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A successful plan for racial balance now finds its future uncertain

For 18 years, White Plains, NY—a city of 55,000—has maintained racially balanced schools without the white flight that has followed integration plans in places like Boston and Canarsie, Brooklyn. But in June, the Supreme Court rejected school assignment plans in Louisville and Seattle that, like the one in White Plains, are also based explicitly on race. And there are fears that should a court turn down White Plains’s plan in the future, white families may abandon some of the neighborhood schools. That is not a fear restricted to White Plains, as dozens of other cities are having to reconsider similar plans. Read more of this article from The New York Times.

Posted by Steve Groft on 22 August 2007 in Issues in the News , Urban Issues

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