High Court Rules for White Firefighters in Discrimination Suit:
Ruling Reverses High-Profile Decision by Supreme Court Nominee Sonia Sotomayor
The Supreme Court has ruled that white firefighters in New Haven, Conn., were unfairly denied promotions because of their race, reversing a decision high court nominee Sonia Sotomayor endorsed as an appeals court judge.
By Robert Barnes
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, June 29, 2009; 12:07 PM
The Supreme Court today narrowly ruled in favor of white firefighters in New Haven, Conn., who said they were denied promotions because of their race, reversing a decision by Judge Sonia Sotomayor and others that had come to play a large role in the consideration of her nomination for the high court.
The city had thrown out the results of a promotion test because no African Americans and only two Hispanics would have qualified for promotions. It said it feared a lawsuit from minorities under federal laws that said such "disparate impacts" on test results could be used to show discrimination.
In effect, the court was deciding when avoiding potential discrimination against one group amounted to actual discrimination against another.
The court's conservative majority said in a 5 to 4 vote that is what happened in New Haven.
"Fear of litigation alone cannot justify an employer's reliance on race to the detriment of individuals who passed the examinations and qualified for promotions," wrote Justice Anthony M. Kennedy.
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg wrote for the liberals on the court and said the decision knocks the pegs from Title VII of the Civil Rights Act.
She read her dissent from the bench for emphasis. "Congress endeavored to promote equal opportunity in fact, and not simply in form," she said. "The damage today's decision does to that objective is untold."
On the last day on the bench for retiring Justice David H. Souter, the court failed to reach a decision on one of its most important cases of the term: whether a conservative group's production of a 90-minute film on Hillary Rodham Clinton amounted to a documentary, or merely a long commercial of the type restricted by the McCain-Feingold campaign finance reform act.
Instead, the court took the unusual action of scheduling new arguments on the case for Sept. 9, before the court's new term begins next October. The court wants new briefings on issues that could lead to the justices declaring unconstitutional that part of the act, formally called the Bipartisan Campaign Finance Reform Act of 2002.
The court's decision probably will lead Democrats to push efforts to have a vote on Sotomayor's confirmation so she can be in place before the September hearing, although it is unclear whether her replacement of Souter would affect the outcome of the case.
Senate hearings on her nomination are set to begin in two weeks.
The New Haven case, Ricci v. DeStefano, has become the ruling that Sotomayor's critics most point to for evidence that she lets her background influence her decisions, even though her role has been somewhat inflated.
The promotion test results produced a heated debate in New Haven, and government lawyers warned the city's civil service board that if it certified the test results, minority firefighters might have a good case for claiming discrimination under Title VII. Federal guidelines presume discrimination when a test has such a disparate impact on minorities.
The board split 2 to 2, which meant the exam was not certified. Those who opposed using the results said they worried the test must be flawed in some way that disadvantaged minorities. (The test questions have not been made public.)
The white firefighters filed suit, saying their rights had been violated under both the law and the Constitution's protections of due process.
District Judge Janet Bond Arterton dismissed their suit before it went to trial. She said in her 47-page decision that the city was justified under the law in junking the test, even if it could not explain its flaws.
The case then went to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit, where Sotomayor and judges Robert Sack and Rosemary S. Pooler heard the appeal. Oral arguments lasted an hour, with Sotomayor leading the questioning, as is her reputation. But instead of issuing a detailed and signed opinion, the panel said in a brief summary that, although it was "not unsympathetic" to the plight of the white firefighters, it unanimously affirmed the lower court's decision for "reasons stated in the thorough, thoughtful, and well-reasoned opinion."
Kennedy's opinion referred to the judgment of Sotomayor and the other judges only by noting the short opinion.
Kennedy said the standard for whether an employer may discard a test is whether there is a strong reason to the employer to believe that the test is flawed in a way that discriminates against minorities, not just by looking at the results.
In New Haven's case, "there is no evidence -- let alone the required strong basis in evidence -- that the tests were flawed because they were not job-related or because other, equally valid and less discriminatory tests were available to the city," Kennedy wrote.
The case has drawn considerable attention not just because of Sotomayor's role but because of the sympathetic nature of the claim brought by the firefighters, who said they were discriminated against simply because of the color of their skin.
The lead plaintiff, Frank Ricci, is a veteran firefighter who said in sworn statements that he spent thousands of dollars in preparation and studied for months for the exam. Ricci said he is dyslexic, so he had tapes made of the test materials and listened to them on his commute to work.
French Connection
Achile
Diane von Furstenberg
Congrats to these firefighters. May they get the promotion they deserve.
1Hey it's not there fault we suck and can't get promotions. Congrats to them.
2Think this creates more issues than it resolves, and will probably lead to more problems and more lawsuits.
3No one ever said you suck jessie, it's just not right to throw out a test because you didn't achieve the "right" spectrum of nationalities. Just like I'd be upset if they threw out the promotion because there weren't enough white firefighters who passed the test.
4"the standard for whether an employer may discard a test is whether there is a strong reason to the employer to believe that the test is flawed in a way that discriminates against minorities, not just by looking at the results."
I agree. IMO their actions spurned by paranoia were racist to both white and black. As for Sotamayor part in her decision I'll have to read her statements on the (why) of her decision.
5I am glad to see that at very least this was overturned because they feared lawsuits. These discrimination lawsuits are horrendous and they do not solve a single problem. It's about time that we just forgot about racial issues when it is either to one's advantage or detriment. I am in favor of barring political correctness from any political or social decision from this point forward. However I do want everyone to speak English...but because it's the right thing to do rather than a requirement.
6"It's about time that we just forgot about racial issues when it is either to one's advantage or detriment."
7I'm unclear on what this means.
What do you mean "it's the right thing to do"?
8Dave...I was joking or more like I was in a really pissy mood and being cynical. I actually wasn't attacking you for once and I do think the white fire fighters should be promoted, since they clearly deserved to. Obviously if you have a smaller pool of minority candidates you're going to have a smaller amount do well on the test. You shouldn't punish others for that, that's just life. I get that.
Sorry for the misunderstanding. I wasn't even paying attention that I posted after you. Ooo and I used the wrong "their".
9Fortunately, the grammar police aren't around today, or we'd all be in trouble.
10No worries here.
agree Eleu. Completely color blind, good riddence pc and stick with the rule of law & might as well throw in I never thought calling certain crimes "hate" crimes was lawful when in fact all crimes are hate crimes.
Anyway, justice served in this decision.
11I'm happy for them. It was a really stupid move in the first place.
12How will things be completely color blind? Is there a way to do that?
13I'm glad they resolved this before Sotomayer gets sworn in. Although I'm sure she'd do her best to be impartial, it's still better to rule on the case without anyone involved in the first case.
14It starts with the individual. And then it starts with the cynics to stop calling the individual who is color blind silly and telling them it'll never happen. If you don't want to or feel you can't be color blind fine but don't put those limitations on those who choose to and do it. Stand back and give us some breathing room because it is our out look that is most needed here.
15Hypno, I'm not saying color blindness is silly or it'll never happen - but it won't happen by itself and it won't happen without serious effort. This ruling says to the people who thought they detected a lack of color blindness in the test and wanted to do something about it that they were wrong to act.
16So the question remains: how do we determine color blindness? Who determines that a test qualifies as color blind while still being adequate to the subject at hand?
Steph, where was the lack of color blindness in the test? The problem seemed to be with the results.
They gave the test and when it didn't give the results (and the race ration) that they wanted, they threw out the results along with all the hard work the test-takers had put into preparing.
17Race ratio, excuse me.
18Should we assume the problem is with a certain race? How can a 'color blind' test be too difficult for one race?
19Well, I don't know how many firefighters were tested. Does anybody know?
20Ah, I found it. This article said there were 77 people who took the test. (I'll post it separately so it doesn't get flagged.)
"The board found the racially disparate results of the tests unacceptable. New Haven's population is 37.4% black, but no African-American was among the top performers on either exam. The highest-scoring black candidate for a captaincy ranked 16th, behind 12 whites and three Latinos. On the lieutenant's exam, the strongest black performers ranked 14th, 15th and 16th."
21http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124035774411441127.html
22The Constitution is supposed to be color-blind in the sense that it should not permit the government to be used as an instrument to impose injury on someone solely because of his or her race, except in the most extraordinary of circumstances. Racial harmony is not served when race is used as an exclusionist tool against innocent individuals by policy-makers in order to achieve a particular numerical race balancing not required to remedy past state-imposed segregation. Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King "I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character." We have a Black President, A Black Attorney General, A Black Supreme court Justice (who replaced a former Supreme Court Justice, two former Secretary of State, we have had Black CEOs of the "Fortune 500" for years now. People are individuals not statistics.
23Now I was pretty bad in statistics, but it seems to me that this is a pretty small sample size, and that there were many black people who scored pretty highly, but for whatever reason the highest scores went to white and Latino people. In such a small sample population, I would say it has to do with individuals more than race.
That article also says that the firefighters were given a list of material to study, rather than being tested on so called "general" knowledge that can lead to such obvious racial and socioeconomic issues in other standardized tests.
I have no problem with these tests being questioned and examined for racial bias, in fact I invite it, but if there's no evidence of it, it seems really unfair to throw out the results that those top scoring individuals studied so hard for.
24But obviously Mich, people who were responsible for the testing felt there was an issue and didn't feel certain that the test wasn't, or at least couldn't be found to be, at fault. If THEY didn't feel certain that their test was color blind, why would the law say to assume it is?
25I'm guessing people of every race who took the test studied hard, worked hard - you can work your a$$ off for something and still fail.
Steph, those people didn't think there was an issue with the test until the results came in. That makes me question whether they had a problem with the test, or just a problem with the results. And it seems that they threw out the test not because they feared it was biased, but because they feared lawsuits based on the results.
I have no doubt most of the people taking the test worked hard, I really didn't mean to suggest otherwise. But the individuals who scored highest happened to either work the hardest or just have the best natural aptitude for test taking and memorization. Like I said, in a sample size this small, you can definitely attribute this to their individual abilities rather than to their race. Not to mention many black people scored pretty high, just not quite high enough to qualify for the promotions.
26Oh I wasn't suggesting that you are the problem Stephley, I was just answering your question. If I were aiming that statement at you it would be a pointless statement. It's aimed at any one and every one who even thinks much less speaks that some one who chooses to be color blind is foolish because they think it'll never happen. Like I said it starts with the individual. Those with such idealistic insight should not be dissuaded from their enlightenment and if one is cynical to the prospect I simply ask that they stand aside and hush, don't attempt to stifle it if that's what they believe. The less we impied such thoughts the faster this society will move along for the better.
27*impede
28Mich, I can see making up a test and thinking I've done everything right, and only learning when the results come in that I was interpreting something differently than a number of other people taking my test did - we seldom know about differences in interpretation until something highlights those differences.
If they were afraid they were going to be sued based on the results of the test, they were afraid the test couldn't withstand scrutiny on some level.
I think this creates far more confusion and problems than the original issue.
Thanks Hypno.
29"The Constitution is supposed to be color-blind in the sense that it should not permit the government to be used as an instrument to impose injury on someone solely because of his or her race, except in the most extraordinary of circumstances."
Grandpa, just curious exactly what would you consider the most extraordinary of circumstances?
30I would say if a county was responsible for a school system, and that system provided just a fraction of the funding in a black community, that it was providing to a school in a white community, you have a compelling case for extraordinary circumstances absent a compelling reason, such as the school in the white community was burned to the ground, and the disparate funding was in constructing a school equivalent to the one in the black community. I would say if you had a mixed race county, and NONE of the police officers were black, all were white, and they passed over an honorably discharged former black MP, to hire a 19 year old white guy with a high school equivalency certificate, you have extraordinary circumstances.
31"People are individuals not statistics."
32Who's trying to make individuals into statistics? But because one black man has become president of the U.S. doesn't mean that all minorities in the U.S. enjoy equal treatment. The fact that after 233 years, you can list the handful of minority individuals who have made it to the top echelon of U.S. government, and still have digits free, shows that there still is room for improvement.
"Mich, I can see making up a test and thinking I've done everything right, and only learning when the results come in that I was interpreting something differently than a number of other people taking my test did - we seldom know about differences in interpretation until something highlights those differences."
But nobody has even attempted to point out such an issue in this particular test. To just assume such a problem exists anyway is unreasonable.
"If they were afraid they were going to be sued based on the results of the test, they were afraid the test couldn't withstand scrutiny on some level."
Most people who fear lawsuits don't necessarily assume they've done something wrong, but they fear the enormous costs that accompany a lawsuit even if they're determined to be in the right.
33Mich, my first comment was in response to this: "Steph, those people didn't think there was an issue with the test until the results came in."
According to the report I just listened to on the case, the city held hearings on the test and did think it was flawed, so it wasn't just fear of being sued but a concern that a suit could be justified. So they didn't feel confident that it was a color blind test.
34Steph, what about the test (besides the results) led them to think the test was flawed? I haven't heard anything about it, but it's definitely relevant so I'd like to know.
35I will have to look that up when I get home.
36"In other situations like this, minority candidates have successfully sued based on the long-recognized legal theory that a test that has a disparate impact—it affects one racial group more than others—must truly be job-related in order to be legal. You can see why New Haven's black firefighters might have done just that. Why promote firefighters based on a written test rather than their performance in the field? Why favor multiple-choice questions over evaluations of leadership and execution? It's like granting a driver's license based solely on the written test, only with much higher stakes."
I found an article that explained the issue this way (will post in a separate comment so I don't get flagged). That's definitely a better explanation of their fears than just "we wanted to promote a black person, but none of our applicants scored high enough, so the test must be flawed". However, it still bothers me that they didn't have an issue with this method of determining promotions until after the results came out. Perhaps they could have added a practical portion in addition to the test instead of just throwing out the results?
This article also gives a better breakdown of the people taking the two tests than the other article, if anybody is interested:
"In 2003, the city of New Haven, Conn., decided to base future promotions in its firefighting force—there were seven for captain and eight for lieutenant—primarily on a written test. The city paid an outside consultant to design the test so that it would be job-related. Firefighters studied for months. Of the 41 applicants who took the captain exam, eight were black; of the 77 who took the lieutenant exam, 19 were black. None of the African-American candidates scored high enough to be promoted. For both positions, only two of 29 Hispanics qualified for promotion."
37http://www.slate.com/id/2219037/
38Doesn't sound like Hispanics fared much better on the tests...
39All I can think about when I hear this story is how uncomfortable this work environment must be. I can't imagine the tension.
40They didn't fare so badly, either. Two Hispanics qualified for promotions.
I don't see how you can so easily ignore the very small sample size. The results don't necessarily have anything to do with race, and nobody has presented any evidence to the contrary.
If the city was truly worried that a solely written exam was not a good reflection of job skills, they should have added another portion to the qualifying tests. Throwing out the results that all of the tested people worked for is highly unfair.
One of the articles I read pointed out that if too many black people (and not enough white men) had qualified for positions, and the results had been thrown out for that reason, it would be an open-shut case of racial discrimination.
41Steph says she thinks this decision will only lead to more problems, but it's pretty clear to me that the entire case is a problem caused by already existing confusing guidelines. That's probably why they tried to use a test instead of an interview or review of past job performance (to appear less biased), and that's why when they didn't see the "right" people succeed in their tests, they threw out the results.
When the courts tell people it's not okay to discriminate based on race (unless of course you're helping people who are discriminated against), and that they must be able to prove their hiring/promotion methods are fair ( but 'fair' means perfectly proportional racial results, not a test with no racial bias) it is going to lead to some serious confusion, and yes, to racial discrimination against people who are not in the minority.
I think the problem already existed, and this case isn't going to make it any worse, it is just going to bring justice to a few of many people harmed by inconsistent, confused precedents and laws.
42"A government big enough to give you everything you want, is strong enough to take everything you have".
43Thomas Jefferson
It's not really going to 'bring justice' to anyone - it's simply going to shift things in favor of one group, most likely the same group that usually, historically, benefits.
44Steph, this particular case is going to bring justice to those individuals who were wronged. It's not about groups.
45More than one individual can be considered a group, however small. And the number of individuals who will benefit from the confusion this decision creates will be a big group. This isn't and wasn't a case about helping one individual win justice.
46"This isn't and wasn't a case about helping one individual win justice."
Tell that to the dyslexic man who gave up his money and time to earn this promotion. I understand that the decision has much larger consequences, but it also effects individuals. Our laws need to protect every individual from racial discrimination, not just protect a few minority groups.
47"it's simply going to shift things in favor of one group, most likely the same group that usually, historically, benefits."
Dyslexic people?
48Careful Mich, you wouldn't want to be caught empathizing.
49Dyslexia was not an issue in the case. Note every headline that says White Firefighters won.
Steph, I'm surprised you went this long without making it personal. We had a good run...
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