Close Menu
  • Breaking News
  • Business
  • Career
  • Sports
  • Climate
  • Science
    • Tech
  • Culture
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
Categories
  • Breaking News (5,267)
  • Business (319)
  • Career (4,472)
  • Climate (217)
  • Culture (4,441)
  • Education (4,662)
  • Finance (214)
  • Health (867)
  • Lifestyle (4,324)
  • Science (4,348)
  • Sports (342)
  • Tech (178)
  • Uncategorized (1)
Hand Picked

Jared Goff News: Career-worst accuracy in loss

November 18, 2025

Global Culture Night showcases international culture to community – The Daily Eastern News

November 18, 2025

Columbia MissourianEducation Immigrant StudentsTeachers look on as students play on the playground at Perkins K-8 School Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025, in San Diego. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull).2 hours ago

November 18, 2025

Nikkei 225, Nifty 50, Kospi

November 18, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and services
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
onlyfacts24
  • Breaking News

    Nikkei 225, Nifty 50, Kospi

    November 18, 2025

    FOX News Media CEO Suzanne Scott participates in fireside chat

    November 18, 2025

    Britain overhauls asylum policy as anti-immigration views rise | Migration

    November 17, 2025

    Alphabet rallies after Berkshire reveals stake. Why Buffett’s firm likely bought it

    November 17, 2025

    Senate Democrats seek investigation into Trump shutdown messaging

    November 17, 2025
  • Business

    Addressing Gender-Based Violence: 16 Days of Activism

    November 16, 2025

    Global Weekly Economic Update | Deloitte Insights

    November 15, 2025

    CBSE Class 12 Business Studies Exam Pattern 2026 with Marking Scheme and Topic-wise Marks Distribution

    November 13, 2025

    25 Tested Best Business Ideas for College Students in 2026

    November 10, 2025

    Top 10 most-read business insights

    November 10, 2025
  • Career

    Jared Goff News: Career-worst accuracy in loss

    November 18, 2025

    Wyoming Guard honors Colonel Tweedy’s 35-year career | News

    November 18, 2025

    Dubois County HeraldAspire 2025 Connects Students with Local Career PathwaysTELL CITY — Perry County high school sophomores had the opportunity to explore local career pathways and connect directly with professionals….4 hours ago

    November 18, 2025

    Career Exploration Fair coming Nov. 20

    November 17, 2025

    Wayne County Schools Career Center open house set for Dec 4

    November 17, 2025
  • Sports

    Thunder’s Nikola Topic diagnosed with testicular cancer, undergoing chemotherapy

    November 15, 2025

    Nikola Topic, Oklahoma City Thunder, PG – Fantasy Basketball News, Stats

    November 14, 2025

    Sports industry in Saudi Arabia – statistics & facts

    November 14, 2025

    OKC Thunder Guard Nikola Topic Diagnosed with Testicular Cancer

    November 12, 2025

    Nikola Topic: Oklahoma City Thunder guard, 20, diagnosed with cancer

    November 11, 2025
  • Climate

    Organic Agriculture | Economic Research Service

    November 14, 2025

    PA Environment & Energy Articles & NewsClips By Topic

    November 9, 2025

    NAVAIR Open Topic for Logistics in a Contested Environment”

    November 5, 2025

    Climate-Resilient Irrigation

    October 31, 2025

    PA Environment & Energy Articles & NewsClips By Topic

    October 26, 2025
  • Science
    1. Tech
    2. View All

    Three Trending Tech Topics at the Conexxus Annual Conference

    November 15, 2025

    Another BRICKSTORM: Stealthy Backdoor Enabling Espionage into Tech and Legal Sectors

    November 14, 2025

    Data center energy usage topic of Nov. 25 Tech Council luncheon in Madison » Urban Milwaukee

    November 11, 2025

    Google to add ‘What People Suggest’ in when users will search these topics

    November 1, 2025

    YouTube · VideoFromSpaceBlastoff! SpaceX launches Sentinel-6B for NASA and European partners, nails landingA SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launched the Copernicus Sentinel-6B ocean-monitoring satellite from Vandenberg Space Force Base on Nov. 17, 2025 at….10 hours ago

    November 18, 2025

    Cohesion, Charging, And Chaos On The Lunar Surface

    November 18, 2025

    Mars spacecraft images pinpoint comet 3I/ATLAS’s path with 10x higher accuracy: This could help us protect Earth someday

    November 17, 2025

    AI creates the first 100-billion-star Milky Way simulation

    November 17, 2025
  • Culture

    Global Culture Night showcases international culture to community – The Daily Eastern News

    November 18, 2025

    Holiday Happenings: Upcoming festive events in Downtown | Arts and Culture

    November 18, 2025

    VikingFest draws crowds to Castle Bridge Event Center with local vendors and Norse culture | News

    November 17, 2025

    Bills fans travel from Mexico for game, bringing piece of culture with them

    November 17, 2025

    HomeTrust Bank Earns 3 National Workplace Culture Awards

    November 17, 2025
  • Health

    Intergovernmental Negotiating Body (INB)

    November 17, 2025

    Health, Economic Growth and Jobs

    November 16, 2025

    Editor’s Note: The Hot Topic Of Women’s Health

    November 14, 2025

    WHO sets new global standard for child-friendly cancer drugs, paving way for industry innovation

    November 10, 2025

    Hot Topic, Color Health streamline access to cancer screening

    November 6, 2025
  • Lifestyle
Contact
onlyfacts24
Home»Education»Trump officials are vowing to end school desegregation orders. Some parents say they’re still needed
Education

Trump officials are vowing to end school desegregation orders. Some parents say they’re still needed

June 8, 2025No Comments
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Trump education desegregation 86685 scaled.jpg
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

FERRIDAY, La. (AP) — Even at a glance, the differences are obvious. The walls of Ferriday High School are old…

FERRIDAY, La. (AP) — Even at a glance, the differences are obvious. The walls of Ferriday High School are old and worn, surrounded by barbed wire. Just a few miles away, Vidalia High School is clean and bright, with a new library and a crisp blue “V” painted on orange brick.

Ferriday High is 90% Black. Vidalia High is 62% white.

For Black families, the contrast between the schools suggests “we’re not supposed to have the finer things,” said Brian Davis, a father in Ferriday. “It’s almost like our kids don’t deserve it,” he said.

The schools are part of Concordia Parish, which was ordered to desegregate 60 years ago and remains under a court-ordered plan to this day. Yet there’s growing momentum to release the district — and dozens of others — from decades-old orders that some call obsolete.

In a remarkable reversal, the Justice Department said it plans to start unwinding court-ordered desegregation plans dating to the Civil Rights Movement. Officials started in April, when they lifted a 1960s order in Louisiana’s Plaquemines Parish. Harmeet Dhillon, who leads the department’s civil rights division, has said others will “bite the dust.”

It comes amid pressure from Republican Gov. Jeff Landry and his attorney general, who have called for all the state’s remaining orders to be lifted. They describe the orders as burdens on districts and relics of a time when Black students were still forbidden from some schools.

The orders were always meant to be temporary — school systems can be released if they demonstrate they fully eradicated segregation. Decades later, that goal remains elusive, with stark racial imbalances persisting in many districts.

Civil rights groups say the orders are important to keep as tools to address the legacy of forced segregation — including disparities in student discipline, academic programs and teacher hiring. They point to cases like Concordia, where the decades-old order was used to stop a charter school from favoring white students in admissions.

“Concordia is one where it’s old, but a lot is happening there,” said Deuel Ross, deputy director of litigation for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund. “That’s true for a lot of these cases. They’re not just sitting silently.”

Debates over integration are far from settled

Last year, before President Donald Trump took office, Concordia Parish rejected a Justice Department plan that would have ended its case if the district combined several majority white and majority Blac k elementary and middle schools.

At a town hall meeting, Vidalia residents vigorously opposed the plan, saying it would disrupt students’ lives and expose their children to drugs and violence. An official from the Louisiana attorney general’s office spoke against the proposal and said the Trump administration likely would change course on older orders.

Accepting the plan would have been a “death sentence” for the district, said Paul Nelson, a former Concordia superintendent. White families would have fled to private schools or other districts, said Nelson, who wants the court order removed.

“It’s time to move on,” said Nelson, who left the district in 2016. “Let’s start looking to build for the future, not looking back to what our grandparents may have gone through.”

At Ferriday High, athletic coach Derrick Davis supported combining schools in Ferriday and Vidalia. He said the district’s disparities come into focus whenever his teams visit schools with newer sports facilities.

“It seems to me, if we’d all combine, we can all get what we need,” he said.

Others oppose merging schools if it’s done solely for the sake of achieving racial balance. “Redistricting and going to different places they’re not used to … it would be a culture shock to some people,” said Ferriday’s school resource officer, Marcus Martin, who, like Derrick Davis, is Black.

The district’s current superintendent and school board did not respond to requests for comment.

Federal orders offer leverage for racial discrimination cases

Concordia is among more than 120 districts across the South that remain under desegregation orders from the 1960s and ’70s, including about a dozen in Louisiana.

Calling the orders historical relics is “unequivocally false,” said Shaheena Simons, who until April led the Justice Department section that oversees school desegregation cases.

“Segregation and inequality persist in our schools, and they persist in districts that are still under desegregation orders,” she said.

With court orders in place, families facing discrimination can reach out directly to the Justice Department or seek relief from the court. Otherwise, the only recourse is a lawsuit, which many families can’t afford, Simons said.

In Concordia, the order played into a battle over a charter school that opened in 2013 on the former campus of an all-white private school. To protect the area’s progress on racial integration, a judge ordered Delta Charter School to build a student body that reflected the district’s racial demographics. But in its first year, the school was just 15% Black.

After a court challenge, Delta was ordered to give priority to Black students. Today, about 40% of its students are Black.

Desegregation orders have been invoked recently in other cases around the state. One led to an order to address disproportionately high rates of discipline for Black students, and in another a predominantly Black elementary school was relocated from a site close to a chemical plant.

The Justice Department could easily end some desegregation orders

The Trump administration was able to close the Plaquemines case with little resistance because the original plaintiffs were no longer involved — the Justice Department was litigating the case alone. Concordia and an unknown number of other districts are in the same situation, making them vulnerable to quick dismissals.

Concordia’s case dates to 1965, when the area was strictly segregated and home to a violent offshoot of the Ku Klux Klan. When Black families in Ferriday sued for access to all-white schools, the federal government intervened.

As the district integrated its schools, white families fled Ferriday. The district’s schools came to reflect the demographics of their surrounding areas. Ferriday is mostly Black and low-income, while Vidalia is mostly white and takes in tax revenue from a hydroelectric plant. A third town in the district, Monterey, has a high school that’s 95% white.

At the December town hall, Vidalia resident Ronnie Blackwell said the area “feels like a Mayberry, which is great,” referring to the fictional Southern town from “The Andy Griffith Show.” The federal government, he said, has “probably destroyed more communities and school systems than it ever helped.”

Under its court order, Concordia must allow students in majority Black schools to transfer to majority white schools. It also files reports on teacher demographics and student discipline.

After failing to negotiate a resolution with the Justice Department, Concordia is scheduled to make its case that the judge should dismiss the order, according to court documents. Meanwhile, amid a wave of resignations in the federal government, all but two of the Justice Department lawyers assigned to the case have left.

Without court supervision, Brian Davis sees little hope for improvement.

“A lot of parents over here in Ferriday, they’re stuck here because here they don’t have the resources to move their kids from A to B,” he said. “You’ll find schools like Ferriday — the term is, to me, slipping into darkness.”

___

The Associated Press’ education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

Copyright
© 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, written or redistributed.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Columbia MissourianEducation Immigrant StudentsTeachers look on as students play on the playground at Perkins K-8 School Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025, in San Diego. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull).2 hours ago

November 18, 2025

Tampa Bay TimesFlorida public education faces free speech testsA roundup of Florida education news from around the state..3 hours ago

November 18, 2025

CBS NewsExpert says higher education has created an "army of unhappy customers"Jon Marcus, the higher education editor at The Hechinger Report, talks about the crisis facing colleges and universities..13 hours ago

November 17, 2025

Education leader’s death has community in mourning, and other Saginaw-related news this week

November 17, 2025
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Latest Posts

Jared Goff News: Career-worst accuracy in loss

November 18, 2025

Global Culture Night showcases international culture to community – The Daily Eastern News

November 18, 2025

Columbia MissourianEducation Immigrant StudentsTeachers look on as students play on the playground at Perkins K-8 School Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025, in San Diego. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull).2 hours ago

November 18, 2025

Nikkei 225, Nifty 50, Kospi

November 18, 2025
News
  • Breaking News (5,267)
  • Business (319)
  • Career (4,472)
  • Climate (217)
  • Culture (4,441)
  • Education (4,662)
  • Finance (214)
  • Health (867)
  • Lifestyle (4,324)
  • Science (4,348)
  • Sports (342)
  • Tech (178)
  • Uncategorized (1)

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from onlyfacts24.

Follow Us
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from ONlyfacts24.

News
  • Breaking News (5,267)
  • Business (319)
  • Career (4,472)
  • Climate (217)
  • Culture (4,441)
  • Education (4,662)
  • Finance (214)
  • Health (867)
  • Lifestyle (4,324)
  • Science (4,348)
  • Sports (342)
  • Tech (178)
  • Uncategorized (1)
Facebook Instagram TikTok
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and services
© 2025 Designed by onlyfacts24

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.