Home / Full timeline / Twenty-two school districts in St. Louis County, Missouri, agree to a desegregation plan to begin the nation’s first widespread voluntary school busing between a major city and its suburbs.
Twenty-two school districts in St. Louis County, Missouri, agree to a desegregation plan to begin the nation’s first widespread voluntary school busing between a major city and its suburbs.
1983 (Apr 4)
Twenty-two school districts in St. Louis County, Missouri, agreed to a desegregation plan to begin the nation's first widespread voluntary school busing between a major city and its suburbs. The accord came just before a deadline imposed by United States District Judge William L.Hungate in an eleven-year-old desegregation suit. Under the plan, all transfers would be voluntary. Predominantly White suburban school districts agreed to accept Black students from the city of St. Louis until “their racial balance was at least 15 percent, but no more than 25 percent, Black.” In order to achieve the ratios, fifteen thousand Black students would have to be bused to suburban schools in the fall of 1983. White suburban students would be encouraged to attend “magnet schools” in the city and city schools would be improved. Teachers were also to be reassigned to achieve more racial balance.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.