversed, holding that the Plan
could not the survive strict scrutiny review required by the Equal
Protection Clause. Relying on the Supreme Court's decision in
Grutter upholding a race-conscious admissions policy at the
University of Michigan Law School, the panel recognized a
compelling interest in "obtaining the educational benefits of a
racially diverse student body." Comfort v. Lynn Sch. Comm., No.
03-2415, slip op. at 30 (1st Cir. Oct. 20, 2004), withdrawn by 2004
WL 2348505 (1st Cir. Nov. 24, 2004). It concluded, however, that
the Plan is not narrowly tailored to that interest because it uses
race "mechanically" and "forgoes individualized consideration of
transfer applications." Id. at 40. The panel also cited other
narrow tailoring flaws, including the Plan's breadth and indefinite
duration. We granted en banc rehearing and now affirm.6
II. Standing
"[T]he general rule is that a court should first confirm
the existence of rudiments such as jurisdiction and standing before
tackling the merits of a controverted case." Berner v. Delahanty,
6
We express our appreciation to the many amici curiae for
their valuable assistance.
-13-
129 F.3d 20, 23 (1st Cir. 1997). This is because "standing is a
necessary concomitant to the court's power to adjudicate a case."
R.I. Ass'n of Realtors v. Whitehouse, 199 F.3d 26, 30 (1st Cir.
1999). Thus, we begin by considering the plaintiffs' standing.
To establish standing in federal court, a party must
demonstrate three things:
First, the plaintiff must have suffered an "injury in
fact" -- an invasion of a legally protected interest
which is (a) concrete and particularized, and (b) actual
or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical. Second,
there must be a causal connection between the injury and
the conduct complained of -- the injury has to be fairly
traceable to the challenged action of the defendant, and
not the result of the independent action of some third
party not before the court. Third, it must be likely, as
opposed to merely speculative, that the injury will be
redressed by a favorable decision.
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 560-61 (1992)
(citations and internal quotation marks omitted). The plaintiffs
must have standing to obtain both forms of relief they seek: an
injunction against the race-conscious aspects of the Plan and a
declaration that the RIA is facially unconstitutional. See Friends
of the Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw Envtl. Servs. (TOC), Inc., 528 U.S.
167, 185 (2000).
With respect to the Lynn Plan, one Bollen plaintiff (Gina
Leone) clearly meets the threshold standing requirement. Leone
sues on behalf of her minor son, Troy Lamothe, whose transfer
request was denied on the ground that it would be segregative. The
fact that Troy was allowed to attend the school of his choice
-14-
pending the outcome of this litigation does not defeat standing.
See Nat'l Amusements, Inc. v. Town of Dedham, 43 F.3d 731, 735 n.3
(1st Cir. 1995) (accepting plaintiff's standing despite agreement
not to enforce disputed ordinance pending outcome of litigation).
So long as one plaintiff has standing to seek a particular form of
global relief, the court need not address the standing of other
plaintiffs seeking the same relief. See Watt v. Energy Action
Educ. Found., 454 U.S. 151, 160 (1981); Houlton Citizens' Coalition
v. Town of Houlton, 175 F.3d 178, 183 (1st Cir. 1999).
Standing to seek injunctive or declaratory relief against
the RIA is a different matter. The parties stipulated, and the
district court confirmed, that the mandatory portion of the RIA
(i.e., the provision under which the Board of Education can require
a district to adopt a plan to reduce racial imbalance) has not been
applied to Lynn. Comfort IV, 283 F. Supp. 2d at 367. The
plaintiffs nevertheless launch a facial attack against the RIA's
mandatory provisions, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 71, § 37D, contending
that they offend the Fourteenth Amendment Equal Protection Clause
and Article 111 of the Massachusetts Constitution by giving white
children a right to transfer out of isolated schools and nonwhite
children a right to transfer out of imbalanced schools, but not
vice versa (i.e., white children cannot transfer out of imbalanced
schools and nonwhite children cannot transfer out of isolated
schools). Even if that is true in theory, the plaintiffs cannot
-15-
overcome the fact that only a person who was denied a transfer on
the basis of the mandatory provisions of the RIA has standing to
challenge them.
The mandatory provisions of § 37D apply only to school
districts that refuse to create voluntary plans to combat
identified racial imbalance. See Sch. Comm. of Springfield v. Bd.
of Educ., 319 N.E.2d 427, 429 (Mass. 1974). Lynn never refused to
take action; rather, it drafted and implemented a voluntary plan.
The plaintiffs therefore have not suffered a cognizable injury from
§ 37D of the RIA.7 Accordingly, they lack standing to seek a
declaration as to its validity.
The plaintiffs also lack standing to seek injunctive or
declaratory relief against the RIA provisions that offer incentives
to districts that voluntarily adopt plans to combat racial
imbalance. See Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 15, §§ 1I, 1J, 1K; id. ch. 71,
§ 37C. Redressability, one of the prerequisites for standing, see
N.H. Right to Life PAC v. Gardner, 99 F.3d 8, 13 (1st Cir. 1996),
requires a substantial likelihood that the relief sought will in
fact remedy the alleged injury, Bonas v. Town of N. Smithfield, 265
F. 3d 69, 73 n.4 (1st Cir. 2001). Plaintiffs describe their injury
as both a racially-based denial of transfers and the stigma of
their inability to "compete" on equal terms for transfers. Even
7
Nor have the plaintiffs shown that they are under any
imminent threat of being subjected to these mandates.
-16-
assuming arguendo that this asserted injury is somehow traceable to
the RIA, the plaintiffs cannot show that an injunction against the
RIA's incentive provisions will lead to racially unrestricted
transfers within the Lynn public schools or eliminate the perceived
stigmatic harm.
This point is apparent from the record. Under the terms
of the RIA, Lynn has received state funding for construction and
busing based on its voluntary efforts to combat racial imbalance.
Even if we directed the Board to distribute aid without regard to
racial balancing efforts, the plaintiffs have not demonstrated that
redress would likely follow. There is no reason to believe that
Lynn would cancel its transfer program merely because state funding
was no longer contingent on it.
In an effort to sustain their claim, the plaintiffs and
amicus Pacific Legal Foundation also present a second theory for
prospective relief. They assert that the incentive provisions of
the RIA are effectively mandatory because they coerce school
districts to adopt race-conscious plans by tying state aid to the
adoption of those plans. There is a flaw in this argument. While
the RIA's incentive provisions reward schools that address racial
imbalance, they do not dictate a procedure or methodology by which
schools must do so. See Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 15, § 1I; id. ch. 71,
§ 37C. Given the absence of a requirement that schools adopt race-
conscious plans to comply with the RIA, the plaintiffs have not
-17-
shown that the incentive provisions of the RIA are causally
responsible for the voluntary adoption of race-conscious transfer
policies.
Even if the plaintiffs did have standing to mount a
facial challenge to the voluntary provisions of the RIA, we agree
with the district court that such a challenge would fail. Comfort
IV, 283 F. Supp. 2d at 367-68. "A facial challenge to a
legislative Act is . . . the most difficult challenge to mount
successfully, since the challenger must establish that no set of
circumstances exists under which the Act would be valid." United
States v. Salerno, 481 U.S. 739, 745 (1987). Such circumstances
exist here. As the district court recognized, "[a] school district
may theoretically adopt a plan that improves racial imbalance
without explicitly introducing race-based criteria at all."
Comfort IV, 283 F. Supp. 2d at 367-68 & n.77 (noting that "if a
small district with racially identifiable school attendance zones
built a single central elementary, middle, and high school to
absorb its entire enrolled student populations, this strategy would
qualify as a racial balancing plan under the RIA, and it would not
trigger any equal protection scrutiny"); see also Boston's Children
First v. Boston Sch. Comm., 260 F. Supp. 2d 318, 327 (D. Mass.
2003) (finding that the RIA's goals may be satisfied by race-
neutral methods), aff'd sub nom. Anderson v. City of Boston, 375
F.3d 71 (1st Cir. 2004).
-18-
III. Federal Equal Protection Claims
The main issue on appeal is the constitutionality of the
Lynn Plan's race-conscious transfer restrictions. The plaintiffs
contend that by mechanically taking race into account, the Plan
violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment
and various federal civil rights statutes. The resolution of the
federal statutory claims depends on the fate of the constitutional
challenge. See infra Part III.D. Consequently, we focus on the
equal protection issue.
A. Standard of Review
We review the court's findings of fact for clear error
and its legal conclusions, including its application of the law to
the facts, de novo. See Wessmann v. Gittens, 160 F.3d 790, 795
(1st Cir. 1998).
The Supreme Court has reviewed racial classifications
under the strict scrutiny standard, which requires that the policy
be narrowly tailored to a compelling state interest. Grutter, 539
U.S. at 326; Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Pena, 515 U.S. 200, 227
(1995). The defendants urge us to apply a more relaxed standard
here. They emphasize that although the Plan is race-conscious, it
is unlike affirmative action because it affects whites and
nonwhites equally.
This argument is foreclosed by the Supreme Court's recent
decision in Johnson v. California, 125 S. Ct. 1141 (2005). There,
-19-
the Court considered an unwritten policy of the California
Department of Corrections whereby inmates are segregated by race
for up to sixty days after entering a new correctional facility.
Rejecting the State's argument that its policy should be subjected
to relaxed scrutiny because it "neither benefits nor burdens one
group or individual more than any other group or individual," id.
at 1147, the Court explained that all racial classifications
raise special fears that they are motivated by an
invidious purpose. Thus, we have admonished time and
again that, "[a]bsent searching judicial inquiry into the
justification for such race-based measures, there is
simply no way of determining . . . what classifications
are in fact motivated by illegitimate notions of racial
inferiority or simple racial politics." Richmond v. J.A.
Croson Co., 488 U.S. 469, 493 (1989) (plurality opinion).
We therefore apply strict scrutiny to all racial
classifications to smoke out illegitimate uses of race by
assuring that [government] is pursuing a goal important
enough to warrant use of a highly suspect tool.
Id. at 1146 (internal quotation marks omitted). This rule applies
in the present context just as firmly. The Plan must be reviewed
under strict scrutiny.
This standard is not "strict in theory, but fatal in
fact." Id. at 1151; see also Grutter, 539 U.S. at 326-27
("Although all governmental uses of race are subject to strict
scrutiny, not all are invalidated by it."). Strict scrutiny "is
designed to provide a framework for carefully examining the
importance and the sincerity of the reasons advanced by the
governmental decisionmaker for the use of race in that particular
context." Grutter, 539 U.S. at 327. We therefore bear in mind the
-20-
court's admonition that "[c]ontext matters when reviewing race-
based governmental action under the Equal Protection Clause." Id.
B. Compelling State Interest
Until recently, there was some question as to whether
diversity could constitute a compelling interest in the educational
context. See Wessmann, 160 F.3d at 795-96. The Supreme Court has
now answered that question in the affirmative, holding in Grutter
that a law school's interest in obtaining the educational benefits
that flow from a diverse student body was compelling enough to
justify the narrowly tailored use of race in admissions. 539 U.S.
at 343.
Grutter involved a challenge to the University of
Michigan Law School's admissions policy, which took into account
racial and ethnic background as one of several "soft variables"
used in assessing applicants. Id. at 315. The Law School
justified this strategy as furthering its goal of assembling a
class that was both "exceptionally . . . qualified and broadly
diverse." Id. at 329. It also sought to enroll a "critical mass"
of minority students, thereby enhancing its quest for broad
diversity. Id. at 330.
The Grutter Court stressed that the Law School's plan did
not pursue a critical mass of minority students for its own sake,
but rather for the sake of obtaining the educational benefits that
flow from having a racially diverse student body. Id. at 329-30
-21-
(acknowledging that racial balancing for its own sake is
unconstitutional). These educational benefits include promoting
cross-racial understanding, breaking down stereotypes, fostering
livelier and better informed class discussions, and preparing
students to succeed in an increasingly diverse society. Id. at
330. The Court largely deferred to the Law School's educational
judgment not only in determining that diversity would produce these
benefits, but also in determining that these benefits were critical
to the school's educational mission. Id. at 328-33. The Court
warned, however, that "scrutiny of the interest asserted by the Law
School is no less strict for taking into account complex
educational judgments in an area that lies primarily within the
expertise of the university." Id. at 328. Nevertheless, the Court
concluded that the pursuit of these benefits constituted a
compelling state interest. Id. In so ruling, it recognized "the
overriding importance of [education in] preparing students for work
and citizenship." Id. at 331.
Against this background, we consider the interest that
Lynn's race-conscious Plan seeks to advance. This is not a case
where the racial classification is aimed at remedying past
segregation. See Comfort IV, 283 F. Supp. 2d at 390 n.101.
Rather, the parties stipulated that Lynn's interests
include fostering integrated public schools and what Lynn
believes are [their] positive effects; reducing minority
isolation and avoiding segregation and what Lynn believes
are their negative effects; promoting a positive racial
-22-
climate at schools and a safe and healthy school
environment; fostering a cohesive and tolerant community
in Lynn; promoting diversity; ensuring equal education
and life opportunities and increasing the quality of
education for all students.
The district court grouped these interests into two
categories: (i) reaping the educational benefits that flow from
having a racially diverse student body in each of Lynn's public
schools, and (ii) avoiding the negative educational consequences
that accompany racial isolation.
Although there are some differences between these
interests, we conclude that they are essentially two sides of the
same coin. The negative consequences of racial isolation that Lynn
seeks to avoid and the benefits of diversity that it hopes to
achieve are rooted in the same central idea: that all students are
better off in racially diverse schools. We therefore restate the
interests at stake here as obtaining the educational benefits of a
racially diverse student body.
Lynn maintains that ensuring a racially diverse student
body in its schools has produced, and will continue to produce,
many of the same benefits cited by the Grutter Court: disarming
racial stereotypes, increasing racial tolerance, and preparing
students to live and work in an increasingly multi-racial society.
The defendants' expert evidence also suggests that racially
isolated students often feel psychological burdens that can lead to
poor attendance and academic woes, and that these effects can be
-23-
combated by racial integration. Consistent with these assertions,
Lynn's schools have indeed experienced many positive developments
-- including higher attendance rates, declining suspension rates,
a safer environment, and improved standardized test scores -- since
the Plan's inception.
In Lynn's view, these developments can be explained by
the intergroup contact theory. This theory holds that "under
certain conditions, interaction between students of different races
promotes empathy, understanding, positive racial attitudes[,] and
the disarming of stereotypes." Comfort IV, 283 F. Supp. 2d at 356.
Under the intergroup contact theory, there are four basic
conditions for success: (1) equal status among racial groups, (2)
the presence of teachers and staff trained to facilitate
interactions between members of different groups, (3) common goals
and cooperative activities, and (4) opportunities for personalized
contact with a sufficient number of children from different racial
groups to disrupt stereotypes. Id. at 356-57.
Lynn's experts explained that meaningful intergroup
contact (the fourth condition of intergroup contact theory)
requires that a school have a "critical mass" of students of each
group, i.e., white and nonwhite. Id. at 357. Lynn's experts also
testified, and the district court found, that the benefits of
intergroup contact continue to accrue as a school becomes
increasingly diverse. Id. Citing this theory and crediting the
-24-
defense experts who explained its application in Lynn, the district
court agreed that there was a causal link between improvements in
the school system and increased racial diversity. Id. at 353-54.
While acknowledging improvements in the Lynn schools
since the Plan's inception, the plaintiffs disagree that these
changes can be attributed to the race-conscious aspect of the Lynn
Plan. More significantly, they also contend that regardless of
whether there are educational benefits to racial diversity, Lynn
does not have a compelling interest in achieving those benefits.
We disagree.
Lynn's transfer policy expressly aims at attaining racial
diversity in the city's schools. Where a community does not seek
racial diversity for its own sake, but rather to advance a
compelling interest in the educational benefits that diversity
provides, there is no absolute bar to pursuing racial diversity.
See Grutter, 539 U.S. at 330. The district court found that this
was Lynn's purpose, Comfort IV, 283 F. Supp. 2d at 375-76, and the
record supports that finding. We see no reason to second-guess it.
Cf. Grutter, 539 U.S. at 328 (stating that, typically, a school's
"educational judgment that . . . diversity is essential to its
educational mission is one to which we defer").
The plaintiffs assert that, unlike Grutter, this case
does not implicate a compelling interest that would justify the
pursuit of racial diversity. The admissions plan at issue in
-25-
Grutter strove for diversity along many axes, including race, in an
effort to create a student body with diverse viewpoints, thereby
enriching classroom discussion and academic experiences. See 539
U.S. at 329 ("As part of its goal of assembling a class that is
. . . broadly diverse, the Law School seeks to enroll a critical
mass of minority students." (internal quotation marks omitted)).
The plaintiffs contend that Grutter's recognition of a compelling
interest in "the educational benefits that flow from student body
diversity," 539 U.S. at 330, is thus limited to the benefits that
flow from viewpoint diversity in the higher education context and
does not extend to the benefits that flow from racial diversity in
the K-12 context.
Again, we disagree. Lynn's asserted interests bear a
strong familial resemblance to those that the Grutter Court found
compelling. There is no reason to believe that these interests are
advanced by viewpoint diversity but not racial diversity, or that
they are substantially stronger in the context of higher education
than in the context of elementary and secondary education. See
McFarland v. Jefferson Cty. Pub. Schs., 330 F. Supp. 2d 834, 852-53
(W.D. Ky. 2004) (reasoning that the benefits recognized in Grutter
also "accrue to students in racially integrated public schools");
cf. Plyler v. Doe, 457 U.S. 202, 221 (1982) (emphasizing the
importance of K-12 education "in maintaining the fabric of our
society"). In fact, there is significant evidence in the record
-26-
that the benefits of a racially diverse school are more compelling
at younger ages. See, e.g., Comfort IV, 283 F. Supp. 2d at 356
(summarizing expert's testimony that "[i]t is more difficult to
teach racial tolerance to college-age students; the time to do it
is when the students are still young, before they are locked into
racialized thinking").
The plaintiffs correctly point out that the benefits
attributed to the Lynn Plan are not identical to those described in
Grutter. But Grutter teaches that the compelling state interest in
diversity should be judged in relation to the educational benefits
that it seeks to produce. 539 U.S. at 330. The Lynn Plan uses
race in pursuit of many of the same benefits that were cited
approvingly by the Grutter Court, including breaking down racial
barriers, promoting cross-racial understanding, and preparing
students for a world in which "race unfortunately still matters."
Id. at 333.8 There are, of course, some variances between the
benefits sought. For example, the law school plan at issue in
Grutter focused on the advantages of viewpoint diversity in the
classroom, while Lynn emphasizes the positive impact of racial
diversity on student safety and attendance. But it is natural that
safety and attendance issues will loom larger in elementary and
secondary schools than in graduate schools. Conversely, lively
8
Notably, one of the studies that the Supreme Court cited as
demonstrating that diversity produces educational benefits was
authored by the defendants' expert in this case, Dr. Gary Orfield.
-27-
classroom discussion is a more central form of learning in law
schools (which prefer the Socratic method) than in a K-12 setting.
These differences do not negate a compelling interest in racial
diversity in a K-12 setting. Instead, they are the logical result
of context.
We are persuaded by the extensive expert testimony in the
record, rooted in observations specific to Lynn, that there are
significant educational benefits to be derived from a racially
diverse student body in the K-12 context. Lynn has a compelling
interest in obtaining those benefits. See Brewer v. W. Irondequoit
Cent. Sch. Dist., 212 F.3d 738, 752 (2d Cir. 2000); McFarland, 330
F. Supp. 2d at 855.
C. Narrow Tailoring
Recognizing that public schools have a compelling
interest in obtaining the educational benefits of racial diversity
does not give schools a blank check to adopt race-conscious
policies. Rather, the government's use of race must be narrowly
tailored to achieve its compelling interest. See Grutter, 539 U.S.
at 333. "The purpose of the narrow tailoring requirement is to
ensure that 'the means chosen 'fit' . . . th[e] compelling goal so
closely that there is little or no possibility that the motive for
the classification was illegitimate racial prejudice or
stereotype.'" Id. (quoting Richmond, 488 U.S. at 493).
-28-
Narrow tailoring generally requires the proponent to show
that a plan or practice is (i) necessary to the declared purpose,
(ii) proportional to the declared purpose, and (iii) not more
burdensome than necessary on third parties. See United States v.
Paradise, 480 U.S. 149, 171 (1987) (plurality opinion). It is a
context-specific inquiry that must be "calibrated to fit the
distinct issues raised" in a given case, taking "relevant
differences into account." Grutter, 539 U.S. at 334 (internal
quotation marks omitted).
Although the Supreme Court has not yet considered a
constitutional challenge to a voluntary race-based transfer policy
for elementary and secondary schools, its recent opinions in
Grutter and Gratz provide some guidance for our narrow tailoring
inquiry into the use of race to obtain the educational benefits of
diversity. Thus we consider these cases further.
1. Gratz and Grutter
Gratz involved a challenge to the University of
Michigan's undergraduate admissions program. The University
automatically assigned twenty points -- one-fifth of the 100 points
necessary to guarantee admission -- to an applicant from an
underrepresented racial or ethnic minority group. Gratz, 539 U.S.
at 255. This twenty-point bonus effectively made race/ethnicity
determinative for minimally qualified minority applicants. Id. at
272. Grutter involved a challenge to the University of Michigan
-29-
Law School's admissions policy. The Law School took race into
account as one of several variables in an individual's application.
Grutter, 539 U.S. at 340. It assigned no mechanical score based on
an applicant's race; instead, it considered race only as one of
several possible ways in which an applicant could enrich the
diversity of the student body. Id. at 315-16.
The Supreme Court struck down the undergraduate
admissions plan in Gratz while upholding the law school admissions
policy in Grutter. In arriving at these decisions, the Court
followed a four-part narrow tailoring inquiry. First, a race-
conscious program cannot institutionalize a quota system or
otherwise insulate one category of applicants from competition with
another solely because of race. Id.; Gratz, 539 U.S. at 334.
Second, the government must consider whether there are any
workable, race-neutral alternatives. Grutter, 539 U.S. at 339.
Third, the plan must not "unduly harm members of any racial group."
Id. at 341. Fourth, the use of racial distinctions must be limited
in time. Id. at 342.
Much of this inquiry is relevant here despite significant
differences between the competitive admissions plans at issue in
Gratz and Grutter and the Lynn Plan, which is non-competitive and
governs only student transfers, not initial assignments. The
requirement that the court consider race-neutral alternatives
addresses whether the Plan is necessary; if there were a race-
-30-
neutral way to achieve the benefits of diversity and reduced racial
isolation, the use of race would be unnecessary and therefore not
narrowly tailored. The requirements that a race-conscious policy
not unduly harm members of any racial group and that it be limited
in time minimize the scope of the Plan, ensuring that its use of
race is no broader than necessary. The weight of these
considerations may vary somewhat from the Grutter setting to ours,
but they remain applicable and we will return to them shortly.
The first Grutter criterion relating to competition,
however, is less useful to our narrow tailoring inquiry. The
University of Michigan admissions policies were designed to
"assemble a student body that is diverse in ways broader than
race." Grutter, 539 U.S. at 340. Individualized assessments, in
which race was only one consideration among many, were the most
narrowly tailored way to achieve such diversity. The mechanical
use of race, by contrast, would preclude an admissions committee
from considering students' "background, experiences, and
characteristics to assess [their] individual 'potential
contribution to diversity.'" Gratz, 539 U.S. at 274 (quoting
Regents of Univ. of Cal. v. Bakke, 438 U.S. 265, 317 (1978)
(opinion of Powell, J.)).
Unlike the Gratz and Grutter policies, the Lynn Plan is
designed to achieve racial diversity rather than viewpoint
-31-
diversity.9 The only relevant criterion, then, is a student's
race; individualized consideration beyond that is irrelevant to the
compelling interest. Cf. Brewer, 212 F.3d at 752 ("If reducing
racial isolation is -- standing alone -- a constitutionally
permissible goal, . . . then there is no more effective means of
achieving that goal than to base decisions on race.")
The concerns motivating the individualized consideration
requirement in a competitive, race-preferential admissions context
that focuses on diversity along a number of axes (e.g., the Gratz
and Grutter policies) are simply not present in a non-competitive
K-12 transfer policy aimed at racial diversity. Because transfers
9
As we have already discussed, see supra Part III.B., the Lynn
Plan's focus on racial diversity rather than viewpoint diversity is
the result of contextual differences between higher education,
where the emphasis is on the exchange of ideas, and primary
education, where the emphasis is on fostering interracial
cooperation. The district court explained this point in
distinguishing Grutter, which was then pending before the Supreme
Court:
In contrast [to Grutter], the "critical mass" sought by
the Lynn Plan is different, because Lynn's goal is not
viewpoint diversity. As I have said, at the elementary,
middle, and high school level, the goal of teaching
socialization is at least as important as the subject
matter of instruction. The value of a diverse classroom
setting at these ages does not inhere in the range of
perspectives and experience that students can offer in
discussions; rather, diversity is valuable because it
enables students to learn racial tolerance by building
cross-racial relationships. In this context a meaningful
presence of racial minorities -- and of whites at
minority-dominated schools -- is crucial not only to
reducing feelings of tokenism, but also to disarming
stereotypes that students in the classroom majority might
harbor about students of other races.
Comfort IV, 283 F. Supp. 2d at 381 n.90.
-32-
under the Lynn Plan are not tied to merit, the Plan's use of race
does not risk imposing stigmatic harm by fueling the stereotype
that "certain groups are unable to achieve success without special
protection." Bakke, 438 U.S. at 298 (opinion of Powell, J.)
(raising the possibility of stigmatic harm in the affirmative
action context). There is also little chance that the decisive use
of race in a plan concerned strictly with racial diversity creates
the unwarranted presumption that race is a proxy for viewpoint.
See Gratz, 539 U.S. at 271 (recognizing this as a risk when members
of a group are favored based on a presumption that "persons think
in a manner associated with their race"). Indeed, the Plan strives
for exactly the opposite result -- that is, to preempt racial
stereotypes through intergroup contact.
The plaintiffs emphasize that the Supreme Court has also
criticized the mechanical use of race on the ground that it may
breed cross-racial tension. As the Court recently explained in
considering a prison policy of segregating prison inmates by race,
racial classifications threaten to . . . incite racial
hostility. Indeed, by insisting that inmates be housed
only with other inmates of the same race, it is possible
that prison officials will breed further hostility among
prisoners and reinforce racial and ethnic divisions. By
perpetuating the notion that race matters most, racial
segregation of inmates may exacerbate the very patterns
of [violence that it is] said to counteract.
Johnson, 125 S. Ct. at 1147 (internal quotation marks, citations,
and emphasis omitted). These concerns, however, are not applicable
to the Lynn Plan, which takes race into account to foster
-33-
intergroup contact rather than to segregate. As the Johnson Court
acknowledged, "racial integration . . . tends to diffuse racial
tensions and thus diminish interracial violence." Id. (citing the
opinion of former corrections officials and a study finding that
"the rate of violence between inmates segregated by race . . .
surpassed the rate among those racially integrated"). The Lynn
Plan validates this conclusion: by reducing racial isolation and
increasing intergroup contact, it has ameliorated racial and ethnic
tension and bred interracial tolerance. Comfort, 283 F. Supp. 2d
at 376. We therefore see no reason to impose a blanket
prohibition on the use of race as a decisive factor in a student
transfer plan to further a compelling interest in obtaining the
educational benefits of racial diversity. If a non-competitive,
voluntary student transfer plan is otherwise narrowly tailored,
individualized consideration of each student is unnecessary.10
2. The Lynn Plan
The district court determined, and we agree, that the
Plan's use of transfer limits to achieve racial diversity has
produced benefits central to Lynn's educational mission.11 Under
10
We note that this conclusion in no way rests on the
administrative difficulties that would be inherent in individually
considering each of the thousands of transfer requests that Lynn
receives each year. Administrative difficulty "does not render
constitutional an otherwise problematic system." Gratz, 539 U.S.
at 275.
11
Plaintiffs argue that improvements in Lynn schools cannot be
attributable to racial diversity. They emphasize (i) that levels
-34-
the general narrow tailoring framework, however, we must also
consider whether the Plan's use of race is no broader than
necessary and whether race-neutral alternatives are available. See
Grutter, 539 U.S. at 339-42; see also Wygant v. Jackson Bd. of
Educ., 476 U.S. 267, 280 n.6 (1986) (noting that the term "narrowly
tailored" requires "consideration of whether lawful alternative and
less restrictive means could have been used" or that "the
classification at issue must 'fit' with greater precision than any
alternative means").
a. Breadth
The defendants maintain that the Plan's use of race is
minimally invasive. First, it governs only voluntary transfers,
rather than initial student assignments. Instead of forcing
children to attend schools far from their homes, as might be the
of diversity vary at schools in the district; (ii) that at least
one school slipped below critical mass during the 2000-01 academic
year; and (iii) that defense experts testified that all schools
they visited -- including schools that had slipped below critical
mass -- demonstrated the benefits that intergroup contact theory
attributes to racial diversity. Plaintiffs reason that the
experts' uniformly positive testimony is inconsistent with a theory
that increased diversity produces increased benefits, and that the
benefits must be attributable instead to race-neutral factors
present in equal measure throughout the district. We do not find
this argument persuasive. The defendants point out that although
some of Lynn's schools occasionally fall below critical mass, those
deviations are small and temporary. Students do not automatically
forfeit the lessons learned from integration when they attend a
school with relatively short-term or marginal deviation from
critical mass.
-35-
result of a controlled choice plan,12 the Lynn Plan preserves the
traditional neighborhood school model. Second, the Plan allows
students to transfer freely between racially balanced schools and
provides an appeals process for students whose transfer requests
are denied on racial grounds.13
The Plan is also less burdensome on third parties here
than in other contexts because of the nature of the "benefit" at
issue, namely the grant of a transfer request. Every child in Lynn
is guaranteed a seat in a district where, as the parties have
stipulated, every school provides a comparable education. The
denial of a transfer under the Plan is therefore markedly different
from the denial of a spot at a unique or selective educational
institution. See, e.g., Gratz, 539 U.S. at 251 (University of
Michigan); Wessmann, 160 F.3d at 793 (Boston Latin School); cf.
12
Controlled choice plans are an alternative to neighborhood
school assignments. See, e.g., Anderson, 375 F.3d at 74-77
(describing controlled choice plans used by the Boston Public
Schools). "Under such programs, parents can choose among a select
number of schools, but their choices and their likelihood of
getting their choice are controlled to help ensure a particular
racial balance." Wendy Parker, The Legal Cost of the "Split Double
Header" of Gratz and Grutter, 31 Hastings Const. L.Q. 587, 603 n.76
(2003).
13
Appeals are granted to unite siblings or when parents can
show a medical, safety, or other hardship, including one based on
daycare arrangements. The district court found that the Parent
Information Center (Lynn's central registration office) "goes out
of its way to make the appeals process accessible to everyone."
Comfort IV, 283 F. Supp. 2d at 349. Additionally, a student whose
appeal is denied will be presented with alternative placement
options.
-36-
Wygant, 476 U.S. at 282-83 ("Though hiring goals may burden some
innocent individuals, they simply do not impose the same kind of
injury that layoffs impose. Denial of a future employment
opportunity is not as intrusive as loss of an existing job.").
This is not to say that the denial imposes no harm at all; the
transfer request itself indicates that despite the availability of
a comparable education at any school in Lynn, students (or their
parents) do not view the schools as fungible. But in construing
the narrow tailoring requirement that a race-conscious plan not
unduly harm members of any racial group, we view the diminished
nature of any harm here as significant.
i. Calibration
Despite the minimally invasive nature of the Plan, the
plaintiffs contend that it imposes undue harm because of its
calibration. Emphasizing the defense experts' testimony that the
educational benefits of diversity are predicated on the presence of
a critical mass of white and nonwhite students, a figure that
social science literature approximates at 20%, the plaintiffs
assert that the Plan's numerical guidelines are substantially more
restrictive than necessary. In their view, a plan narrowly
tailored to the defendants' compelling interest in the benefits of
educational diversity would prohibit only those transfers that
would upset critical mass. They point out that because the Plan is
calibrated around district demographics rather than around critical
-37-
mass, it prohibits some transfers that do not bring a school
population below 20% white. For example, because nonwhites made up
58% of Lynn's student population at the time of trial, an
elementary school with a 40% nonwhite enrollment qualified as
racially isolated, and therefore subject to transfer limits, even
though it contained a critical mass of white and nonwhite
students.14
In response, the defendants rely on expert testimony that
while critical mass is the point at which educational benefits
begin to accrue, those benefits increase as a school nears an even
balance between white and nonwhite students. Relying on this
evidence, the district court found that "gains occur along a
continuum: as the racial composition of school populations creeps
closer to balanced, racial stereotyping and tension is [sic]
reduced and racial harmony and understanding increase." Comfort
IV, 283 F. Supp. 2d at 357. It thus concluded that the Plan was
narrowly tailored, despite its orientation around district
demographics rather than critical mass. See id. at 384 (The Plan
"effectively generates integration in Lynn's schools in such
quantity as to catalyze intergroup contact while still respecting
14
Under the Plan, an elementary school is racially isolated if
its nonwhite enrollment falls more than 15% below the percentage of
Lynn's total student population that is nonwhite. If Lynn's
student population was 58% nonwhite, as it was during the 2001-02
academic year, a school whose student body was less than 43%
nonwhite (i.e., more than 15% below 58%) was racially isolated.
-38-
the neighborhood school principle and Lynn's ever-changing
demographics.").
We agree with the district court's reasoning. The Plan
does not seek racial balancing for its own sake, nor does it use
rigid quotas to ensure a pre-determined level of diversity at each
of Lynn's schools. See Grutter, 539 U.S. at 335-36 ("The . . .
goal of attaining a critical mass of [nonwhite] students does not
transform [a] program into a quota."). Rather, the transfer policy
conditioned on district demographics (+/- 10-15%) reflects the
defendants' efforts to obtain the benefits of diversity in a stable
learning environment.15 The Plan thus provides a sufficiently close
"fit" to the defendants' compelling interest to ensure that "'the
motive for the classification was [not] illegitimate racial
prejudice or stereotype.'" Id. at 333 (quoting Croson, 488 U.S. at
493 (plurality op.)).
The plaintiffs launch a second attack at the Plan's
calibration on the grounds that it is inconsistent with the
defendants' statements that the benefits they seek maximize as a
school moves closer to 50% white/nonwhite. They point out that as
of December 2004, Lynn's student population was more than 61.9%
15
This conclusion is bolstered by the testimony of Dr. Orfield,
a nationally recognized expert on school desegregation, who
concluded that the Plan "used race no more than was necessary to
allow Lynn to meet its educational goal of preparing students to
live in a multiracial society." Comfort IV, 283 F. Supp. 2d at
355.
-39-
minority. A middle school that is 50% minority (the proportion
that the defendants have described as ideal) would now fall outside
of the +/- 10% range for racial balance and would instead be
considered racially isolated, resulting in transfer limitations.
This argument misses the mark. The Lynn Plan's goal is
to improve the racial balance not of any particular school, but
across the school system as a whole. The optimal balance for each
school might well be 50%, but Lynn's 61.9% minority population
means that for every school closer to that ideal, another will be
further away from it. Evaluating schools by reference to the
racial composition of the city's population is a sensible way for
Lynn to strive for the best racial balance attainable across its
entire school system, while acknowledging that practical
constraints make it impossible for Lynn to have an equal population
of minority and non-minority students in every individual school.
ii. White/nonwhite distinction
In addition to challenging the Plan's numerical ranges,
the plaintiffs also argue that the Plan is not narrowly tailored to
advance a compelling interest in racial diversity because it paints
with too broad a brush by distinguishing only between white and
nonwhite students, thereby blurring the many subgroups within each
category. However, this white/nonwhite distinction reflects the
reality of Lynn's experience. As the district court found, before
the Plan, "racial divisions and ethnic conflict between students
-40-
occurred predominantly along a white/nonwhite axis. The growing
gap in understanding between these groups burdened the schools in
ways that more precise shades of racial and ethnic difference did
not." Comfort IV, 283 F. Supp. 2d at 379. By increasing diversity
along the white/nonwhite axis, the Plan reduced racial tensions and
produced positive educational benefits. Narrow tailoring does not
require that Lynn ensure diversity among every racial and ethnic
subgroup as well. See Grutter, 539 U.S. at 316 (noting that the
Law School sought to enroll a critical mass of "minority" students,
a category that included African-Americans, Hispanics, and Native
Americans).
iii. Duration
A narrowly tailored plan must be limited not only in
scope, but also in time. See id. at 342. The Court held in
Grutter that this durational requirement can be met by "periodic
reviews to determine whether racial preferences are still necessary
to achieve student body diversity." Id. The Lynn Plan includes
such review. The PIC continuously monitors the schools'
demographics, gathering data on racial composition and transfers.
Under the Plan, transfer limits are suspended among schools that
are racially balanced. Comfort IV, 283 F. Supp. 2d at 377. This
feature is not merely theoretical. Students may now transfer
freely among all three Lynn high schools. Lynn has also
periodically reevaluated the calibration of its Plan with an eye
-41-
toward maximizing the availability of transfers while maintaining
diverse schools. Id. at 348 n.38 (noting that the Plan's original
10% range was expanded to 15% for elementary schools to "permit
more choice" and that Lynn considered a 20% range in 1994 but
determined that it would compromise student body diversity). We
expect that Lynn will continue to do so, presuming, as did the
Grutter Court, that school officials will demonstrate a good faith
commitment to monitoring the continued need for racial
restrictions. See 539 U.S. at 343.
b. Consideration of race-neutral alternatives
Because narrow tailoring dictates that the government use
race only when necessary to achieve a compelling interest, it
requires "serious, good-faith consideration of workable race-
neutral alternatives that will achieve the diversity [the
government actor] seeks." Grutter, 539 U.S. at 339; see also
Wygant, 476 U.S. at 280 n.6. Here, the defendants have met their
burden. The record reflects that they seriously considered, and
plausibly rejected, a number of race-neutral alternatives. These
included (i) a no-transfer policy, see Comfort IV, 283 F. Supp. 2d
at 387-88 (crediting evidence from a demographics expert that
instituting such a policy would throw several elementary schools
into racial imbalance); (ii) a policy of unrestricted transfers,
see id. at 388 (crediting evidence that instituting such a policy
would result in 500 to 800 segregative transfers per year); (iii)
-42-
a redrawing of district lines, see id. at 387-88 (noting that this
would be impractical); (iv) forced busing, see id. at 387-88
(concluding that the problems that accompany forced busing
justified Lynn's rejection of a controlled choice scheme); (v) a
lottery system, see id. at 389 (finding that demographic and
scheduling factors made this impracticable); and (vi) a plan
conditioning transfers on socioeconomic status, rather than race,
see id. at 389 n.100 (noting that because of residential patterns,
this system would exacerbate existing racial imbalance).
The plaintiffs argue that there are several other
alternatives that the defendants failed to consider. They point
specifically to a Department of Education study reviewing
successful race-neutral programs based on socioeconomic status or
a lottery, see U.S. Dep't of Educ., Achieving Diversity: Race-
Neutral Alternatives in American Education (Feb. 2004), available
at http://www.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ocr/raceneutral.html, and
to the race-neutral student assignment plan adopted in Boston, see
Anderson, 375 F.3d at 76-77. As noted, Lynn has already
considered, and rejected, the possibility of basing student
assignments on socioeconomic status or a lottery. While the record
does not reflect whether Lynn has considered the Boston plan in
depth, we note that the Boston plan is specific to the residential
patterns in Boston, which differ from those in Lynn. Lynn must
keep abreast of possible alternatives as they develop, see Grutter,
-43-
539 U.S. at 342-43, but it need not prove the impracticability of
every conceivable model for racial integration. It is sufficient
that it demonstrate a good faith effort to consider feasible race-
neutral alternatives, as it has done here. We therefore hold that
the Lynn Plan is narrowly tailored to the defendants' compelling
interest in obtaining the benefits of racial diversity.
D. Related Federal Claims
The plaintiffs also advance several statutory equal
protection claims, contending that the Lynn Plan violates, inter
alia, 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981 and 1983,16 and Title VI of the Civil Rights
Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000d.17 Our resolution of the
constitutional equal protection challenge controls those claims.
Title VI "'proscribe[s] only those racial classifications that
would violate the Equal Protection Clause.'" Alexander v. Sandoval
532 U.S. 275, 280-281 (2001) (quoting Bakke, 438 U.S. at 287
(Powell, J.)). Courts have also treated the bar on racial
discrimination imposed by § 1981 and § 1983 as coextensive with the
protections of the Equal Protection Clause. See Mescall v. Burrus,
16
42 U.S.C. § 1981 provides that "[a]ll persons within the
jurisdiction of the United States shall have the same right . . .
to the full and equal benefit of all laws." 42 U.S.C. § 1983
provides a cause of action based on the deprivation of
constitutional rights "under color of any statute, ordinance,
regulation, custom, or usage, of any State."
17
Title VI forbids racial discrimination "under any program or
activity receiving Federal financial assistance." 42 U.S.C. §
2000d.
-44-
603 F.2d 1266, 1271 (7th Cir. 1979) ("The relationships of §§ 1981
and 1983 to the Fourteenth Amendment are so close . . . that we
believe the use of each section must be guided by the principles
announced by the Supreme Court for application of the Fourteenth
Amendment to discrimination cases."); see also Anderson, 375 F.3d
at 77 n.7 (concluding that plaintiffs' claims under Title VI, §
1981 and § 1983 "turn on the resolution of the equal protection
claim"). The district court was therefore correct in holding that
the plaintiffs are not entitled to federal statutory relief.
IV. Article 111
Article 111 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights
provides that "[n]o student shall be assigned to or denied
admittance to a public school on the basis of race, color, national
origin[,] or creed." Plaintiffs contend that when a child is
prevented from making a segregative transfer under the Lynn Plan,
he is illegally "denied admittance to a public school on the basis
of race." Mass. Const. amend. art. 111. The district court
rejected this position as inconsistent with the meaning of Article
111, which was designed to limit forced busing and to protect
neighborhood schools. Comfort IV, 283 F. Supp. 2d at 393. The
court also emphasized that although "no court has ever expressly
interpreted Article 111, the SJC [i.e., the Massachusetts Supreme
Judicial Court] has consistently construed similarly worded
statutes narrowly, holding that they do not categorically ban
-45-
suspect classifications but rather merely subject them to strict
scrutiny." Id. Finally, the district court suggested that if
Article 111 were read broadly to prohibit any race-conscious
student assignment plan, as the plaintiffs urge, it would likely
run afoul of the federal Constitution and other sections of the
Massachusetts Declaration of Rights. Id. We review the district
court's interpretation of the Article de novo.18 See Blockel v.
J.C. Penney Co., Inc., 337 F.3d 17, 29 (2003).
Although the SJC has not yet considered Article 111, it
has identified the considerations that guide judicial
interpretation of the state's constitution:
In determining the meaning of a constitutional
provision, we look to the language and structure of the
provision, so that it is construed so as to accomplish a
reasonable result and to achieve its dominating purpose.
We do so bearing in mind the Constitution was written to
be understood by the voters to whom it was submitted for
approval. It is to be interpreted in the sense most
obvious to the common intelligence. Its phrases are to
be read and construed according to the familiar and
approved usage of the language. The words of a
constitutional provision are to be given their natural
and obvious sense according to common and approved usage
at the time of its adoption.
Moreover, the Constitution is to be interpreted in
the light of the conditions under which it and its
18
The defendants assert that we should not consider the
substance of the Article 111 claim at all, maintaining that the
Commonwealth was a necessary party to adjudicate this claim but
could not be joined because of the Eleventh Amendment, see Fed. R.
Civ. P. 19(b). Alternatively, they urge us to certify a question
regarding the proper interpretation of Article 111 to the SJC
pursuant to Mass. R. Sup. Jud. Ct. 1:03. We reject both
contentions, finding it appropriate to reach the merits as the
district court did.
-46-
several parts were framed, the ends which it was designed
to accomplish, the benefits which it was expected to
confer, and the evils which it was hoped to remedy.
McDuffy v. Sec'y of the Executive Office of Educ., 615 N.E.2d 516,
523 (Mass. 1993) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
To determine whether Article 111 prohibits a race-
conscious plan for voluntary student transfers, we begin, as the
SJC has instructed, with the language of the provision. Id. at
524. The plaintiffs contend that the plain language of the Article
unequivocally invalidates the Lynn Plan. They reason that when a
student is precluded from transferring because of the transfer's
impact on racial balance, that student is "denied admittance to a
public school on the basis of race" within the meaning of Article
111.
It is not readily apparent, however, that a student
denied a transfer is "denied admittance" to a school within the
meaning of the provision. The Article's pairing of the terms
"assigned" and "denied admittance" suggests that it contemplated
initial student placements, not subsequent transfers. Under the
Lynn Plan, students are assigned to their neighborhood schools
without regard to race; conversely, no student is denied that
placement based on race. Only after a student has been assigned to
a school and wishes to transfer does race enter the calculus.
The "specific circumstances of the adoption" of Article
111, see McDuffy, 615 N.E.2d at 528, convince us that the provision
-47-
does not preclude such a plan. Article 111 was adopted as an
amendment to the Massachusetts constitution in 1978. The House and
Senate bills that became Article 111 were introduced by legislators
on behalf of Massachusetts Citizens Against Forced Busing. See
Comfort IV, 283 F. Supp. 2d at 395. When the bill was presented to
voters for ratification, the constitutionally required description
that accompanied it19 explained:
A "YES VOTE" would guarantee the right of parents or
guardians of school-age children to educate those
children free from any arbitrary assignment by school
authorities to schools outside the school district. Any
public assignment to a school outside the school
district, based on achieving any established racial
quota-system or ethnic balance[,] would require the
permission of a parent or guardian.
Id. (citing Massachusetts Information for Voters (1978)); see also
Bates v. Dir. of Office of Campaign and Political Finance, 763
N.E.2d 6, 22-23 (Mass. 2002) (using Information for Voters
statement as an aid to statutory construction).
We would be hard-pressed to extrapolate from these
circumstances an intent that Article 111 bar an entirely voluntary
student transfer program narrowly tailored to a compelling interest
in the educational benefits of diversity. As the district court
19
The Massachusetts Constitution requires the Secretary of
State to publish and distribute information regarding ballot
questions, including the full text of every measure, "a fair,
concise summary of the measure as such summary will appear on the
ballot [and] other information and arguments for and against the
measure." Mass. Const. art. 48, Gen. Prov., pt. IV, as amended by
arts. 74 and 108.
-48-
noted, "'the benefit [Article 111] was expected to confer' was
preservation of neighborhood schools, and the 'evil which it was
hoped to remedy' was the politically divisive resort to forced
busing." Comfort IV, 283 F. Supp. at 395 (quoting McDuffy, 615
N.E.2d at 523). The Lynn Plan advances those goals. It protects
neighborhood school assignments and does not entail any forced non-
neighborhood assignments. Race-conscious transfers occur only if
initiated by a student's parent or guardian, a result entirely
consistent with the explanation of the Article put before the
voters.
The plaintiffs do not dispute that Article 111 was
designed to prevent forced busing. Rather, they argue that any
inquiry into the Article's legislative history is improper because
the provision is clear on its face. As we have already explained,
the application of the Article to the context of voluntary
transfers is not entirely clear from the statutory language.
Moreover, the SJC has expressly provided that the state
constitution's words "must be given a construction adapted to carry
into effect its purpose." Cohen v. Att'y Gen., 259 N.E.2d 539, 543
(Mass. 1970) (quoting Tax Comm'r v. Putnam, 116 N.E. 904, 906
(Mass. 1917)). The Article's legislative history helps us
determine its purpose, and thereby points us to a construction that
furthers that purpose. Looking to legislative history is therefore
-49-
entirely consistent with the principles of constitutional
interpretation set forth by the SJC.
Our conclusion that the Lynn Plan does not violate
Article 111 would be the same even if the Article did apply to a
voluntary transfer system. As the district court recognized, the
SJC has treated provisions similar to Article 111 not as banning
the use of race outright, but rather as subjecting the use of race
to strict scrutiny. Comfort IV, 283 F. Supp. 2d at 396; see also
McDuffy, 615 N.E.2d at 545 (noting that the court's decision on a
matter of first impression was consistent with earlier decisions).
In Attorney General v. Massachusetts Interscholastic
Athletic Association, Inc., 393 N.E.2d 284 (Mass. 1979), the SJC
considered a challenge, brought under the Massachusetts Equal
Rights Amendment ("ERA") and a state statute, to a rule prohibiting
boys from joining girls' sports teams. The ERA provides that
"[e]quality under the law shall not be denied or abridged because
of sex, race, color, creed or national origin." Mass. Const. pt.
1, art. 1, as amended by art. 106. The relevant statute provides:
"[n]o person shall be excluded from or discriminated against in
admission to a public school . . . or in obtaining the advantages,
privileges and courses of study of such public school on account of
race, color, sex, religion, national origin or sexual orientation."
Mass. Gen. L. ch. 76, § 5. Although both of these provisions speak
in absolute terms, the SJC did not treat them as automatically
-50-
invalidating the gender-based prohibition at issue. Rather, it
subjected the "no boys on girls' teams" rule to something akin to
strict scrutiny. 393 N.E.2d at 291-93. We have already determined
that the Lynn Plan survives the strict scrutiny required by the
federal Equal Protection Clause. Therefore, it would also survive
review under Article 111, if the Article did apply in this context.
Either way, the plaintiffs' claim fails.
V. Recusal
Finally, the plaintiffs assert that the district court
judge should have recused herself from this case. Their argument
is as follows: (1) prior to her appointment to the federal bench,
Judge Gertner was a member of the Lawyers' Committee for Civil
Rights ("LCCR"), a nonprofit organization; (2) LCCR unsuccessfully
moved to intervene in this litigation on the side of the
defendants, and therefore (3) the law required that Judge Gertner
recuse herself. Judge Gertner denied the recusal motion in an
order dated March 21, 2002. We review that ruling for abuse of
discretion. Camacho v. Autoridad de Telefonos, 868 F.2d 482, 490
(1st Cir. 1989).
The controlling statute is 28 U.S.C. § 455, which sets
forth the standards for recusal. That statute provides that a
judge "shall" recuse herself "in any proceeding in which [her]
impartiality might reasonably be questioned." Id. § 455(a). A
party who suggests that recusal is appropriate must support the
-51-
motion with facts that "provide what an objective, knowledgeable
member of the public would find to be a reasonable basis for
doubting the judge's impartiality." In re Boston's Children First,
244 F.3d 164, 167 (1st Cir. 2001) (quoting In re United States, 666
F.2d 690, 694 (1st Cir. 1981)). The plaintiffs have failed to make
this showing.
Every judge comes to the bench with a lifetime of
background experiences, a roster of associations, and a myriad of
views. This past history, in and of itself, is seldom sufficient
to require recusal. Brody v. President & Fellows of Harvard Coll.,
664 F.2d 10, 11 (1st Cir. 1981) (per curiam). Unless there is a
direct link that establishes a reasonable basis for doubting
impartiality, the judge should not step aside. In re United
States, 158 F.3d 26, 31 (1st Cir. 1998); cf. United States v.
Giorgi, 840 F.2d 1022, 1035 (1st Cir. 1988) (explaining that unless
a party can establish a reasonable factual basis to doubt a judge's
impartiality "by some kind of probative evidence," then the "judge
must hear a case as assigned") (internal quotation marks omitted).
These principles govern our decision here. LCCR is not
a party to this case. Even if it were, Judge Gertner's
relationship with that organization ended when she took the bench
on February 14, 1994. There is no allegation that she has
maintained ties with the LCCR. Given the eight-year interval
between the end of the judge's connection with LCCR and the recusal
-52-
motion, her prior association with that organization cannot be the
basis for a reasonable attack on her impartiality. Thus, recusal
was not obligatory. See, e.g., Sierra Club v. Simkins Indus.,
Inc., 847 F.2d 1109, 1117 (4th Cir. 1988) (holding that an
association with a nonprofit organization that ended a decade
before the proceedings commenced does not form a reasonable basis
for questioning the trial judge's impartiality, even though the
nonprofit organization was a party to the litigation); cf.
Veneklase v. City of Fargo, 236 F.3d 899, 901 (8th Cir. 2000)
(finding recusal unnecessary where judge's former law firm had
represented parties tangentially involved in civil rights suit);
United States v. Story, 716 F.2d 1088, 1090 (6th Cir. 1983)
(finding recusal unnecessary where judge had represented victim in
will contest matter thirteen years earlier).
The plaintiffs' argument that our decision in Boston's
Children First dictates recusal here ignores an important
difference between the two cases. In Boston's Children First, we
ordered recusal not because of the judge's past association with
civil rights organizations, but because the judge had publicly
commented on a pending case. See 244 F.3d at 169-70. The judge's
passing comment in this case that LCCR was eligible to apply for
amicus status does not constitute a basis on which to require
recusal.
-53-
The plaintiffs' claim of bias is equally unpersuasive.
The only evidence of bias they cite involves their view of the
judge's policy preferences. That perception, standing alone, does
not warrant our interference with the district judge's recusal
decision. If judges were subject to disqualification on such a
basis, our judicial system would be paralyzed. See Camacho, 868
F.2d at 491. We therefore conclude that the court did not abuse
its discretion in denying the motion for recusal.
Affirmed.
- Concurring and Dissenting Opinions Follow -
-54-
BOUDIN, Chief Judge, concurring. The Lynn plan at issue
in this case is fundamentally different from almost anything that
the Supreme Court has previously addressed. It is not, like old-
fashioned racial discrimination laws, aimed at oppressing blacks,
e.g., Brown v. Bd. of Educ., 347 U.S. 483 (1954); Strauder v. West
Virginia, 100 U.S. 303 (1880); nor, like modern affirmative action,
does it seek to give one racial group an edge over another (either
to remedy past discrimination or for other purposes). E.g.,
Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Pena, 515 U.S. 200 (1995). By
contrast to Johnson v. California, 125 S. Ct. 1141 (2005), the plan
does not segregate persons by race. See also Loving v. Virginia,
388 U.S. 1 (1967). Nor does it involve racial quotas. E.g.,
Regents of the Univ. of Cal. v. Bakke, 438 U.S. 265, 273-79 (1978).
Instead, the plan uses race as an express criterion to
permit transfers where they are consistent with maintaining schools
with a racial mix of students, and to limit transfers where they
would increase racial imbalance within the school system beyond
certain predetermined limits. The plan does not purport to favor
one race over another, nor have the parties claimed that it does
so. Every child can as a matter of right attend his or her local
school. And the parties have stipulated that Lynn's schools are
educationally equal in quality; thus a child who is unable to
transfer to a non-local school of choice is not relegated to an
inferior education.
-55-
Whether such a plan is desirable as a matter of social
policy is open to reasonable debate. So, too, are claims as to the
extent of educational or civic benefits derived from the plan.
But, in the absence of a constitutional violation, these choices
are customarily left to legislatures, city councils, school boards
and voters. Cf. Harris v. McRae, 448 U.S. 297, 326 (1980).
Indeed, one of the advantages of our federal regime is that
different communities try different solutions to common problems
and gravitate toward those that prove most successful or seem to
them best to suit their individual needs. See United States v.
Lopez, 514 U.S. 549, 581 (1995) (Kennedy, J., concurring).
Some may be offended by any express use of race as a
touchstone for transfers, believing that a race-based criterion is
the wrong lesson for school boards to teach and students to absorb.
But ours is a society with a heritage of racial problems growing
out of generations of slavery and post-slavery segregation, and it
may be unrealistic to suppose that everything will work out well if
only race is ignored in every context. In any event, the Supreme
Court has upheld the use of race-conscious solutions in certain
settings.20 The question is where and how one draws the line.
If we knew how the Supreme Court would decide the case
before us, it would be right to adopt its answer in advance--
20
See, e.g., Grutter v. Bollinger, 539 U.S. 306 (2003);
Fullilove v. Klutznick, 448 U.S. 448 (1980); Bakke, 438 U.S. 265;
cf. Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Bd. of Ed., 402 U.S. 1 (1971).
-56-
whatever this court's members might prefer. Cf. Wessmann v.
Gittens, 160 F.3d 790, 809-10 (1st Cir. 1998) (Boudin, J.,
concurring). But where the outcome in the Supreme Court is
uncertain and past pronouncements were made in contexts different
than the one now presented, the appellate court must exercise its
own judgment on whether the local plan is constitutionally
forbidden. There is very little to be said for mechanically
extrapolating from general phrases visibly addressed to different
issues. United States v. Jerrold Elecs. Corp., 187 F. Supp. 545,
555-56 (E.D. Pa. 1960), aff'd, 365 U.S. 567 (1961) (per curiam).
Treated as an open question, this is a difficult case.
The Supreme Court’s language disfavors racial tests and, without
flatly forbidding them, has restricted their use with particular
rubrics (compelling interest, narrow tailoring). See, e.g.,
Adarand, 515 U.S. at 227. But such rubrics depend on degree and
context; there is no yardstick that crisply determines when an
interest is compelling enough or how narrow is sufficiently so.
The way the Lynn plan uses race is certainly more benign than laws
that favor or disfavor one race, segregate by race, or create
quotas for or against a racial group.
The goal of the Lynn plan--to achieve the educational and
civic benefits of exposing youngsters to those of different races--
is not unlawful; the attack is upon the means. Yet given the goal,
it is not easy to see how it can be achieved in a community like
-57-
Lynn without using race as a touchstone. The problem is that in
Lynn, as in many other cities, minorities and whites often live in
different neighborhoods. Lynn's aim is to preserve local schools
as an option without having the housing pattern of de facto
segregation projected into the school system. The choice is
between openly using race as a criterion or concealing it through
some clumsier proxy device (e.g., transfer restrictions based upon
family income).
If the plan were patently offensive to core equal
protection principles, this would be an easy case. But the Lynn
plan is far from the original evils at which the Fourteenth
Amendment was addressed. The Fourteenth Amendment sought to forbid
the oppression of one race by another. We are here working from
doctrines concerning the use of race-based criteria that are mainly
the product of twentieth-century jurisprudence. This is not a case
in which, against the background of core principles, all doubts
should be resolved against constitutionality.
Rather, we are faced with a local experiment, pursuing
plausible goals by novel means that are not squarely condemned by
past Supreme Court precedent. The problems that the Lynn plan
addresses are real, and time is more likely than court hearings to
tell us whether the solution is a good one; indeed, indications so
far are that Lynn's efforts have met with success. To bring that
success to a halt in this court seems neither advisable nor
-58-
necessary. The Supreme Court has not passed upon a plan anything
like the one before us. That Court is free to extend its
precedents to the present context, but that is its role--not ours.
Cf. State Oil Co. v. Khan, 522 U.S. 3, 20 (1997).
-59-
SELYA, Circuit Judge (with whom HOWARD, Circuit Judge,
joins), dissenting. While no two cases are exactly alike, the
function of the judiciary in passing upon a constitutional
challenge is to read the pertinent text of the Constitution,
examine the universe of relevant legal precedents, extract guiding
principles from that case law, and apply those principles to the
facts at hand. This case, like most cases, presents a factual
scenario that contains certain idiosyncratic elements. There is
neither a Supreme Court decision squarely addressing whether racial
diversity alone may constitute a compelling interest sufficient to
justify the government's race-conscious preferences nor one
addressing the narrow tailoring of racial classifications in
voluntary, non-competitive school transfer plans. The majority
accentuates those idiosyncracies, but chooses to overlook the
elephant in the room: the fact that this case arises against a
backdrop of Supreme Court jurisprudence, recently revisited in
Grutter v. Bollinger, 539 U.S. 306 (2003), and Gratz v. Bollinger,
539 U.S. 244 (2003), that must guide our decision.
The majority's eagerness to justify departing from
precedent frees it to strike out on its own, fashioning a rule that
flies in the teeth of the Supreme Court's stalwart opposition to
the use of inflexible, race-determinative methods in granting or
-60-
denying benefits to citizens.21 Because that departure is
inconsistent with the role that an intermediate appellate court
should play in the federal system, I respectfully dissent.
To my mind, the precedents are rather clear. The two
latest Supreme Court decisions illustrate the point. I begin by
briefly rehearsing the facts upon which those decisions turned.
Gratz involved the University of Michigan's undergraduate
admissions program. The University automatically assigned 20
points — one-fifth of the 100 points needed to guarantee admission
— to an applicant from an underrepresented racial or ethnic
minority group. Gratz, 539 U.S. at 255. This 20-point bonus
effectively made race/ethnicity determinative for minimally
qualified minority applicants. Id. at 272.
Grutter involved law school admissions. The law school
took race into account as one of several variables in an
individual's application. Grutter, 539 U.S. at 340. The school
assigned no mechanical score based on an applicant's race; instead,
it considered race only as one of several possible ways in which an
applicant could enrich the diversity of the student body. Id. at
315-16. Moreover, the school set no quotas for racial or ethnic
minorities. Id. at 335-36.
21
While such methods may be justified to remedy the effects of
past discrimination, see, e.g., Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Bd.
of Ed., 402 U.S. 1 (1971), no such justification exists in this
case.
-61-
The Supreme Court struck down the plan used in Gratz
while upholding the one used in Grutter. In arriving at these
decisions, the Court made it crystal clear that a race-conscious
admissions program must use race in "a flexible, non-mechanical
way" if it is to be considered narrowly tailored (and, thus, if it
is to pass constitutional muster). Id. at 334. Such a plan cannot
institutionalize a quota system or in any way insulate one category
of applicants from another solely on account of race. See id.;
Gratz, 539 U.S. at 258, 270-72. Race can, however, be used as a
plus factor in the course of individualized consideration of each
applicant. Grutter, 539 U.S. at 334.
The majority, emphasizing that context matters, simply
writes this requirement out of the narrow-tailoring analysis.
That, to me, requires more than a soupcon of legal legerdemain.
While I agree that context matters, the Supreme Court has
catalogued a compendium of dangers flowing from the mechanical,
inflexible, and exclusive use of race as a determinant. For one
thing, such an approach insulates the preferred category of
applicants from competition with other applicants. Grutter, 539
U.S. at 334. For another thing, such an approach feeds the
stereotype that students from the preferred group lack academic
merit and, thus, raises the specter of stigmatic harm. See Regents
of Univ. of Cal. v. Bakke, 438 U.S. 265, 298 (1978) (opinion of
Powell, J.) (stating that "preferential programs may only reinforce
-62-
common stereotypes holding that certain groups are unable to
achieve success without special protection").
The majority argues that these dangers are less ominous
in a setting, like this one, that neither skews a competitive
process nor substitutes race as a proxy for academic merit. But
competitive disadvantage and the substitution of race for academic
merit are not the only reasons behind the Supreme Court's
understandable disdain for quotas and other inflexible uses of
racial determinants. Regardless of the burden imposed by a racial
preference, the simple act of granting benefits based on a quota or
other mechanical use of race will breed cross-racial tension. See
Richmond v. J. A. Croson Co., 488 U.S. 469, 493 (1989) (plurality
op.). Moreover, when government indulges in the automatic and
unflinching use of race in the bestowal of any benefit, that usage
counteracts the ultimate goal of relegating racial distinctions to
irrelevance. Id. at 495. As the Court reminded us earlier this
year, the mechanical use of racial classifications inflicts
stigmatic harm wherever and whenever it occurs — a consequence that
is by no means limited to contexts that involve schools, students,
or academic merit. See Johnson v. California, 125 S. Ct. 1141,
1147 (2005) (explaining in a prison context that "racial
classifications threaten to stigmatize individuals by reason of
their membership in a racial group" and "perpetuate the notion that
race matters most").
-63-
Nothing in either Grutter or Gratz (or in any other case,
for that matter) dispels the notion that mechanical, race-based
programs work this harm — and, indeed, the Lynn Plan inflicts it
upon a number of students seeking to benefit from a program that
Lynn knows is appealing without regard to racial reasons. To
illustrate, consider that the Plan can succeed only if the
opportunity to transfer to a distant school is attractive to
parents. It is conceivable that some parents would transfer a
child out of a desire to have the child learn in a more integrated
environment. But the Lynn Plan actively creates and exploits other
methods of benign coercion in search of its goal. For instance,
Lynn admits that a major function of its "theme" schools is to
entice parents to transfer their children. Another method is
selling convenience to parents. School officials are aware that
some of schools are located near after-school programs or near
high-employment areas. Every student, of every race, in every
school zone, has some potential benefit — yet the school
committee's policy evaluates whether students may take part in the
transfer program based solely on the color of a student's skin.
Only after experiencing a racially based rejection can an affected
student plead for relief from the stated policy.
In one sense, then, this plan is even more harmful than
the racially inflexible program struck down in Gratz. There,
prospective non-minority students could be admitted by the terms of
-64-
the policy itself and thus those who were rejected could look to
something other than race as a reason for their failure.
The majority writes off these concerns, stating that
Lynn's goal is increased racial harmony for the student body as a
whole. But the end cannot be allowed to justify the use of
unconstitutional means; even laudable goals must be attained in
constitutional ways. The Lynn Plan's inflexible use of race
offends this principle.
Moreover, the majority's attempted justification misses
a crucial point. The Fourteenth Amendment protects individuals,
not groups. Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Pena, 515 U.S. 200, 227
(1995). There is a harm inflicted on a student when her government
denies her transfer for the sole or determinative reason of race —
an immutable condition that she cannot change. That harm cannot be
ignored simply because it serves what others (be they school
committee members or my distinguished colleagues) perceive as a
greater good. Cf. Grutter, U.S. at 341 (holding that narrow
tailoring requires program to not unduly harm members of any racial
group).
If more were needed — and I doubt that it is — the
mechanical use of race is not necessary to meet the compelling
interests that Lynn asserts here. A flexible, race-conscious
transfer program, creating a strong but non-determinative "plus"
factor for integrative transfers but permitting other transfers
-65-
based on the strength of individual requests, would serve to
increase diversity and avoid the harm arising from an unflinching
use of race. The children rejected for transfer under such a plan
would not be rejected solely because of the color of their skin but
because the reasons supporting their transfer requests were
comparatively insubstantial. That kind of harm is not
constitutionally suspect.
Lynn hardly can be heard to complain that such a plan is
unworkable. By its own admission, it already allows more than half
of the students denied transfers under its race-based policy to
have an exemption for non-race-related reasons. These transfers
have not undermined the benefits of diversity in the school
community. The city persists, however, in subjecting all the
students who request transfers to what is in effect a two-tier
process — one in which the student is evaluated solely on the basis
of color and a second in which a rejected student must convince the
school that his or her color should not matter.
Many good things can be said about the Lynn Plan. I do
not doubt that it is well-intentioned and that it has helped to
promote greater diversity in the public schools. But the
overriding fact is that it unnecessarily inflicts racially based
wounds on a large and diverse group of its students and,
consequently, fails to satisfy the narrow-tailoring requirement set
out in the Supreme Court's equal protection jurisprudence. Because
-66-
that is so, I must respectfully dissent from what I view to be an
erroneous decision.
-67-