ON MOTION FOR HEARING EN BANC
WISDOM, Circuit Judge,with whom BROWN, Chief Judge, and GOLDBERG, Circuit Judge, join.
I respectfully dissent from the denial of the hearing en banc.
Fifteen years after Brown,1 school boards in the Western District of Louisiana are still unwilling to face up to the prerequisites to effective desegregation. These prerequisites are the transitionary short steps which must be taken now and the planning for the long steps that must be taken in 1969-70/1970-71 to effect lock-stock-and-barrel desegregation. More than two years after Jefferson,2 this Court is still not able to get the message through to these school boards that the standard for determining the effectiveness of a desegregation plan is an objective one: Does it work?3 Fidelity to our earlier holding in these very cases now consolidated in three appeals,4 fi*1333delity to other decisions of this Court5 and of the Sureme Court,6 indeed fidelity to federal judicial process command summary reversal.7
These thirty cases, consolidated in three appeals, were among forty-four cases consolidated on appeal in Adams v. Mathews, No. 26501. In Adams, on August 20, 1968, we set deadlines for action by the school boards and by the district court. We did so to prevent the delay here granted by the district court and now blessed by a majority of this Court. Our object was to forestall the ubiquitous contention that it is too late this school term to make extensive changes in the next school term.
The order in Adams is short. It is quoted, in pertinent part, in the footnotes.8 We required the district court *1334to “treat school desegregation cases as entitled to the highest priority and conduct a hearing in each case at the earliest practicable time, no later than November 4, 1968”.9 If, in a particular case, the district court concluded that the existing freedom of choice plan was not working but that it was not administratively feasible for the board to shift “immediately” to other alternatives the court was directed to require the board
(1) “to take forthwith such steps toward full desegregation as may be practicable in the first and second semesters of the 1968-69 school year, and (2) to formulate and submit to the Court by November 28, 1968, a plan to complete the full conversion of the school district to a unitary, non-racial school system for the 1969-70 school year”. (Emphasis added.)
We directed the district, court to “en-fer an order by such date as will permit effective review, if review is necessary, of the court-approved actions the Board will institute in the 1968-69 year as well as the 1969-70 year”. Unfortunately for the constitutional rights of Negro students, the 1968-69 term will be over by the time this case is heard and decided on “expedited” appeal. Full desegregation in the 1969-70 term is made difficult, if not impossible, by the unwillingness of the school boards to take effec-five transitionary action.
On remand, the district court found that the “school boards are acting in good faith”. But good faith does not excuse non-compliance; it is relevant only as a necessary ingredient of an acceptable desegregation plan,
The district court’s major finding was that the decree under which the boards have been operating since the fall of 1967 has “real prospects for dismantling the dual system ‘at the earliest practicable date’” — whenever that is. ' Apparrently because of this finding, the district court did not require the school boards to “take forthwith” any steps for the 1968-69 school year. And instead of requiring the boards to submit by November 28, 1968, specific plans for full conversion to a unitary, non-racial system, the district court required each board to “re-assess its own system and on or before March 1, 1969, make a rePort * * * as to what additional courses are open to it to bring about the end result required by the Supreme Court in Green."
I turn now to the Supreme Court’s con-elusions as to what does not constitute “real prospects for dismantling the dual system”. In Green, the Supreme Court found the following criteria relevant to workability of a school desegregation plan (1) A school board’s adoption of a freedom of choice plan 11 years after Brown I was decided and 10 years after *1335Brown II raises the inference that the board deliberately perpetuated the unconstitutional dual system. “Such delays are no longer tolerable * * The burden on a school board today is to come forward with a plan that promises realistically to work, and promises realistically to work now”; not at “the earliest practicable date”.10 (2) Freedom of choice is not acceptable if its effect is to shift the burden of desegregating schools from the school board to the children and their parents.11 (8) Existence of an all-Negro school12 and (4) the fact that 85 percent of the Negro children attend all-Negro schools demonstrate, as a matter of law, that a desegregation plan is not working.13 (5) Green does not deal with faculty desegregation. The Supreme Court has held, however, that students in public schools have a constitutional right to attend schools where teachers have not been assigned on the basis of race.14 As to faculty, Jefferson held that nothing less is required than “that the pattern of teacher assignment to any particular school not be identifiable as tailored for a heavy concentration of either Negro or white pupils in the school”.15 Bessemer set a date for “C-day”, the first day of the 1970-71 term, for full compliance with the requirement of faculty integration.16 The Fourth and Tenth Circuits require, as a remedy to eliminate faculty segregation, “the same approximate percentage of non-white teachers in each school as there now is in the system”.17
This Court has held that “school authorities bear the burden of justifying an apparent lack of progress”.18 At the November 12 hearing the school boards came forward with no suggested steps that might ease the transition from a dual to a unitary system. They relied on the so-called Jefferson reports to the courts, statistical records showing the degree of desegregation. These reports show that there is no basis for the district court’s findings. On the contrary, there is not one case where a desegregation plan meets the Green-Jefferson criteria and none that offers any hope of “working” without substantial additions and changes.
There are seven school districts involved in the cases consolidated in No. 27,087.19 Here are the facts as to those districts, (a) The 37 traditionally Negro *1336schools remain all-Negro schools, (b) The number and percentage of Negroes attending formerly all-white schools is as follows:
STUDENT DESEGREGATION - NO. 27,087
School System No. of Negroes Percentage No', of of Negroes Negroes attending at former former No. of white white whites schools schools
Union Parish 2300 2700 17 0.5
City of Monroe 5300 54 1
Concordia Parish 3400 37 1
Claiborne Parish 23 1
Ouachita Parish 4500 12,300 79 1.5
Winn Parish 1520 2400 69 3.8
Jackson Parish 1500 83 5
* according to choice forms
(c) The figures on faculty integration are unclear, e. g. they do not reflect the courses taught by teachers or whether an arts teacher for several schools is treated as a member of the faculties in the several schools. The number of Negro teachers on the faculties in white schools and the number of white teachers on the faculties of Negro schools is as follows:
FACULTY DESEGREGATION - NO. 27,087
School System Teachers on Faculties in Teachers on Faculties Former white schools of Negro schools whites Negroes whites Negroes
Claiborne Parish 108 0 8 112
Union Parish 134 17 13 91
Concordia Parish 184 1/2 14 13 160
Winn Parish 140 10 3 68
Jackson Parish 127 1/3 7 1/2 8 1/3 80 2/3
Monroe (City) 266 23 27 215
Ouachita Parish Figures not given in 1968 Report.
There are 13 school districts involved in the cases consolidated in No. 27106. There are 103 virtually all-Negro schools enrolling 97 percent of the Negro students; that is, three percent attend white schools. In 12 of the 13 school districts 5 percent, or less, of the Negro students attend white schools; in Avoyelles Parish 12 percent of the Negro students attend white schools. No white students *1337attend or have attended Negro schools in 11 of these districts; one white student attends a Negro school in Bossier Parish, and one in Caddo Parish. The faculty desegregation is as follows:
FACULTY DESEGREGATION - NO. 27106
School System School Year* Number of Teachers Number of Teachers Assigned to School In System of Opposite Race white Negro Negro white Percentage of Teachers Assigned to School of Opposite Race white Negro
AVOYELLES 1967 - 68 293 126 6 3 1.02 4.76
1968 - 69 317 126 8 9 3.15 6.66
BIENVILLE 1967 - 68 119 1/4 135 3/4 81 72 5.87 5.89
1968 - 69 121 4/5 133 1/2 13 1/2 13 10.67 10.11
BOSSIER 1967 - 68 551 212 14 7 1.27 6.60
1968 - 69 614 213 33 22 3.58 15.49
CADDO 1967 - 68 1418 1117 15 7 .49 1.34
1968 - 69 1395 1094 91 66 3.26 8.31
(See Footnote 3) (See Footnote 3)
CLAIBORNE 1967 - 68 102 115 0 8 7.84 0
1968 - 69 108 112 0 8 7.40 0
CONCORDIA 1967 - 68 184 147 24 45
1968 - 69 184.5 160 14 13 7.04 8.75
DE SOTO 1967 - 68 1546 1936
1968 - 69 1367 1'847 14 14 10.52 7.69
EAST CARROLL 1967 - 68 84 109 4 5 5.95 3.66
1968 - 69 83 97 4 78 8.43 4.12
GRANT 1967 - 68 127 49 0 0
1968 - 69 128 51 3 4 2.89 5.88
JACKSON 1967 - 68 124 84 8 1/3 7 1/3 5.91 9.91
1968 - 69 127 1/3 80 2/3 7 1/2 8 1/3 6.54 9.29
LA SALLE 1967 - 68 140 23 0 0
1968 - 69 139 25 1/2 5 3 2.15 19.60
LINCOLN 1967 - 68 174 133 59 79
1968 - 69 182 142 16 2/3 17 9.34 11.73
RAPIDES 1967 - 68 766 409 5 3 .33 1.22
1968 - 69 807.5 416 37 26 3.21 8.41
RICHLAND 1967 - 68 168 139 0 0 0 0
1968 - 69 175 150 11 11 5/6 6.76 7.33
There are fifteen school districts involved in the cases consolidated in No. 27,054. In a few districts there has been progress in student desegregation. In *1338Vermilion Parish, for example, 44 percent of all Negro students attend former white schools20 But it can hardly be said that free choice is working in Evangeline Parish. In that parish the percentage of Negro students attending white schools dropped from 2.9 percent in 1967-68 to 2.3 percent in 1968-69. The following tables show the extent of student and faculty desegregation as of September-October of 1968:
STUDENT DESEGREGATION IN SCHOOL DISTRICTS - NO. 27,054
No. of Negroes No. of Negro No. of white & %age attending No. of All-Negro All-white School System Students Students white Schools Schools Schools Schools
Caddo 25,414 33,879 642 (2.5%) 77 26 15
Bossier 4,268 13,949 188 (4.4%) 24 5 5
Madison 3,235 1,255 83 (2.6%) 8 5 0
Jeff Davis 2,069 5,976 270 (13%) 19 5 1
Lafayette 6,984 20,311 1,195 (17%) 35 10 4
Acadia 2,694 8,930 149 (5.5%) 22 4 9
Iberia 4,897 10,070 426 (8.7%) 30 11 4
St. Martin 3,516 4,871 128 (3.6%) 15 7 1
St. Mary 5,390 10,537 729 (13.5%) 26 9 1
Vermilion 1,644 8,138 722 (44%.) 18 1 2
Rapides 9,671 18,856 402 (4.3%) 51 19 16
Evangeline 3,114 5,624 71 (2.3%) 14 5 2
St. Landry 10,754 11,779 330 (3%) 43 20 3
Natchitoches 4,601 4,327 101 (2.2%) 26 10 7
FACULTY DESEGREGATION - NO. 27,054
No. of No. of Average Negro white No. at All-white All-Negro No. of No. of Teachers Teachers Schools Faculties or Faculties or Negro white at white at Negro of other No. of having 1 having 1 Scncoi System Teachers Teachers Schools Schools Race Schools Negro white
Caddo 1,099 1,395 96 66 2.1 77 2 2
Bossier 213 614 33 22 2.3 24 1 1
Madison 137 81 5 13 2.25 8 2 1
Jeff Davis 110 287 11 2 .7 19 14 5
Natchitoches 247.07 301 29 33 2.4 26 10
Lafayette 283 91] 45 28 2.1 35 7 2
Acadia 127 389 23 12 1.6 22 12 not given
Iberia 231 430 24 2 .86 30 9 2
St. Martin 161 215 15 8 1.5 15 3 3
St. Mary 246 455 52 12 2.5 26 1 4
Vermilion 62 371.5 23 3 1.4 18 11 not given
Rapides 392 786.5 35 28 1.2 51 11 10
Evangeline 142 274 19 12 2.2 14 not given 2
St. Landry 484 547 23 21 1.02 43 23 19
I am not suggesting that freedom of choice should necessarily be abandoned in favor of zoning. In some areas, because of residential patterns based on race, court-approved school zoning would legalize the Southern equivalent of Northern de facto segregation. In many school districts freedom of choice has not worked because school boards have thought that they complied with the law simply by opening the doors of white schools to Negro children bold enough to apply for entrance. That is not the law. This Court and the Supreme Court have held *1339that the dual system must be done away with, root and branch. There is nothing necessarily unconstitutional about freedom of choice or geographic zoning or a combination of the two. Whatever plan is used, transfers should be favored when a transferee is from a school where the transferee’s race constitute a majority and he is transferring to a school where students of his race are in the minority; minority to majority transfers should not be favored. Principals are enormously important, especially in rural areas. They should be rotated or assigned to schools where students of the opposite race are in the majority. All athletic activities should have been desegregated years ago.
The statistical evidence points plainly to the fact that in a freedom of choice system white students will not attend a school having a Negro principal and all-Negro faculty. One remedy is for the school authorities to assign teachers on the basis of race, so that the faculty of each school will substantially reflect the racial composition of the total number of teachers in the system. The rule should not be inflexible. The proportion of teachers and staff in a school should substantially reflect the ratio of Negro teachers in a school to all teachers in the system such as would have resulted if, in the past, teachers had been assigned without regard to race. As this Court has held in other cases, race may be considered when it is necessary in fashioning a remedy to undo past unconstitutional discrimination.21 The purpose is not to achieve racial balance as an end in itself but to use it as a means of ending the dual system based on segregated faculties in segregated schools. As the Seventh Circuit recently pointed out in a decision upholding a district court’s order requiring bussing of children from one Chicago school to another, “This is not done to achieve racial balance, although that may be the result, but to counteract the legacy left by the Board’s history of discrimination.” United States v. School District 151 of Cook County, Illinois, Dec. 17, 1968, 404 F.2d 1125.
Freedom of choice as now administered by the defendant school boards fails all of the tests established by Green and restated in Adams in these very cases now before us.22 The judgments below *1340should be summarily reversed with instructions that each defendant school board be ordered to submit immediately a desegregation plan that “promises realistically to work now”, to the end that the school system be converted to one without white schools and Negro schools, but just schools.
. Brown v. Board of Education, 1954, 347 U.S. 483, 74 S.Ct. 686, 98 L.Ed. 873, 38 A.L.R.2d 1180, (Brown I) ; 1955, 349 U.S. 294, 75 S.Ct. 753, 99 L.Ed. 1083 (Brown II).
. United States v. Jefferson County Board of Education, 5 Cir. 1966, 372 F.2d 836 (Jefferson I), adopted on rehearing en banc, 1967, 380 F.2d 385 (Jefferson II), cert. denied, Caddo Parish School Board v. United States, 389 U.S. 840, 88 S.Ct. 67, 19 L.Ed.2d 103.
. In Jefferson I this Court said, with emphasis, that “The only school desegregation plan that meets constitutional Stand-areis is one that works.” 372 F.2d at 847. In Green v. County School Board of New Kent County, Virginia, 1968, 391 U.S. 430, 88 S.Ct. 1689, 20 L.Ed.2d 716, the Supreme Court said, “The burden on a school board today is to come forward with a plan that promises realistically to work, and promises realistically to work now”. (Original emphasis.) Under HEW regulations, freedom of choice plans are acceptable, so long as in operation such a plan is effective. 45 CFR §§ 80.1-80.13, 181-1-181.76 (1967).
. Adams v. Mathews, 5 Cir., 403 F.2d 181 [No. 26,501, August 20, 1968]. See also Graves v. Walton County Board of Education, 5 Cir., 403 F.2d 184 [No. 26,452, September 28, 1968], in which we put school boards on notice that all-Negro *1333schools in this circuit “must be integrated or abandoned by the commencement of the next school-year.” In Gi-aves we suggested steps, also suggested in this dissenting opinion, that school boards should take in order to carry out the imperative commands of the Supreme Court in Green and of this Court in Adams.
. Notably, Jefferson; Davis v. Board of School Commissioners of Mobile County, 5 Cir. 1968, 364 F.2d 896; United States v. Board of Education of City of Bessemer, 5 Cir. 1968, 396 F.2d 44; Montgomery County Board of Education v. Carr, 5 Cir. 1968, 400 F.2d 1, dissenting opinions, 402 F.2d 782.
. Particularly Green v. County School Board of New Kent County, Virginia, 1968, 391 U.S. 430, 88 S.Ct. 1689, 20 L.Ed.2d 716; Raney v. Board of Education, 1968, 391 U.S. 443, 88 S.Ct. 1697, 20 L.Ed.2d 727; Monroe v. Board of Commissioners, 1968, 391 U.S. 450, 88 S.Ct. 1700, 20 L.Ed.2d 733, 735; and, earlier, Bradley v. School Board of City of Richmond Va., 1965, 382 U.S. 103, 86 S.Ct. 224, 15 L.Ed.2d 187 and Rogers v. Paul, 1965, 382 U.S. 198, 86 S.Ct. 358, 15 L.Ed.2d 265.
. For example, the Jefferson decree, which was entered in all of the cases included in the three appeals before this Court, provides, in part, as follows :
Section VIII (a) Faculty Employment. Race or color shall not be a factor in the hiring, assignment, reassignment, promotion, demotion, or dismissal of teachers and other professional staff members, including student teachers, except that race may be taken into account for the purpose of counteracting or correcting the effect of the segregated assignment of faculty and staff in the dual system,.* Teachers, principals, and staff members shall be assigned to schools so that the faculty and staff is not composed exclusively of members of one race. Wherever possible, teachers shall be assigned so that more than one teacher of the minority race (white or Negro) shall be on a desegregated faculty. Defendants shall take positive and affirmative steps to accomplish the desegregation of their school faculties to achieve substantial desegregation of faculties in as many of the schools as possible for the 1967-68 school year notwithstanding that teacher contracts for tlie 1967-68 or 1968-69 school years may have already been signed and approved. The tenure of teachers in the system shall not be used as an excuse for failure to comply with this provision. The defendants shall establish as an objective that the pattern of teacher assignment to any partieular school not be identifiable as tailored for a heavy concentration of either Negro or white pupils in the school. * * * Section VIII (c) Past Assignments. The defendants shall take steps to assign and reassign teachers and other professional staff members to eliminate the effects of the dual school system. (Emphasis added.)
. Adams, 403 F.2d 188, [No. 26,501, August 20, 1968] :
The court should make findings of fact and state conclusions of law (in each case) as to (1) whether the school board's existing plan of, desegregation is adequate “to convert [the dual system] to a unitary system in which racial discrimination would be eliminated root and branch” and (2) whether the proposed changes will result in a desegregation plan to “promises realistically to work now”. An effective plan should produce integration of faculties, staff, facilities, transportation, and school activities (such as athletics) along with integration of students. * * *
If in a school district there are still all-Negro schools, or only a small fraction of Negroes enrolled in white schools, or no substantial integration of faculties and school activities then, as a matter of law, the existing plan fails to meet constitutional standards as established in Green. Boards in such districts are under a duty to take affirmative action toward effective desegrega*1334tion before the start of the 1968-69 school year or as soon as practicable after the commencement of that year. One alternative to freedom of choice is the assignment of students on the basis of geographic attendance zones. In an attendance zone system (as in a freedom-of-choiee system), the school authorities should consider the consolidation of certain schools, pairing of schools, and a majority-to-minority transfer policy as means to the end of disestablishing the dual system. * * Should the district court in a particular case conclude that the existing freedom-of-choiee plan is not working, but that it is not administratively feasible for the board to shift immediately to other alternatives, the court should require the board (1) to take forthwith such steps toward full desegregation as may be practicable in the first and second semesters of the 1968-69 school year, and (2) to formulate and submit to the court, by November 28, 1968, a plan to complete the full conversion of the school district to a unitary, non-racial system for * * * 1969-70; * * * The district court should enter an order by such date as will permit effective review in this Court, if review is necessary, of the court-approved actions the Board will institute in the 1968-69 year as well as the 1969-70 year. * *
. The hearing was held on November 12, 1968, with the approval of this Court, The Chief Judge of the Western District, with commendable celerity, after Oreen an(j before Adams, had called a hearing en banc to determine the effect of that of Green on school desegregation plans in the Western District of Louisiana.
. Green, 391 U.S. at 438, 88 S.Ct. at 1694, 20 L.Ed.2d at 724. Here the schools voluntarily adopted no plan. They acted only under the compulsion of court orders.
. Green, 391 U.S. at 442, 88 S.Ct. at 1696, 20 L.Ed.2d at 726.
. Green, 391 U.S. at 442, 88 S.Ct. at 1696, 20 L.Ed.2d at 726.
. Green, 391 U.S. at 442, 88 S.Ct. at 1696, 20 L.Ed.2d at 726.
. Bradley v. School Board, 1965, 382 U.S. 103, 86 S.Ct. 224, 15 L.Ed.2d 187; Rogers v. Paul, 1965, 382 U.S. 198, 86 S.Ct. 358, 15 L.Ed.2d 265.
. 380 F.2d at 394.
. United States v. Board of Education of City of Bessemer, 5 Cir. 1968, 396 F.2d 44.
. Dowell v. School Board of Oklahoma City, W.D.Okla., 1965, 244 F.Supp. 971, 978, aff’d., 10 Cir. 1967, 375 F.2d 158, 167, cert. denied, 387 U.S. 931, 87 S.Ct. 2054, 18 L.Ed.2d 993; Coppedge v. Franklin County Board of Education, E.D. N.Car., 1967, 273 F.Supp. 289, 300, aff’d., 4 Cir. 1968, 394 F.2d 410. The Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit has declined to require this formula, but has suggested it is a standard “which comports with Brown’’. Kelley v. Altheimer, Arkansas Public School District No. 22, 1967, 8 Cir., 378 F.2d 483, n. 24.
. Jefferson I, 372 F.2d at 895.
. The statistics cited in this opinion are based on the September-October 1968 reports of the school boards filed with the district courts in accordance with Jefferson. Necessarily, I have had to rely on the briefs of the plaintiffs-appellants who used the reports as a basis for their compilation of statistics. There is some overlap; that is, some school districts are defendants in two or more proceedings.
There was no faculty desegregation prior to the 1967-68 school year.
Includes 5 full time regular classroom teachers, 1 full time librarian, 1 part time guidance teacher and 1 part time music teacher.
Includes 4 full time regular classroom teachers and 2 part time music teachers.
No full time regular classroom teachers.
Ibid.
Includes 20 itinerant teachers serving in more than one school.
Does not include fractions of teachers.
Includes 2 “helping teachers.”
No full time regular classroom teachers.
. However, in Vermilion all of the other Negro students attend one large all-Negro school. The school board still maintains two all-white schools.
. See Jefferson I, 372 F.2d at 876-878; Brooks v. Beto, 5 Cir. 1966, 366 F.2d 1; United States v. State of Louisiana, E.D.La.1963, 225 F.Supp. 353, aff’d., 380 U.S. 145, 85 S.Ct. 817, 13 L.Ed.2d 709.
. The following tables compiled by the district clerks show the improvement or lack of substantial improvement in 1968 over 1967:
[NEGRO] STUDENTS IN SCHOOLS OF PREDOMINANTLY DIFFERENT RACE [That is, Former white schools]
PARISH 1967 1968
Avoyelles 203 410
Bienville 53 55
Bossier 137 191
Caddo 482 677
Claiborne 24 23
Concordia 32 37
DeSoto 20 30
East Carroll 106 162
Grant 48 39
Jackson 37 83
Lincoln 95 111
Rapides 302 400
Richland 11 34
Calcasieu 734 944
Jeff Davis 178 260
Lafayette 620 1195
Acadia 61 149
Iberia 301 446
St. Martin 381 411
St. Mary 467 739
Vermilion 311 723
Evangeline 77 71
St. Landry 318 339
Natchitoches 95 137
Madison 79 83
Winn 58 69
Ouachita 66 83
Monroe 22 4
Webster 120 108
Winn 58 69
Union 11 14
5507 8146
TEACHERS IN SCHOOLS OF PREDOMINANTLY DIFFERENT RACE
PARISH 1967 1968
Avoyelles 9 17
Bienville 15 26
Bossier 21 55
Caddo 50 179
Claiborne 8 8
*1340Concordia 6 27
DeSoto 30 28
East Carroll 9 11
Grant 0 7
Jackson 15 18
Lincoln 12 34
Rapides 5 63
Richland 0 22
Jeff Davis 0 14
Calcasieu 20 59
Lafayette 10 72
Acadia 1( 35
Iberia 25
St. Martin 24 36
St. Mary 33 65
Vermilion 11 26
Evangeline 8 30
St. Landry 14 44
Natchitoches 20 71
Madison 5 17
Union 8 30
Ouachita 6 58
Winn 0 13
Monroe 5 49
Webster 18 31
351 1Í70