Sent to you by Tee via Google Reader: Supreme Court to consider
reverse discrimination case that could transform hiring nationwide via
Black Politics on the Web by The Admin on 4/18/09
Inside a burning building, fire doesn’t discriminate between Matthew
Marcarelli and Gary Tinney. Inside the New Haven Fire Department,
however, skin color has put them on opposite sides of a lawsuit that
could transform hiring procedures nationwide.

This week, the Supreme Court will consider the reverse discrimination
claim of Marcarelli and a group of white firefighters. They all passed
a promotion exam, but the city threw out the test because no blacks
would have been promoted, saying the exam had a “disparate impact” on
minorities likely to violate the 1964 Civil Rights Act.

Besides affecting how race can be considered in filling government and
perhaps even private jobs, the dispute also addresses broader questions
about racial progress: Do minorities and women still need legal
protection from discrimination, or do the monumental civil rights laws
that created a more equal nation now cause more harm than good?

Also, beneath the specific details of the firefighters’ lawsuit lies an
uncomfortable truth: On most standardized tests, regardless of the
subject, blacks score lower than whites.

Reconciling that reality with efforts to ensure “justice for all”
remains a work in progress — one that will be molded by the Supreme
Court.

New Haven’s population is 44 percent white, 36 percent black and 24
percent Hispanic (who can be any race). At the time of the 2003 test,
53 percent of the city’s firefighters, 63 percent of lieutenants and 86
percent of captains were white. Blacks were 30 percent of the
firefighters, 22 percent of lieutenants and 4 percent of captains.

The promotion exams were closely focused on firefighting methods,
knowledge and skills. The first part had 200 multiple-choice questions
and counted for 60 percent of the final score. Candidates returned
another day to take an oral exam in which they described responses to
various scenarios, which counted for 40 percent.

Tinney, a black lieutenant who has been a firefighter for 14 years, was
seeking a promotion to captain when he took the exam.

He says both the test and his fire department have hidden biases
against minorities: The department is historically white, with the
first blacks joining in 1957, and jobs, relationships, knowledge and
choice assignments are passed on from friend to friend and generation
to generation.

“I just call it ‘the network,’” Tinney says.

The white firefighters’ attorney, Karen Torre, said they would not be
interviewed for this story. In a conversation on Fox News’ “Hannity”
program, Marcarelli said it was “gut wrenching” to learn that he was
No. 1 on the test but would not get promoted.

“It’s something that shakes what you believe in. Because you believe if
you work hard, you’re rewarded for that, and that’s not necessarily the
case,” Marcarelli said.

Torre said whites have no special advantage in promotions because of
laws requiring use of a race-blind, score-based system. She added that
many blacks have relatives on the force, including high-ranking
officers.

One hundred and eighteen people took the tests; 56 passed. Nineteen of
the top scorers were eligible for promotion to 15 open lieutenant and
captain positions. Based on the test results, the city said that no
minorities would have been eligible for lieutenant, and two Hispanics
would have been eligible for captain. (The lawsuit was filed by 20
white plaintiffs, including one man who is both white and Hispanic.)

The exams were designed by a professional testing firm that followed
federal guidelines for mitigating disparate racial outcomes, the
plaintiffs say.

But after the results came back, the city says it found evidence that
the tests were potentially flawed. Sources of bias included that the
written section measured memorization rather than actual skills needed
for the jobs; giving too much weight to the written section; and lack
of testing for leadership in emergency conditions, according to a brief
filed by officers of the Society for Industrial and Organizational
Psychology.

“I’m sure there are numerous reasons why (blacks didn’t do as well),
and not because we’re not as intelligent,” Tinney says. “There’s a lot
of underlying issues to that … these folks are saying, ‘We studied the
hardest, we passed the test, we should be promoted.’ But they’re not
talking about all the other things.”

Torre argues that discarding a test because no minorities would have
been promoted violates the equal protection clause of the U.S.
Constitution and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, which forbids
discrimination because of race.

Call it a legal riddle only the Supreme Court could solve: The white
firefighters say Title VII prohibits discrimination against them for
being white; New Haven says Title VII prohibits it from using a test
that has a disparate impact against blacks.

“All were afforded the same notice, the same study period, the same
exam syllabi, etc.,” said Torre, who would only answer questions by
e-mail. “The rest was up to the individual.”

There are long-standing divisions over the concept of hardworking,
qualified whites being “victimized” by laws or practices designed to
help minorities overcome America’s history of racism. What’s different
today is that the landscape has shifted in many ways, big and small.

The biggest is the election of President Barack Obama, and the support
he received from millions of white voters.

“It is not white racism that plays the deciding role in the success of
minorities any more,” says Edward Blum, a visiting scholar at the
American Enterprise Institute who believes that race should not be
considered in employment decisions.

“That was the case in the ’60s and ’70s and maybe even part of the
’80s,” he says. “But it is no longer the case in the 21st century that
because you are black you are being held back from achieving what your
parents and your ambitions will allow you to achieve. I think that has
been crystallized with the election of President Obama.”

Obama’s election has been a boon to the movement that developed years
ago seeking to reshape civil rights laws designed to remedy
discrimination.

Besides the firefighters’ lawsuit, the Supreme Court will soon hear a
case seeking to overturn a Voting Rights Act requirement that all or
parts of 16 states with a history of discrimination must get approval
from the Justice Department before changing election procedures. And in
2007, the court struck down voluntary integration plans in two public
school districts.

Even though it may result in less opportunities for qualified
minorities, “the use of race does greater harm to our social fabric by
being there than by being eliminated,” Blum says.

Another major shift has been in the balance of the Supreme Court.
Conservatives gained a 5-4 majority during the Bush administration,
although Justice Anthony Kennedy is seen as a potential swing vote.

In Chief Justice John Roberts’ majority opinion in the 2007 school
ruling, one line rang loudest: “the way to stop discrimination on the
basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis of race.”

That statement was seen as a harbinger of future rulings that would end
the use of race in employment, voting and awarding government
contracts. It also rebutted a famous statement by Justice Harry
Blackmun in the landmark Bakke affirmative action case: “In order to
treat some persons equally, we must treat them differently.”

Mary Frances Berry, a history professor at the University of
Pennsylvania and head of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights during the
Clinton administration, said the firefighters’ case has broad
implications.

“This is about whether we are going to see a sea change in how the
judiciary looks at the need for these (protections), and how the
popular culture and electoral politics influence their perceptions,”
Berry said.

The Obama administration has said such laws are needed and it is
committed to enforcing them. The Justice Department’s brief in the
firefighters case supports New Haven’s position that the city acted
properly in throwing out the tests.

But in what many call a political maneuver designed to avoid taking
sides, the Justice Department stopped short of saying the firefighters’
case should be dismissed, instead recommending that it be remanded to a
lower court to determine if city’s decision was a pretext for
intentional discrimination.

Polls show varying levels of support for affirmative action programs.

In an AP-Yahoo poll conducted in December 2007 through January 2008,
one-quarter of respondents favored affirmative action programs and 37
percent opposed them. Another 36 percent neither favored nor opposed
them.

A September 2007 Pew poll, which did not give people the option to say
they had no opinion, found that 46 percent of people said they favored
affirmative action programs that give special preferences to qualified
blacks in hiring and education, while 40 percent opposed such programs.

Last November, Colorado voters became the first in the nation to reject
a ban on state affirmative action programs. Similar measures have been
approved in Nebraska, California, Michigan and Washington.

Supreme Court observers predict the firefighters’ lawsuit will be
decided by a 5-4 margin, with Justice Kennedy casting the deciding vote.

His past decisions give hope to both sides.

In the recent Voting Rights Act decision that made it harder for some
minority candidates to win election when voting districts are redrawn,
Kennedy wrote in the majority opinion that “racial discrimination and
racially polarized voting are not ancient history. Much remains to be
done to ensure that citizens of all races have equal opportunity to
share and participate in our democratic processes and traditions.”

“It would be an irony, however,” Kennedy continued, if civil rights
laws were used to “entrench racial differences.”

Jesse Washington, AP

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