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Wealthier and Whiter: Louisiana School District Secession Gets a Major Boost

Court approves a 10-year effort to turn East Baton Rouge suburb into a new city 鈥 presumably with its own, far less impoverished, school system.

Long Farm Village and nearby affluent neighborhoods have gotten approval to form their own city, seceding from East Baton Rouge and its school district and leaving behind impoverished areas lacking needed resources for their schools. (Beth Hawkins)

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Correction appended May 13

A recent decision by the Louisiana Supreme Court handed a decisive win to backers of a long-running campaign to create a new, overwhelmingly white Baton Rouge-area school system, further concentrating poverty in the remaining, majority-Black part of the district. 

When finalized, the secession will likely cost East Baton Rouge Parish Public Schools 10,000 students and 25% of its $700 million budget, school board member and former board president Dadrius Lanus estimated. 

鈥淭his is all rooted in institutional racism,鈥 he said in an interview. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about what white, middle-class people want for their kids.鈥 

Barring complications, it will be the fifth time in nearly a quarter-century that part of the district has broken off and formed its own school system. Currently, the district 鈥 Louisiana鈥檚 second-largest 鈥 has 40,000 students. Ninety percent are impoverished. 

A complicated tangle of laws governs the creation of new school districts, with the most straightforward path being the formation of a new municipality corresponding to the area seeking to break away. A decade ago, residents of the affluent southeast quadrant of the parish began campaigning to , St. George.

In 2019, 54% of the area鈥檚 residents voted to incorporate as a standalone municipality. Baton Rouge leaders sued, and in late April the state’s high court ruled in favor of the new city鈥檚 proponents. Republican Gov. Jeff Landry will now appoint St. George鈥檚 first mayor and five city council members.

The St. George area is represented by East Baton Rouge School Board member Nathan Rust, who backed the breakaway. Rust could not immediately be reached for comment, but his campaign website includes a statement decrying the condition of local schools.

鈥淥ur schools in District 6 are overcrowded and fraught with violence, disruption and an exodus of quality teachers,鈥 it states. 鈥淎fter 20 years of Board Tenure, how is this the best public education offered to our children?鈥 Many parents, it adds, 鈥渞esort to spending their hard-earned money on private schools because they have no better option.鈥

In 2109, 蜜桃影视 published a deep dive into a decades-long school integration scheme that shaped the district, the first four secessions and the potential implications of a St. George . Under the terms of a desegregation order 鈥 no longer in force 鈥 many East Baton Rouge students attend magnet schools that are spread throughout the district. Consequently, many children who live in the most impoverished neighborhoods 鈥 many still devastated by recent floods 鈥 attend schools in the St. George area. 

According to Lanus, the existing district has 90 days to 鈥渁nnex鈥 the 10 existing schools and two properties where it had planned to build schools within the new city鈥檚 boundaries 鈥 all of which were purchased or built by parish taxpayers. St. George residents would then have a choice: pay to build their own schools, or attempt to buy existing school facilities and lots from the East Baton Rouge district. As yet unknown is whether the district would be willing to sell and, if not, how many students would be bused into the new city to attend existing district schools. 

The secession would also shift an unknown but significant amount of local tax revenue to the new city, further straining the East Baton Rouge district鈥檚 coffers. Lanus estimates the district will lose some $150 million in per-pupil state and federal aid, plus money that is supposed to flow to children in poverty, magnet school students and those receiving special education or gifted-and-talented services.  

鈥淚 can鈥檛 tell you how many calls I鈥檝e gotten from parents saying, 鈥榃hat鈥檚 going to happen to my kids?鈥 鈥 said Lanus. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 have any time to waste.鈥

Correction: Dadrius Lanus’s term as East Baton Rouge Parish School Board president ended Jan. 11, 2024.

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