Jones, Elaine; and Others (scrapbook), 1980s - 1 of 42
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January 1, 1980 - January 1, 1990

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Press Releases, Volume 6. Harkless v. Sweeney Ruling Awards Back Pay to 10 Black Teachers, 1978. aea6117c-bb92-ee11-be37-00224827e97b. LDF Archives, Thurgood Marshall Institute. https://ldfrecollection.org/archives/archives-search/archives-item/798be3bd-e587-4859-b333-b70217121a5f/harkless-v-sweeney-ruling-awards-back-pay-to-10-black-teachers. Accessed August 19, 2025.
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St] NEWS RELEASE DRAFT HARKLESS v. SWEENEY BILD Today the District Coutt for the South District of Texas awarded $372,000 in back pay to ten black teachers who were discharged in xn 1966 On account of their race. This award concluded a thirteen year legal battle brought by the NAACP Legal Defense Fund to obtain relief for these teachers. After two trials and two appeals to the Fifth Sixkux Circuit Court, LDF was finally able in 1977 to obtain a decision that the teachers were discharged for racial reasons. One teacher will receive as much as $120,000. In 1974, another discrimination suit was filed also in the Fifth Cirunit. The Courts held that victims of employment discrimination should be restored to their"rightful place" through the compensation of back pay. Henceforth, the $372,000 to be received hy the plaintiffs should xemedy to the fullest extant tke lossdaof income an@ beadrits incurred as a reault of the dis- crimination. Aside frem the forementioned losses, factored_into the back pay consideratinn are expenses incurred by the plaintiffs in seeking ane onee While the apparent success of Harkless v. Sweeney rests with the up- holding of the plaintiffs’ compaaints and the issuance of back pay, it may not be easy to ignore the unfortunate events experienced by the teachers during this lengthy litigation. Although the teachers had among them an average of 15 years ¥eaching experience, several of them were not able to find teaching jogs or comparable employment in the Sweeney area. One of the teachers worked as a nurse's aide which yielded only a small portion of her salary were she employed in her profession. Some of them were forced to relocate to other communities for various reasons. Ironically, two fo the plaintiffs NEWS RELEASE HARKLESS v. SWEENEY Page Two will never a witness a successful Harkéess nor pessonally recover their losses; however, their children will inherit the back pay compensation as a result of their parents’ death.