Home / Full timeline / The U.S. Senate passes a higher education and desegregation aid bill with an anti-busing provision. The bill appropriated $2 billion over a two-year period to aid school districts in the process of desegregating. Although the Nixon administration criticized the bill as inadequate, President Nixon signs the bill into law.
The U.S. Senate passes a higher education and desegregation aid bill with an anti-busing provision. The bill appropriated $2 billion over a two-year period to aid school districts in the process of desegregating. Although the Nixon administration criticized the bill as inadequate, President Nixon signs the bill into law.
1972 (May 24)
The U.S. Senate passed and sent to the House of Representatives a final version of an omnibus higher education and desegregation aid bill with an anti-busing provision. The bill would delay all new court-ordered busing until appeals had been exhausted or until January 1974. Federal funds could not be used to finance busing to achieve desegregation unless specifically requested by local authorities. Federal officials would be prohibited from encouraging or ordering school districts to spend state or local funds for busing in cases where such busing endangered the health or education of students involved, unless constitutionally required. The bill further appropriated $2 billion over a two-year period to aid school districts in the process of desegregating. Although the Nixon administration had criticized the bill as inadequate, HEW Secretary Elliott Richardson announced that it embodied the heart of the president's higher education initiative. On June 8, 1972, the U.S. House of Representatives approved the bill and sent it to President Richard Nixon for his signature. Nixon signed the bill into law on June 23.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.