Mississippi accused of unequal schooling for black students

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Mississippi is violating the federal law that enabled the state to rejoin the union after the Civil War, a civil rights group alleged Tuesday in a lawsuit over school funding.

The lawsuit filed by the Southern Poverty Law Center on behalf of four black public school students asks a federal judge to force the state’s leaders to comply with the 1870 law, which says Mississippi must never deprive any citizen of the “school rights and privileges” described in its 1868 constitution.

The SPLC argues that Mississippi has repeatedly watered down education protections in its first post-Civil War constitution ever since, as part of what it calls a white supremacist effort to prevent the education of blacks.

“From 1890 until the present day, Mississippi repeatedly has amended its education clause and has used those amendments to systematically and deliberately deprive African Americans of the education rights guaranteed to all Mississippi schoolchildren by the 1868 Constitution,” the suit states.

The suit names as defendants Gov. Phil Bryant, Lt. Gov. Tate Reeves, House Speaker Philip Gunn and Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann, all Republican elected officials. It also names state school Superintendent Carey Wright and the nine appointed members of the state Board of Education.

The plaintiffs say their children are deprived because they are black and attend overwhelmingly black schools.

“I’m filing this lawsuit because the state has an obligation to make the schools that black kids attend equal to the schools that white kids attend,” said Indigo Williams, the parent of a first-grade boy at Raines Elementary School in west Jackson.

Mississippi already faces another major lawsuit over school funding. Former Gov. Ronnie Musgrove is representing 21 school districts demanding that the state pay back amounts it has shorted districts under the public school funding formula between 2010 and 2015.

Musgrove said the Legislature can’t evade a 2006 law requiring it to fund the amount required by the Mississippi Adequate Education Program. He also argues that this law is reinforced by the current constitution.

The SPLC suit takes a sharply different view of the current law and constitution.

Its lawsuit recites changes to the provision, including a 1960 amendment that made public schools optional that was designed to allow the state to close public schools to evade racial integration.

That change was partially reversed in 1987, when voters amended the state constitution to again make public schools mandatory, but the amendment didn’t require a uniform system, and said lawmakers could impose “such conditions and limitations as the Legislature may prescribe.”

“This is one of the weakest education clauses in America because its mandate creates virtually no obligations that the Legislature does not choose for itself,” the suit states.

That’s close to the view of proponents of Initiative 42, a failed attempt in 2015 to amend the constitution yet again to require “an adequate and efficient system of public schools,” and allow people to sue over funding shortfalls.

Tuesday’s lawsuit, if successful, could also set the stage for such suits.

Among the lawyers bringing Tuesday’s suit is Rita Bender, widow of 1964 Civil Rights martyr Michael “Mickey” Schwerner. James Chaney, Andrew Goodman and Schwerner were killed by Ku Klux Klan members while in Neshoba County to investigate the burning of church and beating of its African-American members. The three bodies were found weeks later in an earthen dam.

The SPLC also sued last week on behalf of two Democratic lawmakers who claim the governor’s midyear budget-cutting authority is an unconstitutional infringement on legislative powers. That lawsuit also addresses education funding, among other budget issues.

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Follow Jeff Amy at: http://twitter.com/jeffamy. Read his work at https://www.apnews.com/search/Jeff_Amy.

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