Copies of Replacement Pages with Cover Letter
Public Court Documents
June 7, 1995
5 pages
Cite this item
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Case Files, Sheff v. O'Neill Hardbacks. Copies of Replacement Pages with Cover Letter, 1995. 18dcae93-a146-f011-877a-002248226c06. LDF Archives, Thurgood Marshall Institute. https://ldfrecollection.org/archives/archives-search/archives-item/ac3979c0-5b5f-412f-a639-97f0cb9e8c96/copies-of-replacement-pages-with-cover-letter. Accessed November 23, 2025.
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FOUNDATION
ThirtyTwo Grand Street, Hartford, CT 06106
203/247-9823 Fax 203/728-0287
June 7, 1995
Ms. Michele Angers
Office of the Clerk
Connecticut Supreme Court
231 Capitol Avenue
Drawer Z, Station A
Hartford, CT 06106
RE: Sheff v. O'Neill, s.C. 15255
Dear Ms. Angers,
Attached please find an original and three (3) copies of the
replacement pages you requested.
Please call us if you need any additional items.
Sincerely,
pi LC a
Martha Stone
Philip D. Tegeler
Attorneys for Plaintiffs
MS,PDT/dmt
Enclosures
cc: Bernard McGovern, Assistant Attorney General
All counsel of record.
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VI.
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A. STUDENTS’ SOCIO-ECONOMIC STATUS IN HARTFORD
METROPOLITAN AREA SCHOOLS (Stipulations 113-
CT RE RE a ER
C. INTEGRATION AND ITS EFFECTS (Stipulations
ISO EB RY oes eie siniaihiv stimu ols iiatain a x x svi es sn as
F. DISPARITIES IN EDUCATIONAL OUTCOMES
(Stipulations 154-202). cue ver rns ravines smmsenes
PLAINTIFFS’ HEADING:
HAS THE STATE BEEN INVOLVED IN MAINTAINING RACIAL,
ETHNIC, AND ECONOMIC SEGREGATION, UNEQUAL EDUCATIONAL
OPPORTUNITIES, AND LACK OF A MINIMALLY ADEQUATE
EDUCATION; DOES THE STATE HAVE AN AFFIRMATIVE DUTY
TO ADDRESS SUCH ISSUES; AND HAS THE STATE FAILED TO
DEFENDANTS’ HEADING:
HAS THE STATE BEEN TAKING APPROPRIATE ACTION TO
ADDRESS RACIAL, ETHIC, AND SOCIO-ECONOMIC ISOLATION
AND EDUCATIONAL UNDERACHIEVEMENT OF URBAN CHILDREN
A. STATE INVOLVEMENT IN EDUCATION HISTORICALLY
(Stipulations 203-220) «vate reevseormevnossnen
B. STATE INVOLVEMENT IN EDUCATION TODAY
(Stipulations 221-251)... uv ctv nnssovansonnnine
STEPS TOWARD INTEGRATION (Stipulations 252-256).....
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31. As of 1990, eighteen of the surrounding suburbs had less
than 10% minority population, ten of the surrounding suburbs have
less than 5% minority population, 18 out of the 21 suburbs have less
than 4% Black population, and 12 towns have less than 2% Black
population. (Pls’ Ex. 137 at 1, 7; Pls’ Ex. 138; Steahr pp. 99-101)
32. In 1991, sixteen suburbs had less than 3% Latino
enrollment. (Pls’ Ex. 83 pp. 18-21)
33. Some of Connecticut’s school districts, including
Hartford, serve higher percentages of African American and Latino
students than others.
34. In 1986, 12.1% of Connecticut’s school age population was
black and 8.5% was Hispanic.
35. 1987-88 figures for total school population and percent
minority for the towns listed below are:
Total School Pop. % Minority
Hartford 25,058 90.5
Bloomfield 2,585 69.0
Avon 2,068 3.9
Canton 1,189 3.2
East Granby 666 2.3
East Hartford 5,205 20.6
East Windsor 1,267 8+5
Ellington 1,855 2.3
Farmington 2,608 37
Glastonbury 4,463 5.4
Granby 1,528 3.5
Manchester 7,084 11.1
Newington 3,801 6.4
Rocky Hill 1,807 5.49
Simsbury 4,039 6.5
South Windsor 3,648 9.3
Suffield 1,772 4.0
Vernon 4,457 6.4
West Hartford 7,424 15.7
Wethersfield 2,997 3.3
Windsor 4,235 30.8
Windsor Locks 1,642 4.0
36. As of 1991-92, two districts, Hartford and Bloomfield, had
more than five percent African Americans and Latinos on their
professional staffs. (Defs’ Exs. 14.1-14.22)
37. As of 1990, fourteen of the state’s 166 school districts
are home to 30 percent of the state’s total student population, 77
(replacement page, June 7, 1995)
-28
V. PLAINTIFFS’ HEADING:
HAS THE STATE BEEN INVOLVED IN MAINTAINING RACIAL, ETHNIC, AND
ECONOMIC SEGREGATION, UNEQUAL EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES, AND
LACK OF A MINIMALLY ADEQUATE EDUCATION; DOES THE STATE HAVE AN
AFFIRMATIVE DUTY TO ADDRESS SUCH ISSUES; AND HAS THE STATE
FAILED TO ACT TO REMEDY THESE CONSTITUTIONAL DEFICIENCIES?
DEFENDANTS’ HEADING:
HAS THE STATE BEEN TAKING APPROPRIATE ACTION TO ADDRESS RACIAL,
ETHNIC, AND SOCIO-ECONOMIC ISOLATION AND EDUCATIONAL
UNDERACHIEVEMENT OF URBAN CHILDREN IN POVERTY?
A. STATE INVOLVEMENT IN EDUCATION HISTORICALLY
203. During the Eighteenth Century, the General Assembly of
the State of Connecticut assigned the responsibility for providing
education to parishes, or ecclesiastical societies, the boundaries
of which were not generally coterminous with town boundaries.
(Collier p. 19)
204. At the end of the Eighteenth Century, state funds for
education were channeled to independent entities called school
societies, the boundaries of which were at first coterminous with
parishes. (Collier p. 20)
205, During the first half of the Nineteenth Century, the
General Assembly of the State of Connecticut assigned responsibility
for providing education to approximately 1,600 small corporate
entities called districts, the boundaries of which were not
generally coterminous with towns. (Collier p. 21)
206. Districts in the Nineteenth Century had their own school
committees and were delegated the power to tax, hire teachers and
establish textbooks, among other things. (Collier at 61)
207. During the second half of the Nineteenth Century and the
first decade of the Twentieth Century, the General Assembly of the
State of Connecticut passed legislation to encourage the
consolidation of districts under the auspices of towns in order to
improve the condition of the schools. (Collier pp. 27-28, 39)
208. By 1909, all but fifteen school districts in the state
were consolidated at the town level so that school district
boundaries except for the fifteen districts were contiguous with
town boundary lines. (Collier pp. 28, 39, 66)
2009. The consolidation of school boundaries in 1909 had
nothing to do with the race of Connecticut students. (Collier, p.
66)
(replacement page, June 7, 1995)