Home / Full timeline / Federal judge Robert Krupansky ends court-ordered busing in Cleveland after education officials say integration had been successful, and $10 million in busing costs could be saved.
Federal judge Robert Krupansky ends court-ordered busing in Cleveland after education officials say integration had been successful, and $10 million in busing costs could be saved.
1996 (May 8)
Federal judge Robert Krupansky lifted a seventeen-year desegregation order, which resulted in the end of court-ordered busing in Cleveland, Ohio. Student busing had been implemented in 1979 in an effort to integrate the city's public school system. Education officials asked to end busing because they felt integration had been successful and $10 million in busing costs could be saved. The original ruling stemmed from a 1973 case involving Black students who accused the school system of running segregated schools. The courts decided in favor of the students, and six years later Cleveland began busing students.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.