News

Tennessee Higher Ed Desegregation Case Comes to an End

by Diverse staff and wire reports , October 5, 2006

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Rita Sanders Geier, center, flanked by her attorney George Barrett, left, and Tennessee Attorney General Paul Summers, are shown outside federal court in Nashville, Tenn., in 2001.

Higher education officials told the state’s Fiscal Review Committee last year that the directives were being met.

To meet those directives, the state had to complete measurement studies of Black students, establish minority and nontraditional scholarship programs and establish pre-doctoral fellowship programs at various institutions.

Of the universities overseen by the Tennessee Board of Regents, Black enrollment rose from 17.8 percent in 1984 to 23.5 percent in 2005. In the University of Tennessee system, enrollment increased from 7.9 percent to 11.6 percent.

Attorney George E. Barrett, who filed the original lawsuit, says he’s satisfied with the accomplishments of the decree. “The main objective was to get rid of the vestiges of segregation,” he says, “and I believe the state has done that.”

Diverse staff and wire reports



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