LMSD Response Motion New Trial 8-5-10

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    IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

    Student Doe 1 by and through his :

    Parents/Guardians Does 1 and 2, :

    et al. :: CASE NO. 2:09-cv-02095-MMB

    Plaintiffs, :

    :

    :

    v. :

    :

    : ELECTRONICALLY FILED

    Lower Merion School District, :

    :

    Defendant. :

    DEFENDANTS BRIEF IN OPPOSITION TO PLAINTIFFS

    MOTION FOR A NEW TRIAL

    Judith E. Harris (PA I.D. No. 02358)

    Christina Joy F. Grese (PA I.D. No. 200727)Allison N. Suflas (PA I.D. No. 204448)

    Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP

    1701 Market StreetPhiladelphia, PA 19103

    215-963-5028/5085/5752

    Kenneth A. Roos, EsquireMegan E. Shafer, Esquire

    WISLER PEARLSTINE, LLP

    484 Norristown RoadBlue Bell, PA 19422

    610-825-8400

    Dated: August 5, 2010 Attorneys for Defendant

    Lower Merion School District

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    Defendant Lower Merion School District (the District), by its attorneys,

    respectfully submits this brief in opposition to Plaintiffs Motion for a New Trial.

    I. INTRODUCTION

    This court has invested a substantial amount of time and resources hearing and

    evaluating the facts and arguments in support of Plaintiffs race discrimination claims

    against the District. The Court first evaluated Plaintiffs claims when it reviewed full

    briefing by both parties on the Districts Motion for Summary Judgment. On February

    25, 2010, the Court issued a detailed, 25-page decision denying the Motion, reasoning

    that trial was necessary to flesh out the facts, and noting that it was particularly reluctant

    to grant summary judgment and to deny Plaintiffs the right to trial in this case, which

    involves issues of public policy and great concern to the community. The Court reached

    this decision primarily in reliance on Village of Arlington Heights v. Metro. Housing

    Dev. Corp., 429 U.S. 252 (1977), a case proffered by Plaintiffs. Dkt. No. 53, at 24-25.

    The Court next held a 9-day bench trial in which both sides were permitted

    opening statements. The Court heard evidence from 25 witnesses called by Plaintiffs.

    The Court then heard testimony from two additional witnesses proffered by the District,

    and, at the conclusion of the evidence, permitted both parties to make lengthy closing

    arguments. Finally, after issuing lengthy factual findings on May 13, 2010, the Court

    entertained post-trial briefing by both sides on the legal issues and subsequently held oral

    argument on those very same issues on June 4, 2010. After oral argument, the Court

    allowed the parties an additional opportunity to submit a letter to the Court concerning

    additional points raised during oral argument, which Plaintiffs did on June 11, 2010.

    After considering all of the above evidence and arguments, on June 24, 2010, the Court

    issued a 31-page decision entering judgment in favor of the District.

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    Plaintiffs have not provided any compelling reason why the Court should now

    question its sound discretion and undo its well-reasoned decision. For these reasons and

    those set forth more fully below, this Court should deny Plaintiffs Motion for a New

    Trial and affirm its decision in favor of the District.

    II. ARGUMENT

    A. Legal Standard

    A party seeking a new trial under Fed. R. Civ. P. 59 carries an extraordinarily

    heavy burden. It must demonstrate that a new trial is required to prevent injustice or to

    correct a verdict that was against the weight of the evidence. American Bearing Co. v.

    Litton Indus., Inc., 729 F.2d 943, 948 (3d cir. 1984), cert. denied, 469 U.S. 854 (1984);

    Roebuck v. Drexel Univ., 852 F.2d 715, 736 (3d Cir. 1988). See also Anderson v.

    Consolidated Rail Corp., No. CIV.A. 98-6043, 2001 WL 177068, at *2 (E.D. Pa. Jan. 26,

    2001). In a non-jury case, as here, a motion for a new trial must be based upon manifest

    error of law or mistake of fact, and a judgment should not be set aside except for

    substantial reason. WRIGHT & MILLER, 11 Fed. Prac. & Proc. 2d 2804 (2005)

    (emphasis added); see also Moore, Moores Federal Practice, 59.13[3][a] (same).

    The authority of a trial court to grant a new trial is confided almost entirely to the

    exercise of [its] discretion. American Bearing Co., 729 F.2d at 948. When determining

    whether to grant a motion for a new trial, a court should be most reluctant to set aside

    that which it has previously decided. Libatti v. United States, 178 F.3d 114, 118 (2d

    Cir. 1999) (citing Arizona v. California, 460 U.S. 605, 618 n.8 (1983)), and must view

    all the evidence and inferences reasonably drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to

    the party with the verdict. Ferguson v. Univ. of Pennsylvania, Civ. A. No. 95-938,

    1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10910, at *10 (emphasis added) (quoting Marino v. Ballestas, 749

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    F.2d 162, 167 (3d Cir. 1984)). These rigorous restrictions imposed on the granting of a

    new trial are critical to uphold the important policies of conserving ever-dwindling

    judicial resources and promoting judicial efficiency. Burzynski v. Travers, 111 F.R.D.

    15, 18 (E.D.N.Y.), affd without op., 833 F.3d 1002 (2d Cir. 1986).

    Notably, a motion for new trial is not meant to be an avenue to rehash or relitigate

    legal principles and arguments already presented to and rejected by the court. The

    authorities generally recognize that a new trial should not be granted where it is obvious

    that it would serve no purpose except to relitigate issues which have been correctly and

    finally determined. In considering a motion for a new trial the court must determine

    whether or not the reasons advanced indicate that a substantial injustice has been done by

    improper action on the part of the court or jury, and also indicates that a new trial will

    amount to more than a mere relitigation of the issues. Wilson v. Nu-Car Carriers, Inc.,

    158 F. Supp. 127, 129-30 (M.D. Pa. 1958) (quoting Miller v. Pacific Mutual Life Ins.

    Co., 17 F.R.D. 121, 124 (W.D. Mich. 1954)). As one court has succinctly observed,

    [d]istrict court opinion[s] are not intended as mere first drafts, subject to reconsideration

    at a litigants pleasure. Quaker Alloy Casting Co. v. Gulfco Indus., Inc., 123 F.R.D.

    282, 288 (N.D. Ill. 1988).

    Plaintiffs have failed to show that they are entitled to a new trial under these

    stringent standards. Accordingly, the Court should deny Plaintiffs Motion for a New

    Trial.

    B. The Court Did Not Find that Strict Scrutiny Was Mandated

    As a preliminary matter, contrary to Plaintiffs assertion, the Court did not find

    that application of strict scrutiny was mandated in this case. Indeed, the Court

    distinguished the Supreme Court cases relied upon by Plaintiffs in support of their

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    argument for strict scrutiny, i.e., Parents Involved in Community Schools v. Seattle

    School District, 551 U.S. 701 (2007) (Seattle), Adarand Constructors v. Pena, 515 U.S.

    200 (1995), Gratz v. Bollinger, 539 U.S. 244 (2003), and Johnson v. California, 543 U.S.

    499 (2005), recognizing, as it had done previously, that these cases are distinguishable

    from the case at hand, as they involved actions that expressly employed individual racial

    classifications, whereas this case involves a facially neutral redistricting plan and facially

    neutral redistricting guidelines and no individual racial classifications. Dkt. No. 121 at 9,

    11, 14. The Court further distinguished these cases on the grounds that they allocated

    benefits and burdens based on individual racial classifications, see Dkt. No. 121 at 11,

    which is not the case here.

    Indeed, the Court stated that the Supreme Court cases relied upon by Plaintiffs

    are distinguishable, indicating that strict scrutiny may not be the operative standard to

    evaluate the constitutionality of the Districts January 2009 redistricting. Dkt. No. 121,

    at 6-7 (emphasis added). See also Dkt. No. 121 at 5 (Ifstrict scrutiny applies to this

    case, the Court must determine whether the inclusion of a particular geographic area due

    to its racial makeup violates the Equal protection Clause, or whether the District has

    shown that the same redistricting plan would have been adopted absent such a

    concentration of African-American students.) (emphasis added).

    Moreover, even though the Court ultimately applied strict scrutiny in light of the

    Third Circuits decision in Pryor v. National Collegiate Athletic Assn, 288 F.3d 548 (3d

    Cir. 2002), it noted that language in Adarand indicates that the Supreme Court did not

    intend for strict scrutiny to be applied to cases such as Arlington Heights, Pryor, or this

    case, in which the challenged policies do not expressly employ individual racial

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    classifications. Dkt. No. 121 at 16, n.7. The Court similarly questioned whether

    application of strict scrutiny under Pryor was valid in light of Seattle. Id. at 15, n.6

    (Seattles focus on applying strict scrutiny to student assignment and placement

    programs only involving individual racial classifications calls into question whether

    Pryors pronouncement on the broad applicability of strict scrutiny to policies motivated

    in part on race, applies to student assignment plans that do not involve individual racial

    classifications.).

    Nevertheless, [a]ssumingthat the Districts consideration of the Affected Areas

    racial demographics in assigning students from that neighborhood to Harriton is

    considered evidence that race was a motivating factor during redistricting, the Court

    applied strict scrutiny. Dkt. No. 121 at 17 (emphasis added). At the same time, however,

    the Court expressly recognized that no congressional statute or Supreme Court

    precedent provides that the mere consideration of a neighborhoods racial demographics

    in assigning students to schools constitutes decisionmaking in which race has been a

    motivating factor. Id. at n.8.

    C. The Court Properly Found that the District Demonstrated

    Compelling State Interests

    After giving Plaintiffs every benefit of the doubt and applying strict scrutiny

    (although not mandated), the Court found, based on the record evidence and testimony

    elicited after nine days of trial, that the redistricting in question survived such review, as

    the District had demonstrated that Plan 3R was the only redistricting plan that

    simultaneously met the following compelling educational interests identified by the

    District: (1) equalizing the populations at the two high schools; (b) minimizing travel

    time and transportation costs; (3) fostering educational continuity; and (4) fostering

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    walkability, as defined by reference to living within the official, historic Lower Merion

    High School walk zone. Dkt. No. 121 at 21.1

    The Court also found that other legitimate

    factors motivated the Administration to act as it did, including the goals of helping

    students achieve educational excellence, . . . and also closing the achievement gap that

    the Administration perceived to exist between AfricanAmerican and white students.

    Dkt. No. 114 at 51 (emphasis added). See also Dkt. No. 121 at 29-30.

    Plaintiffs contention that the interests identified by the District (a) do not fall

    within the categories of compelling state interests recognized by the Supreme Court in

    situations where student school assignments are based upon race, and (b) cannot be

    considered compelling when measured against other interests recognized by the

    Supreme Court, should be rejected. As an initial matter, and as the Court found, this case

    does not involve individual student assignments based upon race. Moreover, the

    Supreme Courts recognition of certain interests as compelling does not preclude the

    existence of other compelling interests, and Plaintiffs fail to cite any authority that would

    indicate otherwise. Seattle did not rule out diversity as a compelling government interest

    outside the higher education context, and, indeed, five Justices in Seattle agreed that

    diversity and reducing racial isolation in the secondary education context are compelling

    government interests. See 551 U.S. at 788, 790, 864-66.

    1 In a footnote, Plaintiffs cite Seattle, 551 U.S. at 720, for the proposition that the stated goal has to

    bear a relationship to a race based policy in order to survive a strict scrutiny challenge andconcludes that none of the goals identified by the Court, i.e., equalizing the populations at the twohigh schools, minimizing travel time and transportation costs, fostering educational continuity,

    and fostering walkability, bear such a relationship. Dkt No. 127-2 at 7, n.3. Notably, however,

    the language relied upon by Plaintiffs reads as follows: [T]he school districts must demonstrate

    that the use of individual racial classifications in the assignment plans here under review is

    narrowly tailored to achieve a compelling government interest. 551 U.S. at 720. As

    previously stated and repeatedly recognized by this Court, the instant matter did not involve a

    student assignment plan and did not involve individual racial classifications; consequently, it does

    not fit the mold of Seattle or the other Supreme Court precedents relied upon by Plaintiffs.

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    D. The District Was Not Precluded From Arguing Both That Race Was

    Not a Factor in Redistricting and that, To the Extent that It Did

    Consider Race, It Did So to Achieve a Compelling State Interest

    The District has maintained throughout this case that race was not a factor in

    determining which of the Districts two high schools students would attend, but that to

    the extent that it did consider race in the redistricting process, it did so in an appropriate

    and legally permissible manner. This position does not preclude it from arguing, and is

    entirely consistent with its position, that Plan 3R and any consideration of race in

    connection with Plan 3R were narrowly tailored to achieve compelling government

    interests. Notably, Plaintiffs fail to proffer any applicable case law holding otherwise.

    The one case they do cite in purported support of their argument that these defenses are

    mutually exclusive, G-1 Holdings, Inc. v. Reliance Insurance Co., 586 F.3d 247 (3d Cir.

    2009), is inapposite, as it did not involve an equal protection analysis, or any claim of

    discrimination, for that matter. Instead, in G-1 Holdings the defendant first claimed that

    a particular policy did not apply to the matter at issue but later attempted to invoke a

    provision of the same policy. The court ultimately found that judicial estoppel did not

    apply, and noted that in the Third Circuit, judicial estoppel is generally not appropriate

    where the defending party did not convince the District Court to accept its earlier

    position. 568 F.3d at 262. Here, Judge Baylson found that race was one of several

    motivating factors in the Administrations consideration and formulation of redistricting

    plans; therefore, judicial estoppel does not operate to preclude the District from arguing

    that Plan 3R and any consideration of race in redistricting were narrowly tailored to

    achieve compelling government interests.2

    2 Plaintiffs boldly assert that [i]t would appear as a matter of law that in those instances when a

    court has found that a defendant used race as a factor in decision-making after an Arlington

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    E. There Is Ample Record Evidence Supporting the Courts

    Conclusion that Redistricting Took Race into Account Only to

    Address Achievement Gap and Racial Isolation Issues

    Contrary to Plaintiffs arguments, there is ample evidence in the record from

    which the Court could conclude that to the extent the District took race into account in

    the redistricting process, it did so to address the empirically measured achievement gap

    between African-American students and their peers of other racial and ethnic

    backgrounds and racial isolation that African-American students may experience. As

    the Court noted in its Factual Findings, legitimate factors motivated the Administration

    to act as it did, including the goals of helping students achieve educational excellence,

    attaining equal student populations at the two high schools, minimizing travel time,

    developing the 311 feeder pattern, and also closing the achievement gap that the

    Administration perceived to exist between AfricanAmerican and white students. Dkt.

    No. 114. at 51 (emphasis added).

    Moreover, at trial Dr. McGinley testified at length as to the reasons why he, as an

    educator, would look at race in connection with providing educational opportunities to all

    students, and testified concerning a number of programs and initiatives that he and the

    District had implemented to specifically combat the achievement gap and ameliorate

    racial isolation. See April 14, 2010 Trial Testimony of Dr. McGinley. Plaintiffs

    themselves introduced into evidence documents demonstrating that, to the extent race

    was taken into account during redistricting, it was done to address these issues. See P-

    166 and P-167, video clips of portions of the November 17, 2009 Board meeting, during

    Heights/Pryor review, as in this case, then said defendant will always lose a strict scrutiny

    challenge. Dkt. No. 127-2 at 6-7. Plaintiffs cite no authority in support of this statement,

    and the Supreme Courts precedents contradict it. Even under Arlington Heights/Pryor, a

    defendant can prevail even after race has been found to have been a factor by showing that

    its action was narrowly tailored to a compelling state interest. See Pryor, 288 F.3d at 562.

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    which Dr. McGinley stated that he would want to make sure the District did not have any

    racially isolated students if they were to adopt a 3-1-1 plan drawn on a north-south bias,

    and that he thought about equalization of student populations, such as students with IEPs

    and students on free or reduced price lunch, as a reality check after each plan. In sum,

    the record speaks for itself, and there is sufficient evidence for the Court to have

    concluded that the District considered the racial demographics of the Affected Area

    during redistricting in connection with its desire to address the achievement gap and

    reduce racial isolation.

    The Courts finding that the redistricting process embraced racial parity does

    not alter this conclusion. Plaintiffs incorrectly assume that racial parity, as referenced

    by the Court in its Factual Findings, equals the racial balancing found impermissible by

    the Seattle Court. There is no support for this assumption. Moreover, Plaintiffs reliance

    on the Seattle Courts statement that racial balancing is patently unconstitutional is

    misplaced here. The full context of this statement in both Grutter v. Bollinger, 539 U.S.

    306 (2003), and Seattle indicates that racial balancing is never permittedsolely for the

    purpose of achieving a particular racial balance in other words, racial balance is not to

    be achieved for its own sake. Such racial balancing is not at issue here.

    F. The Court Properly Found that the Districts Actions Were Narrowly

    Tailored to Achieve Compelling State Interests

    Each of Plaintiffs arguments in purported support of their position that the

    District failed to demonstrate narrow tailoring is without merit. First, Plaintiffs

    contend that there is no evidence in the trial record regarding how many African-

    American students needed to be redistricted or whether this number were in fact moved

    or scheduled to be moved in future. Plaintiffs ignore the undisputed testimony of Dr.

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    McGinley, Dr. Jarvis, and Dr. Lyles that because racial isolation is not formulaic, any

    effective method of combating racial isolation similarly must not be formulaic or by the

    numbers.

    Second, Plaintiffs contention that there is no record evidence as to whether race-

    neutral programs, including targeted magnet programs, were seriously considered is

    wrong. Plaintiffs ignore the undisputed testimony of Dr. McGinley and Board Members

    that magnet programs were, in fact, considered, but because additional magnet programs

    at Harriton would interfere with the legitimate educational goal of having equal curricular

    opportunities at both high schools, and because the use of magnet programs in the past

    failed to result in a significant number of students choosing to attend Harriton instead of

    Lower Merion High School, the District determined, in its discretion, that the

    implementation of additional magnet programs at Harriton High School would not

    achieve its redistricting goals. Moreover, as the Court noted, narrow tailoring does not

    require exhaustion of every conceivable race neutral alternative. Dkt. No. 121 at 30

    (quoting Grutter, 539 U.S. at 339).

    Third, Plaintiffs contend that there is no evidence that once the African-American

    student population at both high schools becomes equal, there will be more African-

    American children taking classes with their non-African-American peers. The Court,

    however, never found that the African-American student populations would at some point

    be equal at both high schools. The Court instead relied on evidence that the District

    implemented initiatives such as clustering to address racial isolation and achievement gap

    issues by, for example, encouraging African-American students to take advanced-level

    courses and not select courses below their individual abilities. On that basis, the Court

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    found legitimate educational reasons for having African-American students at both high

    schools. Plan 3R, in addition to fulfilling the Districts goals of equalizing the overall

    student populations at the two high schools, minimizing travel time and transportation

    costs, fostering educational continuity K-12, and fostering walkability, achieved that.

    Finally, Plaintiffs place great emphasis on the fact that there is no express limit on

    Plan 3Rs duration. The mere fact, however, that Plan 3R may not have a definitive end

    point does not render it insufficiently narrowly tailored. First, the language of Grutter

    wherein Justice OConnor referenced duration, on which Plaintiffs rely, appears to be

    mere dicta. Second, Justice OConnor went on to state that [e]nshrining a permanent

    justification for racial preferences would offend this fundamental equal protection

    principle. Grutter, 539 U.S. at 341-42. These concerns simply do not exist here, where

    there is no ongoing government use of racial preferences.

    G. The Court Properly Found that Adoption of Plan 3R Was Inevitable

    Regardless of Any Consideration of Race

    The Court properly found that the District established that Plan 3R still would

    have been adopted even had racial demographics not been considered. Plaintiffs have

    characterized this as an inevitability defense and claim that it is an affirmative defense

    that the District failed to allege and therefore waived. This argument is misplaced and

    should be rejected. First, Plaintiffs fail to cite any case law in support of their position.

    They do, however, cite authority stating that an affirmative defense is an assertion by the

    defendant ofnew facts or arguments that, if true, would defeat plaintiffs claim, even if

    all of plaintiffs allegations were presumed correct. See Dkt. 127-2 at 12. The facts and

    arguments relied upon by the Court to conclude that Plan 3R would have been adopted

    even had racial demographics not been considered are not new. The District has asserted

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    from the very beginning and throughout this case that the Affected Area was districted to

    Harriton because of geography and existing feeder patterns. Students living in the

    Affected Area attend Penn Valley Elementary School and Welsh Valley Middle School

    and reside outside the official Lower Merion High School walk zone; consequently,

    under Plan 3R, which utilized a 3-1-1 feeder pattern, they were districted to Harriton

    High School, along with all other students, regardless of race, who similarly attend Penn

    Valley and Welsh Valley and live outside the official Lower Merion High School walk

    zone. Consequently, Plaintiffs clearly were on notice of the Districts position that even

    apart from any consideration of race, the Affected Area would attend Harriton under Plan

    3R.

    Plaintiffs also were on notice that the Administration developed and presented,

    and the Board ultimately adopted, Plan 3R because it fulfilled the K-12 continuity goal

    the Board established as a priority in mid-November 2008, and because it restored

    walkability for those students living within the official Lower Merion High School walk

    zone, another priority set by the Board. Once the Board decided to utilize a 3-1-1 plan,

    and to maintain the option for those living within the official Lower Merion High School

    walk zone, it was inevitable that they would choose Plan 3R, because Plan 3R was the

    only plan that would fulfill those goals. It was similarly inevitable that all students in the

    Affected Area would have to attend Harriton under Plan 3R, apart from any consideration

    of race, because they attended an elementary and middle school that fed into Harriton

    High School under the 3-1-1 feeder pattern, and because they resided outside the official

    Lower Merion High School walk zone. The mere fact that the District did not label these

    facts and arguments as an affirmative defense does not alter the fact that they were

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    sufficiently alleged, and that Plaintiffs were on notice of them.

    Moreover, even assuming, arguendo, that inevitability is an affirmative

    defense, Plaintiffs cannot demonstrate any prejudice to them resulting from the Districts

    failure to assert this as an affirmative defense in its answer or other pleading. Indeed, the

    Third Circuit has held that the failure to assert an affirmative defense in an answer will

    not result in waiver if the opposing party has notice of the defense sufficient to avoid

    prejudice. Woodson v. Scott Paper Co., 109 F.3d 913, 925 n. 9 (3d Cir. 1997) (citing

    Charpentier v. Godsil, 937 F.2d 859, 864 (3d Cir. 1991) (It has been held that a

    defendant does not waive an affirmative defense if he raised the issue at a pragmatically

    sufficient time, and [the plaintiff] was not prejudiced in its ability to respond.).

    Plaintiffs contention that the District has not proved inevitability in light of the

    Courts finding that the Affected Area had been targeted due to its racial composition and

    the Districts admission that the walk zone does not extend one mile into Plaintiffs

    neighborhood is incorrect. The Court already has found that there is no evidence in the

    record to support Plaintiffs conclusion that not expanding the walk zone to include the

    Affected Area, even though part of the Affected Area is within one mile of Lower Merion

    High School, was a subterfuge. See Dkt. No. 114 at 43-44. Moreover, the Courts

    finding that the District targeted the Plaintiffs neighborhood for redistricting to

    Harriton High School in part because of its racial demographics does not negate the fact

    that the District would have chosen Plan 3R, and the Affected Area would have been

    districted to attend Harriton High School under Plan 3R, even in the absence of such

    targeting.

    Case 2:09-cv-02095-MMB Document 129 Filed 08/05/10 Page 14 of 16

    http://web2.westlaw.com/find/default.wl?tf=-1&rs=WLW10.06&referencepositiontype=S&serialnum=1997084892&fn=_top&sv=Split&referenceposition=925&pbc=112D7490&tc=-1&ordoc=2004104216&findtype=Y&db=506&vr=2.0&rp=%2ffind%2fdefault.wl&mt=Westlawhttp://web2.westlaw.com/find/default.wl?tf=-1&rs=WLW10.06&referencepositiontype=S&serialnum=1991117494&fn=_top&sv=Split&referenceposition=864&pbc=112D7490&tc=-1&ordoc=2004104216&findtype=Y&db=350&vr=2.0&rp=%2ffind%2fdefault.wl&mt=Westlawhttp://web2.westlaw.com/find/default.wl?tf=-1&rs=WLW10.06&referencepositiontype=S&serialnum=1991117494&fn=_top&sv=Split&referenceposition=864&pbc=112D7490&tc=-1&ordoc=2004104216&findtype=Y&db=350&vr=2.0&rp=%2ffind%2fdefault.wl&mt=Westlawhttp://web2.westlaw.com/find/default.wl?tf=-1&rs=WLW10.06&referencepositiontype=S&serialnum=1997084892&fn=_top&sv=Split&referenceposition=925&pbc=112D7490&tc=-1&ordoc=2004104216&findtype=Y&db=506&vr=2.0&rp=%2ffind%2fdefault.wl&mt=Westlaw
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    In addition, the Plaintiffs fixation on the elimination of potential scenarios

    because of racial considerations fails to show that Plan 3R was not inevitable. What

    matters is what plan was adopted by the Board, notwhat scenarios or plans were

    discarded. Consequently, the argument that Dr. Haber unilaterally discarded potential

    scenarios because of racial considerations is immaterial. Plaintiffs argument that

    information was withheld from the public is likewise immaterial. What is material is that

    once the Board decided that K-12 educational continuity, which required a 3-1-1 feeder

    pattern, was its primary goal, and that it should maintain walkability (as defined in

    relation to those students residing within the official Lower Merion High School walk

    zone), Plan 3R was the only plan that could meet these requirements.

    In sum, the irony is that if the District had never looked at any race data during

    the redistricting process, it still would have ended up with Plan 3R, knowing full well that

    a significant number of African-American students reside within Ardmore. As the Court

    found, both North Ardmore and the Affected Area were natural candidates for

    redistricting because they were the two areas closest to Harriton that were not already

    districted to attend Harriton prior to the adoption of Plan 3R. Dkt. 121 at 25. Of these

    two areas, the Affected Area ultimately was chosen for redistricting to Harriton High

    School, because redistricting students in that area fostered K-12 educational continuity,

    whereas redistricting students in North Ardmore would not have done so. Dkt. 121 at 27.

    III. CONCLUSION

    The Courts decision was based on solid reasoning and evidence much of which

    was undisputed presented during a 9-day bench trial, and Plaintiffs have not provided

    any compelling reason why the Court should now question its sound discretion. The

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    bottom line is that, as this Court found, neither the Supreme Court, nor the Third Circuit

    has ever prohibited a school district from taking into account the demographics of a

    neighborhood as one of many factors in assigning students to schools. Indeed, the only

    discussion of this issue in any Supreme Court case is that of Justice Kennedy, who

    sanctionedconsideration of neighborhood demographics in assigning students to schools.

    See Seattle, 551 U.S. at 789 (Kennedy, J., concurring). Thus, there is no error of law to

    be corrected. As to the facts, Plaintiffs have not pointed to any mistakes. Having

    performed the Arlington Heights factual examination, the Court has reached a decision

    that Plaintiffs simply do not like. Plaintiffs dissatisfaction with the Courts decision,

    however, is not a legal basis under Fed. R. Civ. P. 59 to relitigate these facts. The

    District respectfully submits that the Court should therefore deny their Motion for a New

    Trial.

    Respectfully submitted,

    /s/ Judith E. Harris

    Judith E. Harris (PA I.D. No. 02358)Christina Joy F. Grese (PA I.D. No. 200727)

    Allison N. Suflas (PA I.D. No. 204448)

    Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP1701 Market Street

    Philadelphia, PA 19103

    215-963-5028/5085/5752

    Kenneth A. Roos, EsquireMegan E. Shafer, Esquire

    WISLER PEARLSTINE, LLP484 Norristown Road

    Blue Bell, PA 19422610-825-8400

    Dated: August 5, 2010 Attorneys for Defendant

    Lower Merion School District

    Case 2:09-cv-02095-MMB Document 129 Filed 08/05/10 Page 16 of 16