Office of Desegregation Monitoring

Office of Desegregation Monitoring

The Office of Desegregation Monitoring (ODM) was a federal office created by the Eighth Circuit Court and charged with the duty of monitoring and assisting Pulaski County’s three school districts – Little Rock School District (LRSD), North Little Rock School District (NLRSD), and Pulaski County Special School District (PCSSD) – to meet their respective desegregation obligations and mandates following legal battles related to desegregation. ODM was preceded by the Office of Metropolitan Supervisor (1989-1990). However, after the death of Metropolitan Supervisor Eugene Reville in a car accident on March 17, 1990, the Office of Metropolitan Supervisor was converted into the Office of Desegregation Monitoring.

The Pulaski County School desegregation case was originally filed on November 30, 1982, when the LRSD, composed mostly of African American students due to "white flight" from the city, sues the NLRSD, the PCSSD (composed mostly of white students), and the State of Arkansas. Represented by the law firm of Heller, Friday, Eldredge and Clark, the LRSD sought to obtain a remedy for the effects of segregation practices, charging that the actions and policies of the other districts had racially segregated it. The suit asked that all three districts consolidate into one countywide district to address the issue. Two intervenors eventually entered the litigation. The Joshua Intervenors, with Lorene Joshua as plaintiff, hired civil rights attorney John Walker to represent African American students with the goal of eliminating racial discrimination and its effects in the LRSD. The Knight Intervenors had Katherine Wright Knight, president of the Classroom Teachers Association, as plaintiff.

The request to consolidate all three school districts into one was ultimately denied, but the districts were required to take steps to end the remnants of racial discrimination in their schools. The final plan involved a series of programs to improve education and attract white students from the suburbs. As a part of the settlement, the state agreed to subsidize the districts' desegregation efforts over several years. The case came under the jurisdiction of the United States District Court, Eastern District of Arkansas, which eventually granted unitary status to two of the three districts. Unitary status is obtained when desegregation has occurred to a practical extent. At that point, the district is allowed to manage its affairs without federal court approval. The LRSD was granted unitary status in 2007 and the NLRSD in 2011. The PCSSD was approaching unitary status when the ODM was closed by court order on June 30, 2014.

The ODM's records are held by the Butler Center for Arkansas Studies. The collection contains legal documents, including court filings, motions, responses, orders, and exhibits. It also contains correspondence, news clippings, maps, school profiles, monitoring and various other reports concerning school district compliances, operations, and policies. ODM federal monitors have included: Ann S. Marshall, Judge Andrea Roaf, and Margie Powell. And the court cases were heard by five federal judges: Henry Woods (1982-1990), Susan Webber Wright (1990-2002), William R. Wilson Jr. (2002-2009), Brian Miller (2009-2011), and D. Price Marshall (2011-2014). The collection was donated by the ODM to the Butler Center for Arkansas Studies in 2008.

About the Author

Danielle Butler is a new professional serving as an Archival Assistant for the Butler Center for Arkansas Studies, a division of the Central Arkansas Library System. She previously served as the project archivist for UA Little Rock's Center for Arkansas History and Culture's Digitizing Hidden Collections project. She completed her MA in Public History in 2016 with a master's thesis project on the intersection of gender and home life in the development of the Arkansas kitchen.