U.S. court skeptical of challenge to elite Virginia school's admissions
policy
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[September 17, 2022]
By Nate Raymond
(Reuters) - A U.S. appeals court on Friday
appeared skeptical of claims that an admissions policy adopted for a
highly selective Virginia public high school discriminates against Asian
Americans in a closely watched challenge brought by a conservative
parents group.
The Richmond-based 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals heard arguments in
the Fairfax County School Board's appeal of a judge's ruling that Thomas
Jefferson High School for Science & Technology's admissions policy was
discriminatory and violates the U.S. Constitution's 14th Amendment
guarantee of equal protection under the law.
During the arguments, Erin Wilcox, a lawyer with the conservative
Pacific Legal Foundation representing the group called Coalition for TJ,
was questioned by the judges on how an admissions policy that facially
does not consider race can be discriminatory.
The policy was adopted in 2020 by the school board following concerns
about a lack of racial diversity at the school, which is known as "TJ"
and often ranks among the best U.S. public high schools.
TJ is a magnet school located in Alexandria with a selective admissions
policy that has had chronic underrepresentation of Black and Hispanic
students. Aware of this, the board crafted a policy that eliminated a
standardized test from TJ's admissions process, capped how many students
could come from each of the district's middle schools and guaranteed
seats for the top students from each of these schools.
"Racial discrimination by proxy is nothing new," Wilcox told the
three-judge 4th Circuit panel.
The case is another front in the U.S. legal battle over school
admissions policies involving or affecting the racial composition of
campuses.
On its face, the high school's policy is race neutral, unlike
race-conscious policies used by Harvard University and the University of
North Carolina that the conservative-majority U.S. Supreme Court will
review on Oct. 31. That litigation gives the high court a chance to end
affirmative action policies used by many colleges and universities to
increase racial diversity on campus.
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Fairfax County school buses sit in a
depot in Lorton, Virginia, U.S., July 22, 2020. REUTERS/Kevin
Lamarque/File Photo
While Black and Hispanic student admissions increased under TJ's new
policy, the proportion of Asian American students decreased in the
first year from 73% to 54%, U.S. District Judge Claude Hilton noted
in his February ruling that deemed the admissions rules improper
"racial balancing."
Judge Toby Heytens, an appointee of Democratic President Joe Biden,
told Wilcox during Thursday's arguments that under that logic "any
attempt to increase representation of one group, in your view, by
necessity discriminates against another."
Don Verrilli, the former U.S. solicitor general representing the
school board, said the "radical" argument advanced by the
challengers boiled down to saying that any government effort to
increase opportunities for underrepresented groups violates the
Constitution.
"It makes no sense to conclude that promoting equal opportunities is
a suspect purpose, because it would inappropriately freeze in place
the status quo," said Sydney Foster, a U.S. Justice Department
lawyer arguing for the Biden administration.
The only member of the panel who appeared sympathetic to the
challengers was Judge Allison Jones Rushing, who asked whether
attempting to match regional racial demographics with a facially
neutral policy was an "impermissible purpose."
Rushing, an appointee of Republican former President Donald Trump,
dissented in a 2-1 ruling 4th Circuit ruling in April granting the
school board's request to delay the implementation of Hilton's
decision while it appealed.
The Supreme Court in April declined an emergency request to block
the policy, though three conservative justices dissented.
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Will Dunham and
Alexia Garamfalvi)
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