Like many late twentieth-century political issues in the US, school funding inequality and desegregation cases reached a pivotal moment in 1968. The year of Martin Luther King Jr.’s Poor People’s Campaign and assassination, Richard Nixon’s election, and youth protests sweeping the world was also the year Demetrio Rodriguez and six other parents filed suit in federal court in Texas two months after many of their children led a walkout demanding better-resourced schools. And it was the year when both influential national scholarship and a state commission in Texas published proposals to remedy school finance disparities, as well as the year the Supreme Court began to at last push for real, immediate enforcement of school desegregation, fourteen years after Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka.
San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez is perennially haunted by Brown. But unlike Brown, there are no triumphalist narratives around Rodriguez to counter. Rodriguez bookended Brown by closing the crack that Brown symbolically surfaced in the uneasy Cold War consensus between White liberalism and the civil rights movement.Footnote 1 If Brown was an interest-convergence dilemma, in the words of Derrick A. Bell Jr., Rodriguez was an interest-divergence dilemma, as Lani Guinier narrated on Brown’s fiftieth anniversary, a case that closed off and individuated so many visibly connected things that it surfaced all the inconsistencies and intersections that had always been inherent in Brown.Footnote 2
This article provides an overview of the history around the Rodriguez case and synthesizes the scholarship, legal cases, and archival sources in order to situate Rodriguez in three ways. First, it locates Rodriguez at a pivotal constitutional moment in Supreme Court equal-protection analysis and desegregation jurisprudence around race, class, and education and identifies Rodriguez as a desegregation case as much as a school finance case. Second, it analyzes sources to highlight the ways in which Rodriguez was a case deeply embedded in and reflective of the racial, social, and class politics of its time. Finally, it argues that Justice Thurgood Marshall’s dissenting prophecy is reflected in many of the ongoing partial and contingent experiences of state-based school funding litigation after Rodriguez. The Rodriguez case itself confronted the court with three intersecting desegregation claims: discrimination on the basis of race, discrimination on the basis of wealth, and violation of the right to education, and each of these intersecting inequalities was foreclosed or dramatically shifted by the ruling.
Race, Wealth, and Education: From Brown to Rodriguez
Rodriguez is a school desegregation case, part of the legacy of Brown as much as it is part of the series of poverty law cases in the same era. If Brown was a (partial) overturning of the infamous Plessy ruling, legal scholars Charles Ogletree and Kimberly Jenkins have argued that “Rodriguez will one day be considered as erroneous as … Plessy v. Ferguson.” Footnote 3 The seeds of Rodriguez were embedded in the litigation choices and judicial decision-making in Brown, and seeing them as a connected pair helps highlight those linkages. As Kevin Brown argues, “Supreme Court opinions like Brown v. Board of Education reveal their consequences and yield their secrets only with the passage of time.”Footnote 4
Brown was a short opinion, with the eyes of the world on it, and a canny Chief Justice Earl Warren worked assiduously to cultivate unanimity among the court.Footnote 5 The opinion strategically declared a dramatic shift in US racial politics in the context of education, without expanding racial equality to all aspects of law or explicitly naming the right to education as an element of the ruling. In many ways, the opinion had “a narrow rationale” as a constitutional case, in legal scholar Michael Klarman’s words, though both the historical backlash and global political symbolism and significance of the case have often overshadowed that nuance.Footnote 6 As education historian Charles M. Payne has suggested, Brown has become “a milestone in search of something to signify.”Footnote 7
The court drew from history and social science throughout the opinion to summarize the new constitutional approach it was pursuing, emphasizing that it could not “turn the clock back to 1868 … or … 1896” but must “consider public education in the light of its full development and its present place in American life.”Footnote 8 Klarman argues that because the court at the time was unwilling to actually go so far as to name racial classification as inherently unconstitutional, it focused instead on the importance of education and highlighted psychological harm caused by school segregation.Footnote 9 As Cheryl I. Harris argues, Brown dismantled the old structure of “whiteness as property” but failed to “clearly expose the real inequities produced by segregation,” which allowed dramatic material inequality to be “ratified as an accepted and acceptable base line.”Footnote 10
The dialectical contradiction of Brown has been noted by many observers, then and now. Judge Robert L. Carter, a former NAACP attorney who had helped craft the Brown litigation strategy, wrote in 2007 that he had “come to believe that the Brown jurisprudence is itself tainted; that it was rendered by the Court with the internal understanding that it would not be implemented.”Footnote 11 Sheryll Cashin argues that Brown represented the idea “that there should be at least one institution in American society that provides a common experience of citizenship and equal opportunity, regardless of the lottery of birth.”Footnote 12 But Jack Balkin points out that the case “always had a dual nature,” because it symbolized the expansive goal of securing “social rights in a welfare state” but focused only on racial discrimination laws in pupil placement.Footnote 13
As many scholars have noted, the shift in the twentieth-century Supreme Court’s expanded consideration of rights created the modern constitutional order, and Brown was a pivot point.Footnote 14 Brown did two key things that would be further developed in future jurisprudence, in addition to its social and political impact.Footnote 15 First, it deployed the Equal Protection Clause to state that heightened judicial scrutiny would likely be required for any legislation that included race.Footnote 16 However, the decision’s language limited itself to overturning the “separate but equal” doctrine of Plessy v. Ferguson specifically “in the field of public education.”Footnote 17 The Loving v. Virginia case thirteen years later extended this ruling and announced the “very heavy burden of justification” under the Fourteenth Amendment that the court would henceforth require of any statutes drawn according to race.Footnote 18
Second, Brown appeared to suggest that education itself was an unenumerated fundamental right. The opinion famously called education “perhaps the most important function of state and local governments,” “the very foundation of good citizenship,” and affirmed that “such an opportunity, where the state has undertaken to provide it, is a right which must be made available to all on equal terms.”Footnote 19 Other unenumerated rights the court had deemed fundamental before and after Brown included the right of a parent to choose a child’s education, the right to travel, the right to procreate, the right to privacy in decisions affecting procreation, and the right to marry.Footnote 20 While the opinion demurred on actually calling education a fundamental right, the language it used in defending access to public education was forceful, and it was immediately clear that the decision was extraordinarily significant, judging from the national as well as international reception.Footnote 21
When Brown v. Board of Education turned fifty in 2004, Klarman argued that although Brown had been a judicially challenging decision—unanimity outcome notwithstanding—it was made possible by myriad social and historical circumstances in 1954 that included the civil rights movement as well as the justices’ own preferences in the historical sweep of postwar developments, and that while the case was “less directly responsible than is commonly supposed” for ensuing civil rights protests, “it was more directly responsible for their violent reception.”Footnote 22 The White backlash of Klarman’s thesis was even more central in national politics and governance by the time of Rodriguez. Footnote 23
In the years after Brown, the court built a third meaningful strand of jurisprudence on poverty law. In a series of decisions throughout the 1950s and 1960s, the justices decided cases suggesting poverty was also perhaps a suspect classification that, like race, would now trigger heightened constitutional scrutiny under the Fourteenth Amendment.Footnote 24 In fact, in 1963, dissenting Justice John Mashall Harlan II grumbled in one such case about the court’s “new fetish for indigency.”Footnote 25 And in a 1969 case, Warren wrote for the majority in non-binding language, or dictum, that “a careful examination on our part is especially warranted where lines are drawn on the basis of wealth or race, two factors which would independently render a classification highly suspect and thereby demand a more exacting judicial scrutiny.”Footnote 26 While not formally binding, it was evident the court was perhaps building toward a wealth discrimination precedent.
After the 1968 election of Richard Nixon signaled a broader rightward backlash against civil rights and the Johnson administration’s War on Poverty, the court still showed sympathy to indigent defendants claiming wealth discrimination within the context of other fundamental rights.Footnote 27 So in Boddie v. Connecticut in 1971, the court found that the ability of indigent people to file for divorce affected their fundamental right to marry or to exit marriage if there were high filing fees.Footnote 28 The court’s opinion in another 1971 case alleging combined racial and wealth discrimination in housing avoided the wealth discrimination claim entirely and only examined the record for racial discrimination.Footnote 29 This made it virtually inevitable that the court would have to settle the question of whether wealth discrimination was an unconstitutional suspect classification, but it also illustrates the ability of courts to analyze intersectional claims when they choose.
Meanwhile, the immediate symbolic vision of Brown I was devastated by the concomitant instruction the next year in Brown II ordering desegregation to occur “with all deliberate speed,” serving as a near-endorsement of the slow-down and avoidance tactics that pro-segregationist hard-liners would pursue for years to come.Footnote 30 Finally, fourteen years after Brown, in Green v. County School Board of New Kent County in 1968, the court ruled that a freedom-of-choice plan was still not an acceptable desegregation plan and stated firmly that “such delays are no longer tolerable.”Footnote 31 And in Alexander v. Board of Education of Holmes County in 1969, the court issued a brief opinion that overturned its own standard of “all deliberate speed” from Brown II as unconstitutional and bluntly required all school districts to cease operating segregated schools “at once.”Footnote 32 Desegregation had finally come to even the most recalcitrant southern schools, though the actual period of judicially supervised desegregation was brief.Footnote 33 And as Kevin Kruse argued in the context of Atlanta, Whites leaving cities for suburbs to avoid court-ordered desegregation throughout this era “fought to take their finances with them.”Footnote 34
The final case that casts a shadow over Rodriguez was decided just the year before, in 1972’s Wright v. Council of the City of Emporia. The majority opinion found that the creation of new school districts in systems that had not yet completed desegregation was a violation of the court’s rulings in Brown and Green.Footnote 35 Four Nixon nominees—Justices Harry Blackmun, Lewis Powell Jr., William Rehnquist, and Warren Burger—all argued that local control had a special and sacrosanct position in the history of education, an idea which education law scholar Derek Black has illustrated was more inventive than real.Footnote 36 Ultimately, the ascendant conservative wing of the court was unifying around the idea that forms of “secession” to avoid desegregation, whether geographic or, in the case of Rodriguez, fiscal, went beyond the mandate of Brown’s oversight. In Rodriguez the dissenters in Wright had their triumph.
While scholars have debated the impact of Brown, most have agreed that whatever other political, judicial, and social impacts it had, actual desegregation only substantively occurred for a few years, once the court had the cover of congressional action in the Civil Rights Act of 1964.Footnote 37 Gerald Rosenberg argues that this failure illustrates that “in terms of judicial effects … Brown and its progeny stand for the proposition that courts are impotent to produce significant social reform.”Footnote 38 But Mark Tushnet points out that while Brown did not transform education in the segregated South, it did exemplify a critical moment in American political development as part of “a long-term collaboration between the Supreme Court and the New Deal (and later the Great Society) political coalition.”Footnote 39 And legal historian Mary Dudziak, in the tradition of Bell’s “interest-convergence” argument, shows that Brown reflects the ways in which “the Cold War simultaneously harmed the movement and created an opportunity for limited reform.”Footnote 40
If Rodriguez is haunted by Brown, the pain of resource inequality (a core issue in the four other cases unified under Brown) is the lingering cry of the unsettled ghost. Calling Brown’s egalitarianism “more symbolic than real,” Kevin Gaines argues that the case failed to achieve the “structural vision of equality and redistributive justice” many Black people sought, and only offered “an attenuated formal equality that failed to address the inequitable distribution of resources and opportunities.”Footnote 41
It was virtually inevitable that a case would eventually reach the Supreme Court that would take up these resource inequalities. The social impact of Rodriguez, bookending Brown, was enormous. On Rodriguez’s relation to Brown, Robert L. Carter wrote that Rodriguez “effectively eviscerated many of the gains that were won in Brown” by validating huge disparities between poor, minority districts and wealthy White suburbs.Footnote 42
Edgewood or Alamo Heights: Injustice, Inequality, and Politics
A legal case is built from briefs and filings, but also from a social context, embedded in place, space, and time. The local and national context of Rodriguez highlight why this case came at this moment in time. Compounding injustices, complex layers of inequality, and the political backdrop locally and nationally in the late 1960s and early 1970s were critical in bringing this particular case to the Supreme Court and determining the federal constitutional precedent for educational finance.
Three of Demetrio Rodriguez’s four sons attended Edgewood Elementary School a block from his neat white house across a dusty field.Footnote 43 It was 1968 in San Antonio, Texas, and Rodriguez, a veteran who worked at nearby Kelly Air Force Base, was afraid that the education at Edgewood—with nearly half the teachers uncertified and on emergency permits in a poorly supplied and “crumbling” school building—“would not prepare his sons to compete for the good jobs that ‘Anglos’ controlled in San Antonio.”Footnote 44 Students were frustrated as well, and hundreds of them marched out of Edgewood High School one morning in May 1968 to the superintendent’s office to give a list of their demands for better educational opportunities.Footnote 45 They held signs demanding school and teaching improvements, often in stark language: “We want a gym not a barn.”Footnote 46
Demetrio Rodriguez became a community activist and organized with other concerned parents to request school improvements, but learned quickly that there was no money to rebuild the schools and hire more qualified teachers.Footnote 47 They met with local civil rights attorney Arthur Gochman, who emphasized the central paradox: the low property wealth in the district, combined with the state property tax caps, made it impossible for the community to ever raise the necessary funds for quality education. Gochman’s first act was to send a memo detailing the issues in the case to the newly established Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund (MALDEF) in the hopes it could take on the costs of litigation—when MALDEF said no, Gochman paid for the litigation himself.Footnote 48
As a new organization, it was understandable that MALDEF did not have the funds or perhaps the appetite to take on a case combining school segregation and resource inequality issues. Jeanne Powers has described the different paths taken by the Mexican American and African American desegregation campaigns through three major differences that highlight variations in the process of racial subordination among groups over time.Footnote 49 First, Mexican Americans were more likely to experience extralegal segregation by state actors, requiring the judiciary to attend to actions, data, and outcomes, rather than the explicit language of law alone. Additionally, Mexican Americans had been frequently considered “not-quite-white” by some courts, which, in the context of the early campaign to end de jure segregation by race, rendered their status complex. Finally, school districts often claimed that separation of Mexican American students owed to language rationales, which many courts found “plausible” as a defense of segregation.Footnote 50 Additionally, Steven Wilson argues that “the legacy of Brown is more troubled for Mexican Americans” because school districts manipulated existing “biracial (black-white) formulas” initially to transfer Black students into predominantly Mexican American schools and then call the schools “desegregated.”Footnote 51
But, in 1967, a significant ruling in the District Court of Washington, DC, by Circuit Judge J. Skelly Wright had foreshadowed the way courts could treat the complex intersection of race and wealth in education.Footnote 52 In Hobson v. Hansen Judge Wright wrote a sweeping and detailed opinion finding that the District of Columbia’s public school system unconstitutionally deprived Black and poor children of their right to an equal education on par with the White and wealthy children of DC.Footnote 53 Mark Yudof, who became a co-counsel with Gochman in the Rodriguez litigation, wrote in 1974 that Gochman was cognizant of the Hobson ruling the year before he filed the complaint and that it contributed to his legal strategy.Footnote 54 Gochman sought to extend the intersectional and intra-district logic in Hobson to disparities across districts within Texas.Footnote 55
In Texas, meanwhile, the Governor’s Committee on Public School Education had been charged by Governor John Connally in 1965 to thoroughly examine and develop a long-term plan to make Texas a leader in public education.Footnote 56 While the committee did suggest reforms to Texas’s Minimum Foundation Program, including encouraging more equalization of affluent and poor districts, the timing ultimately failed.Footnote 57 The committee’s report was published in 1968, “too late to have much chance of success” as the new governor “showed no inclination to push for school financing reform.”Footnote 58 On the national stage, however, education law scholar Arthur Wise influentially argued in his 1968 book Rich Schools, Poor Schools: The Promise of Equal Educational Opportunity that school finance litigation was the next step in equal protection advocacy.Footnote 59
Given these legal and political trends, Gochman believed this was the moment to make an argument that disparities between schools could be a constitutional violation under the Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause.Footnote 60 In a federal complaint in July 1968, he made three claims—wealth discrimination, race discrimination, and a violation of the fundamental right to education—each of which could be tenuous legally in its own way, but in combination made a powerful argument about the intersecting and overlapping nature of segregation, inequality, and opportunity.Footnote 61 The state court delayed hearing the case initially for several years to allow legislators to act on promised reforms, but the legislature failed to take action.Footnote 62
While the Rodriguez plaintiffs waited, the movement toward school finance equality in courts gained more momentum. Three education policy scholars wrote an influential book in 1970 that argued for fiscal neutrality in schooling by building a system that mitigated disparities due to wealth.Footnote 63 Building on this conversation, in Serrano v. Priest in 1971, the California Supreme Court ruled for the plaintiffs in a case very similar to Rodriguez, and pointed out that “affluent districts can have their cake and eat it too” only because they were able to pay lower taxes while providing a high-quality education for their children, but that poor districts “have no cake at all.”Footnote 64
Back in Texas in December 1971, one of the judges on the three-judge panel lectured the states’ lawyers about the disingenuousness of the legislative reform assurances (the legislature had adjourned that year without addressing the issue), saying that “it makes you feel that it just does no good for a court to do anything than, if it feels these laws are suspect, declare them unconstitutional.”Footnote 65 The case went to trial, and Gochman designed a strategy to contrast the profoundly minimal funding and resources in Edgewood schools with the wealthy, overwhelmingly White Alamo Heights school district.Footnote 66 While three out of every four Alamo Heights residents had completed high school, “the Edgewood figure was less than one in ten.”Footnote 67
Geography played an important role in the case. Richard Schragger argues that because the argument of the plaintiffs in the Rodriguez case was fundamentally comparative, it was deeply geographical as well.Footnote 68 As he points out, the wooded North San Antonio hills of Alamo Heights had been historically settled by wealthy Whites in part to protect them from the flash flooding in the lower areas of the city, like Edgewood on the West Side, where poor and working-class Mexican Americans were concentrated.Footnote 69 These floods could quickly lead to tragedies, including reports that children were killed in floods as they walked to school, but racially restrictive covenants had long blocked Black and Mexican American people from purchasing housing on the north side of the city.Footnote 70 Another scholar, Christine Drennon, notes that such school districts are “constitutive of the class and race relations” embedded in their histories and landscapes of “privilege and deprivation,” yet the judiciary treats each district as “the source of its own identity, its own problems, and its own solutions.”Footnote 71
The three-judge panel ruled within days that Texas had failed to even establish a reasonable basis under the Fourteenth Amendment for the financing system, as well as affirming Gochman’s novel claims about wealth as a suspect class and education as a fundamental right. Serrano had initially appeared to be the case that would bring the school finance issue before the Supreme Court, but Serrano also relied on the California state constitution as well as the US Constitution, creating more complex potential grounds for appeal. So it was Rodriguez—a case that had been described as “frivolous” by the Texas attorney general early on—that reached the court first, thanks in part to Texas’s immediate decision to appeal the District Court ruling.Footnote 72
Dividing the Court: Rodriguez and Milliken
When Rodriguez reached the US Supreme Court, some in the civil rights community and in the media anticipated that Rodriguez would be the “Brown v. Board of Education of the 1970s,” as described by a front-page Wall Street Journal story.Footnote 73 However, the composition of the court had changed significantly in the few years since some of the pivotal cases discussed earlier, from Alexander v. Holmes County to Boddie v. Connecticut. With the change in composition had come a resistance to the progressive racial desegregation and heightened scrutiny of differential treatment based on poverty that those cases symbolized.
By 1973 Justice William O. Douglas, nominated to the court by Franklin D. Roosevelt, was the sole remnant of the Brown court, and four of the five justices who voted in favor of Texas in Rodriguez were Nixon nominees.Footnote 74 The Rodriguez Court was thus, as Charles Ogletree has argued, fundamentally “a different forum in which to advance the argument that education was a fundamental right or that wealth was a suspect class.”Footnote 75 The Burger Court was once described as “the counter-revolution that wasn’t,” yet Klarman argues that while that might hold for cases on gender or free speech, there is a key area in which the Burger Court’s reversals proved fateful.Footnote 76 The true counterrevolution was in stepping back from the Warren Court trajectory that would have identified discriminatory wealth effects—in education and other areas—as violations of equal protection.Footnote 77
As mentioned earlier, the Rodriguez case made three intersecting desegregation claims: discrimination on the basis of race, discrimination on the basis of wealth, and violation of the right to education.Footnote 78 Gochman’s complaint argued all three, and he later said that Demetrio Rodriguez was chosen as the named plaintiff in the hopes that his surname would emphasize the racial angle in the case.Footnote 79 Unlike Judge Wright in Hobson, the court dismissed the opportunity to engage in an intersectional desegregation analysis of the issues.Footnote 80 Daniel HoSang has argued that politics in this era often explained racial segregation “entirely through neutral market forces” and used claims of “racial innocence” and “suburban innocence” to undergird anti-desegregation campaigns.Footnote 81 HoSang also describes a White suburban “political affect” that interpreted low property taxes and racially homogenous education as “not only unassailable prerogatives, but conditions that had no connection to or culpability for the widening social and racial inequalities in neighboring urban areas.”Footnote 82 This type of innocence presumption was embedded in the Rodriguez ruling as well as Milliken v. Bradley a year later to justify segregation.
As Texas reeled from the initial decision in Rodriguez, the US Senate held hearings on school finance inequalities and instituted a select committee on the issues chaired by Senator Walter Mondale. An attorney from the nationwide resource on school finance lawsuits, the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, testified in 1971 that the goal of the Rodriguez litigation was to go beyond Serrano and combine wealthy White and poor minority school districts in order to achieve true desegregation.Footnote 83
In Supreme Court oral arguments in 1972, Texas’s attorney, Charles Alan Wright, acknowledged disparities in an “imperfect” system.Footnote 84 While Justice Marshall was ill the day of the oral arguments, Justice Douglas asked a final pointed question to Wright, highlighting that the record of the case “pretty clearly demonstrated” that Mexican Americans as a group were suffering from disproportionately unequal funding. Wright acknowledged that while it was “a major portion of the plaintiff’s complaint,” race and taxable wealth correlations in the case were just “a happenstance.”Footnote 85 Gochman, meanwhile, responded to Wright’s argument that Texas only need give students a “minimum” education by pointing to the contrasts, asking, “Are we going to have two classes of citizens—minimum opportunity students, and first class citizens?”Footnote 86
The debate in Rodriguez was also in part structured by what education writer Matt Barnum has described as “educational fatalism,” or “the racist idea at the heart of Rodriguez.”Footnote 87 Barnum points out that this popular idea in the Nixon administration absolved government of responsibility for spending to improve opportunities, drawing on a controversial 1966 report by sociologist James Coleman that purported to show no relationship between spending and outcomes.Footnote 88 This backlash against spending gained political traction at almost precisely the moment desegregation orders were beginning at last to be enforced, as discussed earlier, highlighting that a fiscal justification for inequality could neatly slot in to replace an explicitly racialized legal structure.
On handwritten notes on an early draft opinion, Powell wrote, “Don’t admit or refer to ‘discriminatory treatment of children’—it is not ‘discriminatory’; there are inequalities resulting from [the] system.”Footnote 89 And under a page of handwritten notes for conference on Rodriguez, Powell wrote in large letters that “Brown was based on racial discrimination.”Footnote 90 Yet as the NAACP amicus brief asserted, “Plaintiffs are all Mexican Americans. They claimed relief as and for Mexican Americans” (emphasis in original).Footnote 91 Similarly, an amicus brief from the ACLU, La Raza, and other organizations argued that the inequalities in Texas’s school funding and residential segregation were prima facie racial discrimination, and that, to the litigants and observers nationwide, the issue of race was “not an afterthought” but instead “the very core of this case.”Footnote 92 Rodriguez was a desegregation case to advocates and activists, but not the court.
Derek Black argues that in both Rodriguez and Milliken, the Supreme Court “articulated a localism narrative premised on the assumption that local control is the historical foundation of public education … without bothering to seriously engage education history.”Footnote 93 In Rodriguez, this idea took root, with the majority calling local control “vital” and “of overriding importance,” and by Milliken the following year the court was prepared to say that “no single tradition in public education is more deeply rooted than local control over the operation of schools.”Footnote 94 James Ryan similarly argues that disparate types of school inequality are linked by the belief in the sacredness of district control, specifically suburban districts, pointing out that “each major reform has had the potential to link the fate of urban and suburban schools, or urban and suburban students, but that potential has not been realized.”Footnote 95
Class was ever-present in the litigation. As Mark Yudof said in the lead-up to the Supreme Court argument, “Poor districts do not choose to spend less for education. It’s like telling a man who makes $50 a week that he has the same right as a millionaire to send his son to Exeter.”Footnote 96 For attorneys, Rodriguez was the “doorstop to the Warren Court’s poverty precedents.”Footnote 97 As I have argued elsewhere, Rodriguez also illustrated the culmination of a language of wealth and Whiteness that claimed the mantle of taxpayer and adhered to a marketplace model of educational mobility.Footnote 98 Gochman pointed out in oral argument that “if it was a rich guy in a poor district he could just move,” a sentiment that Justice Powell at least hinted at in the majority opinion, implying that this kind of marketplace of choice was part of the beneficial nature of local control.Footnote 99 Powell indeed viewed himself as “the education justice” as a former school board member and a principal author of an amicus brief opposing busing filed on behalf of two Virginia counties in the 1972 case Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education.Footnote 100
The 5-4 verdict was authored by Justice Powell in a fifty-five-page majority opinion, with a concurrence from Justice Potter Stewart and dissents by Justices William J. Brennan, Byron White, and Thurgood Marshall. Only Justice Marshall’s dissent rivalled Powell’s at sixty-two pages in length, addressing point by point each of the majority’s claims. Marshall called the ruling “a retreat from our historic commitment to equality of educational opportunity” that would enable “state discrimination,” and described it as “unsupportable acquiescence” to a financing system that kept children from their full potential.Footnote 101
Marshall also called the fiscal backlash argument that money has no effect on educational quality an “absurdity” and asked sardonically why, if money didn’t matter, had so many of the wealthiest school districts across the country zealously jumped in to support the Texas legislation?Footnote 102 Finally, he concluded that “the Court’s suggestions of legislative redress and experimentation will doubtless be of great comfort to the school children of Texas’ disadvantaged districts, but, considering the vested interests of wealthy school districts in the preservation of the status quo, they are worth little more.”Footnote 103 Marshall’s prediction of state discrimination would later come to fruition in the complex and sometimes contradictory state outcomes, as discussed in the last section.
While the Brown Court dealt with significant Cold War anxieties, those anxieties contributed to the framing, delivery, and urgency of that decision rather than reversing its sought outcome.Footnote 104 In a very different way, in Rodriguez the anti-communist fears of Justice Powell and others tainted any argument for equal or even more equitable educational funding, particularly equalization premised in the long-term disparities in incomes among families and neighborhoods.Footnote 105
As I have argued elsewhere, it was one thing in an anti-communist era to pay at least lip service to racial desegregation and thereby eliminate one pillar of the Soviet critique of US hypocrisy—it was quite another to directly admit that income inequality in the US was unjustified.Footnote 106 Political scientist Paul Sracic describes Powell’s belief system as “filtered through the prism of anticommunism,” and Powell’s notes preparing for the initial conference on the case show him adamant that “in a free enterprise society we could hardly hold that wealth is suspect. This is a communist doctrine but is not even accepted (except in a limited sense) in Soviet countries.”Footnote 107 He feared “national control of education” would be the outcome of the case and wrote that such a system would resemble “Hitler, Mussolini, and all Communist dictators.”Footnote 108
While the Keyes v. Denver School District No. 1 case, argued the same day as Rodriguez, was significant in defining de facto segregation in a northern city as a remediable constitutional violation in the same vein as the de jure segregation challenged in Brown, it proved to be one of the last gasps of the court’s brief commitment to the more expansive interpretation of Brown.Footnote 109 And, in fact, hints of the opening chasm are seen from the four dissenting justices in Rodriguez, who circulated a memorandum early on in Keyes arguing that the de facto segregation at issue was an infringement of the fundamental right to education, a rationale ultimately not incorporated into the compromise majority opinion.Footnote 110
The tenuous victory in Keyes and the blistering defeat in Rodriguez were followed a year later by the slamming of the metropolitan desegregation door in Milliken v. Bradley. In discussing Milliken, Powell’s former law clerk J. Harvie Wilkinson connected the case to Rodriguez, saying that by 1974 “urban school finance was in desperate shape” and that the “Court had not helped much either.”Footnote 111 He argued that the taxing of suburban property (under the kind of broad metropolitan desegregation sought in Milliken and ultimately denied by the majority) to support all schools, while also working to ensure racial composition throughout, was “a way for the Court to soften the fiscal blow dealt the dispossessed in Rodriguez.”Footnote 112 Instead, “the Court ‘saved’ the suburbs,” in what Wilkinson called “an act of absolution” for White Americans’ responsibility for urban poverty.Footnote 113
Justice Douglas wrote in his Milliken dissent that “today’s decision, given Rodriguez, means that there is no violation of the Equal Protection Clause though the schools are segregated by race and though the black schools are not only ‘separate’ but ‘inferior.’”Footnote 114 Justice Marshall argued that after “20 years of small, often difficult steps … the Court today takes a giant step backwards,” and suggested the ruling was more a reflection of “a perceived public mood that we have gone far enough in enforcing the Constitution’s guarantee of equal justice than it is the product of neutral principle of law.”Footnote 115 Finally, Marshall predicted that simply allowing growing metropolitan segregation would be a choice “our people will ultimately regret.”Footnote 116
Jack Balkin posits that in Rodriguez and Milliken, the four Nixon appointees reflected “the white majority’s attitudes toward the Second Reconstruction and produced a corresponding retrenchment in constitutional doctrine.”Footnote 117 Sheryll Cashin argues that Milliken, decided “only six years after the Court had finally begun to enforce Brown with alacrity, presaged its demise” because the ruling “effectively sanctioned separate and unequal schooling.”Footnote 118 In Milliken, the court solidified its retrenchment away from the Warren Court’s focus on the rights of the disadvantaged, as Adam Cohen argues, and stepped back from active desegregation rulings by ruling interdistrict desegregation unconstitutional.Footnote 119 And as Michael Klarman argues, Rodriguez was the case in which “the door to discovery of new fundamental rights was firmly shut.”Footnote 120 Other scholars describe the Rodriguez decision as a moment when the Supreme Court “dramatically weakened the efficacy of the Equal Protection Clause for challenging racial funding disparities.”Footnote 121
James Ryan connects the justifications used by the court in Milliken and in Rodriguez, arguing that “in the desegregation context, local control protected the ability of suburban schools to reserve their seats for local students,” while “in the school finance context, local control protected the ability of wealthy suburban districts to spend greater resources on their own schools.”Footnote 122 The result of this is to leave suburban schools “untouched” by school finance restructuring, just as they were “untouched” by desegregation orders.Footnote 123
In the Plyler v. Doe case in 1982, the court confronted another case from Texas calling into question whether the state was permitted to entirely deprive children of undocumented parents from having access to public education.Footnote 124 The Supreme Court found that absolute deprivation of education was different than the aspects of inadequacy and inequality in Rodriguez. Footnote 125 Several years later the Kadrmas v. Dickinson case once again raised the question of wealth and poverty in public education, when a family sued their rural school district claiming that fees for busing discriminated against poor families, which the Supreme Court dismissed.Footnote 126
In later school desegregation cases the court pulled back bit by bit on the remedies they would allow and the extent of desegregation oversight.Footnote 127 Cashin writes that Justice Marshall felt “personal devastation” in his final term, when as his clerk she worked with him on his dissent in Board of Education of Oklahoma City v. Dowell in 1991, as the majority allowed federal desegregation orders to lapse.Footnote 128 Marshall wrote that Oklahoma had maintained segregated schools, either de jure or de facto, since statehood began until the state was finally forced in 1972 by a federal court to implement an actual desegregation plan. “The majority today suggests that 13 years of desegregation was enough.”Footnote 129 Following this, in 2007’s Parents Involved in Community Schools v. Seattle School District No. 1, the court majority invalidated voluntary school desegregation plans in Seattle and Louisville, Kentucky, as overly broad and placed a strong punctuation mark on the modern court’s shift away from Brown and its progeny (even as the majority and dissent both cited the case as affirming their positions).Footnote 130 Retrenchment in constitutional doctrine increased with each decision, and resegregation quickly followed.Footnote 131
The Rodriguez ruling ensured that even where states attempt some internal form of equalization, the precedent it set would not address the often-larger resource needs of disadvantaged students nor respond to the interstate and interdistrict resource inequalities that perpetuate many of those disadvantages.Footnote 132 In his notes on the Rodriguez case, Powell acknowledged that while his opinion would effectively kick the case and any similar cases back to state courts, such state judiciaries were “long shots” for plaintiffs “challenging discrimination in school finance systems.”Footnote 133 At first, state courts proved him wrong with a handful of victories for litigants arguing for school funding equality at the state constitutional level. However, as shown below, Marshall’s dissenting prediction, that “the vested interests of wealthy school districts in the preservation of the status quo” would be unlikely to substantively address such profound and long-term inequalities, proved to be prescient.
Rodriguez’s Legacy for State School Finance Law
Mark Yudof, Gochman’s co-counsel in Rodriguez, years later began a talk by describing school finance as “like a Russian novel: long, tedious, and everyone dies in the end.”Footnote 134 Education law scholar Julie Underwood describes it as “like a Stephen King novel—it takes months to read and scares you half to death in the process.”Footnote 135 These analogies highlight the legacy of Rodriguez’s drastic foreclosure of federal remedies: widely variable state-level school funding desegregation rulings that have forced advocates to employ constantly shifting litigation strategies. Many scholars have identified an initial series of waves—at least three—of school finance litigation spanning the 1960s through the 2000s at least.Footnote 136 In the initial challenges to the system of school funding in the 1960s leading up to Rodriguez, the strategy involved making need-based claims, with advocates arguing that in many cases more resources may be needed for disadvantaged students than for affluent students.Footnote 137 Courts did not typically find this needs-based argument convincing, with the Virginia Supreme Court stating in the 1969 case Burris v. Wilkerson that “courts have neither the knowledge, nor the means, nor the power to tailor the public monies to fit the varying needs of the students throughout the State.”Footnote 138 Rodriguez, following on Serrano, had already shifted to emphasizing the minimal property wealth that many poor districts had available and emphasizing a standard of “fiscal neutrality” between poor and rich districts’ funding.Footnote 139
This second wave of school funding litigation, emphasizing equalization, while obviously unsuccessful federally, had some brief success when rooted in state constitutions. The precedent around the idea of a state constitutional right to education post-Rodriguez has remained unchallenged, which Derek Black calls “a legacy that has outlived Brown in many important practical respects, even if not nearly as well known by the average person.”Footnote 140 In the third wave, plaintiffs argued that states had not provided sufficient funding to achieve minimum educational standards, or “adequacy,” which has generally been a more winning argument (approximately two-thirds of cases won).Footnote 141
Scholars examining the DeRolph v. State litigation in Ohio have argued that the shifting definitions of adequacy track the changes in litigation strategy. Indeed, the concept of “basic minimal skills” adequacy mentioned in Rodriguez was used in Board of Education of Levittown v. Nyquist in 1982 to uphold the state’s school finance system as minimally adequate.Footnote 142 But at least at the state level, local judges have also seemed less likely to credulously accept the spending backlash argument that levels of funding were totally irrelevant, with one responding to a state’s argument with, “Money doesn’t matter? That dog won’t hunt in Dodge City.”Footnote 143
But even equalizing monetary inputs does not sufficiently address equity concerns, which is why the criteria have recently again become more “outcome, rather than input related.”Footnote 144 Reuben and Murray argue that the wave of outcome-based adequacy lawsuits at the state level, from the 2000s on, are a rebirth of the “needs-based” claims of the 1960s.Footnote 145 For example, the Abbott v. Burke litigation in New Jersey in the 1990s used a “more expansive notion of adequacy,” in finding that the state needed to give “poorer, disadvantaged children a chance to compete with relatively advantaged students.”Footnote 146 However, James Ryan examined early state evidence in the decades after Rodriguez indicating that predominantly minoritized school districts are still less likely to have successful litigation or legislation, further entrenching racial inequality in school funding systems.Footnote 147 As Douglas Reed argues, “A racial thread winds around the core of class conflict over the distribution of educational money.”Footnote 148
But David Hinojosa suggests that a fourth wave of race-conscious school finance litigation may be emerging in cases such as Montoy v. Kansas (2003), Lynch v. Alabama (2011), and Williams v. Reeves (2020).Footnote 149 Similarly, Michael Heise argues that “the Sheff v. O’Neill litigation in Connecticut, which conspicuously conflated race and school finance, addressed a task side-stepped by the Supreme Court in Rodriguez” by “synthesizing school finance and desegregation theory.”Footnote 150 Kiracofe and Weiler also examine recent federal school finance lawsuits as a signal of the fourth wave in educational finance litigation.Footnote 151 They hypothesize that the future may hold “more cases filed in federal courts contending a state’s funding formula is denying a specific group of students access to an adequate and equitable education.”Footnote 152 Another scholar argues that an “individual-rights approach to enforcing education obligations” could sidestep the challenges of systemic litigation.Footnote 153
Time also matters in an interpretation of “equality” in resources. As Justice Stewart once said in a draft dissent, “a public school system is not built in a day.”Footnote 154 Resource inequality builds exponentially with time, accreting ever more privileges, buildings, and multiplied benefits, or deteriorating to such drastic levels that a “fresh start” of “equal” funding will not mitigate circumstances. Tracy Steffes has argued that, by 1985, the Illinois Resource Equalizer Formula of 1973 that aimed to break the link between wealth and school funding had produced conditions “more inequitable than before the Resource Equalizer law was passed.”Footnote 155 Steffes argues that wealthy districts “benefited from generations of tax benefits and an ability to monopolize their wealth,” allowing them to build a politics that “defended those privileges as rights.”Footnote 156
Ian Millhiser examines the legislative school-financing efforts and highlights the relative budgetary powerlessness of local governments, arguing that the legislative branch is “structurally unfit to provide educational civil rights,” and that “an affirmative right to an adequate education can only come from the courts.”Footnote 157 Other scholars counter that “any solution through the judicial process will be inadequate… . While the courts can identify the wrong, they are incapable of providing effective remedies by adjusting formulas or mandating expenditures.”Footnote 158
There is a debate over how to interpret funding levels today across the nation, fifty years after Rodriguez. Reed argues that the “judicial revolution” in state litigation sparked by Rodriguez “has meaningfully changed the amount of money going to poor school districts.”Footnote 159 But Matthew Saleh suggests that the more recent waves of litigation illustrate the challenge at the heart of cases from Rodriguez onward, that technically equal funding does not address unequal need, particularly “where these districts are already’in the hole’ financially as the result of decades (if not centuries) of being historically underfunded.”Footnote 160 As Steffes argues, school finance is “where structural inequality is made, remade, defended, and hidden.”Footnote 161 It’s clear that money matters a great deal in educational opportunity and outcomes, as Bruce Baker and others have argued.Footnote 162
Kimberly Jenkins Robinson argues that education federalism has changed significantly because of federal actions and urges building on these federal interventions through reallocation of resources to states and localities that lack capacity.Footnote 163 Another scholar suggests that these federal legislative incursions into the realm of public education have perhaps now created an implicit federal right to education.Footnote 164 Local, state, and federal resources are all connected, as Black points out that “heavy reliance on local school funding drives school funding inequality, and low state aid drives overall school funding inadequacy, particularly in those districts suffering inequality.”Footnote 165 And Goodwin Liu has argued compellingly that perhaps the key is to locate a federal right to education in the citizenship clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, building on state adequacy lawsuits by addressing the federal interstate inequalities that are out of reach of state litigants.Footnote 166 Whatever they are, federal remedies would be necessary to address the complex and differential outcomes of the state-based litigation legacy of Rodriguez.
Rodriguez left education as a state and local issue, and, along with Milliken, encouraged a deference to school districts that has often helped perpetuate the kinds of intersecting inequalities Demetrio Rodriguez was challenging. As Erika K. Wilson notes, White-student segregation is enabled by laws around school district boundary lines that enable White students to engage in “social closure” and therefore to monopolize high-quality schools.Footnote 167 Other scholars have examined schooling as a “white good” that White people defend aggressively.Footnote 168 This is illustrated by the fact that in 2016, “overwhelmingly white school districts received $23 billion more in state and local funding than majority nonwhite districts that serve about the same number of children.”Footnote 169 Cashin also points out that “opportunity hoarding also occurs within school districts” through various mechanisms.Footnote 170 At the end of the day, inequalities exist “because those with economic and political power are advantaged by their continuation.”Footnote 171 As James Ryan argues, “The continued separation of urban and suburban students has been the most dominant and important theme in education law and policy for the last fifty years.”Footnote 172 Scholars examining the sixty-year legacy of Brown in 2014 found that that the South has since lost all the progress in desegregation it made after 1967, and emphasized the extremely high levels of segregation for Latino students in particular today.Footnote 173
Finally, in the wake of the Rodriguez ruling, generations of unequal school finance, racist residential zoning policies, and stealth funding inequalities have combined to create a strong rationale for school finance litigation based on a reparations model, as some scholars have recently noted.Footnote 174 Others similarly argue that resource availability should be considered a civil right and assert that equity in school finance must be achieved in order to address disparities and challenges faced by BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and people of color) communities.Footnote 175 The intersections between race and poverty in limiting access to education have shifted in specific contexts in the past fifty years, but in broad strokes they have also calcified and deepened in profound ways that Rodriguez helped legitimize.
Conclusion: Fifty Years of Inequality
Modern segregation intersects race, wealth, and unequal opportunity across space and time and through the imprimatur of law. Multiple and contingent historical contexts created the conditions for the Rodriguez decision, and that decision has in turn shaped and limited a state-based legal trajectory that has determined the material educational experience of countless children nationwide. Separateness and inequality build upon each other year after year, and they have mutually ossified landscapes of education, trapping them in injustice.
This article has argued for three ways to look back at the legacy of Rodriguez. First, understanding Rodriguez as a desegregation decision as much as Swann or Milliken or Keyes helps illuminate the crucial constitutional moment in Supreme Court equal protection analysis and desegregation jurisprudence that Rodriguez represents. Second, by seeing Rodriguez as a case deeply embedded in and reflective of the racial, social, and class politics of its time, we can understand why many advocates a few years prior to the ruling had great optimism for the court’s capacity to address intersecting inequalities, from racial discrimination to poverty discrimination to the constitutional right of a child to education. Finally, looking back at the decades of state-based school funding and desegregation litigation that ensued after Rodriguez illustrates Justice Thurgood Marshall’s dissenting prophecy that “the vested interests of wealthy school districts in the preservation of the status quo” would place profound obstacles in the path of deep and lasting equality of educational opportunity.
Rodriguez, fifty years later, exemplifies an approach to intersectional inequality rooted in a dangerous and superficial colorblindness combined with a dismissal of the poor inspired by Cold War capitalism. Lani Guinier points out that the Rodriguez ruling changed Brown “from a clarion call to an excuse not to act.”Footnote 176 Rodriguez left multiple intersecting inequalities stranded without federal remedies, even as state litigation sought some limited degree of remediation. Meanwhile, generations of schoolchildren have experienced ongoing and multiplying resource inequality as the intersecting segregation system challenged in Rodriguez received federal constitutional endorsement. As Marshall argued in his dissent in Rodriguez, “Who can ever measure for such a child the opportunities lost and the talents wasted for want of a broader, more enriched education?”Footnote 177
Camille Walsh is associate professor in the School of Interdisciplinary Arts & Sciences at the University of Washington Bothell. She thanks the editors and anonymous reviewers of History of Education Quarterly for their helpful feedback. She also discusses the Rodriguez case in a longer historical trajectory in her book Racial Taxation: Schools, Segregation, and Taxpayer Citizenship, 1869-1973 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2018).