[July 16, 2014]By Jonathan Stempel and Jon Herskovitz
(Reuters) - A federal appeals court upheld
the use of race by University of Texas at Austin in undergraduate
admissions, a victory for affirmative action proponents, one year after
the U.S. Supreme Court ordered closer scrutiny of the school's
practices.
By a 2-1 vote, a panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on
Tuesday said the state's flagship university had justified its
limited use of race to achieve diversity, given a lack of workable
alternatives.
A contrary ruling "would hobble the richness of the educational
experience," Judge Patrick Higginbotham wrote for the majority.
"University education is more the shaping of lives than the filling
of heads with facts."
Opponents pledged to appeal, which could give the Supreme Court a
chance to again review the case in its next term.
In June 2013, the Supreme Court did not directly rule on the
program's constitutionality but ordered the 5th Circuit, which sits
in New Orleans, to scrutinize it more closely.
Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote for a 7-1 majority that courts must
"verify that it is necessary for a university to use race to achieve
the educational benefits of diversity." UT Austin admits most
freshmen through a program that guarantees admission to students in
roughly the top 10 percent of their high school classes. It uses
other "holistic" factors, including race, to admit the remainder.
While the program has resulted in significant racial and ethnic
diversity, the percentages of black and Hispanic students remain
lower than in Texas' overall population.
EXACTING REVIEW
Higginbotham said the holistic review met the exacting scrutiny
required by the Supreme Court, and was nearly indistinguishable from
a University of Michigan Law School program that the Supreme Court
narrowly upheld in 2003.
"A variety of perspectives, that is differences in life experiences,
is a distinct and valued element of diversity," Higginbotham wrote.
Judge Emilio Garza dissented, saying the university failed to show
its program was narrowly tailored and "has not defined its diversity
goal in any meaningful way."
Tuesday's decision came three months after the Supreme Court upheld
a voter-approved Michigan law banning racial preferences in
admissions to state colleges.
The Texas case was brought by Abigail Fisher, who said UT Austin
denied her admission in favor of lesser-qualified minorities.
She later graduated from Louisiana State University but, she said,
stayed in the case to help others in similar positions.
Bert Rein, a lawyer for Fisher, did not immediately respond to
requests for comment.
A group led by Edward Blum, a driving force behind the opposition to
the university's program, released a statement in which Fisher
expressed disappointment. Blum, a Maine resident, leads the Project
on Fair Representation, whose website says it devotes "all of its
efforts to influencing jurisprudence, public policy, and public
attitudes regarding race and ethnicity."
"I remain committed to continuing this lawsuit even if it means we
appeal to the Supreme Court once again," Fisher said in the
statement.
University President Bill Powers welcomed the decision, saying it
encourages the exchange of ideas and thoughts "when students who are
diverse in all regards come together in the classroom, at campus
events and in all aspects of campus life."
The case is Fisher v. University of Texas at Austin et al, 5th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals, No. 09-50822.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York, Jon Herskovitz in
Austin, Texas, Joan Biskupic in Washington, D.C. and Brendan O'Brien
in Milwaukee; Editing by Dan Grebler and Steve Orlofsky)