February 24, 2010 The Portland Observer Black Histoiy Month Page 23 PORTLAND S.D. photo by J ake T homas /T he P ortland O bserver Ernest Hartzog, a former Portland Public Schools assistant superintendent who was involved in efforts to desegregate schools, stands next to a bus outside o f Humboldt Elementary in northeast Portland. A Campaign for Equity in School continued ^ ^ J'rom Front minority children being stuck in underperforming inner-city schools and called the problem “a cultural and racial disservice to the entire community.” At the time, most o f Portland’s black population was concentrated in north and northeast portions of the city, particularly the Albina com­ munity, and the schools serving that population didn ’t have the same resources as their more affluent suburban counterparts. After coming underpressure, the school district turned its focus to improving the quality o f education in inner-city schools -- transform­ ing some into magnets- while taking steps to encourage racial integra­ tion district wide. Ernest Hartzog, who served as PPS assistant superintendent, over­ saw the district’s early efforts to bring more diversity and equity to schools in the 1970s. "It was doomed to failure," said Hartzog bluntly of the district’s ef­ fort. According to Hartzog, the prob­ lem with the district’s plan to inte­ grate schools was that it depended on parents voluntarily busing their children across town. Many white parents were reluc­ tant to send their children to the inner city, leaving the burden to fall largely on black families. "It was a one way situation," he said. There were other problems asso­ ciated with the efforts, as educators and administrators struggled to deal with an influx o f students from a different part o f town, said Hartzog. Hartzog recalls a tense atmo­ sphere, "loaded with emotions." Fights broke out at sporting events. Black parents complained that their children were being unfairly treated. There were threats o f lawsuits and actual lawsuits. Hartzog remembers a police officers being stationed in schools, which he described as a welcome presence. Black parents were also rankled by district plan to keep students from the Boise Neighborhood from transferrin g to Jefferson High School, and the Black United Fund raised a ruckus at school board meetings, with organizers jumping on tables, because o f the dispropor­ tionate burden on African Ameri­ can families. By 1980, Hartzog had stepped down from his position, as PPS passed a series o f resolutions that tried to monitor it better, make the burden more equitable, and placed it under the direct control o f Super­ intendent Matthew Prophet. During the 1980s, the district gave additional money and teachers to schools with concentrations o f mi­ norities and established magnet programs in them. It then made it easier for students to transfer, and assumed that integration would happen by choice. The district’s efforts had some success. In 1966 there were only 3 88 transfers. In 1980, there were 4 ,9 6 1, according to PPS records. But schools seem to have gravi­ tated back to being divided along racial lines, with minorities concen­ trated in certain schools. For in­ stance, Jefferson High School is 57 percent black. PPS is currently in the midst o f an ambitious redesign o f its high school system that seeks to make course offerings at each high school more equitable and close the achieve­ ment gap. The plan will severely limit transfers, requiring students to attend their neighborhood school. Carole Smith, PPS superinten­ dent, said that restricting transfers will bolster diversity throughout schools. “I would not call what w e’re do­ ing desegregation,” stressed Smith, who once worked on efforts to inte­ grate Boston public schools in the 1980s. She added that mixing stu­ dents from different ethnic and so­ cial backgrounds improves success across the board, which she hopes to do with the redesign. In 2007, the Supreme Court is sued a ruling prohibiting school from using race as a factor in schoo choice, essentially ending manda tory busing programs in other part: o f the country. But busing might not be the bes way to achieve parity and diversity “It does come down to relation­ ships,” said Smith, who explained that moving people around town will make little difference if students don’t feel welcome and part o f the community their attending school in. Hartzog adds that it means little if schools are the only place that are integrated. "If you don't have racial equal­ ity and parity in the work place, and the church place, and neigh­ borhoods, why should we think it works in the school place? W hat happens is people m irror and re­ flect what they learn in segregated living," he said. "The jury is still out on what the best way to do this is," he added.