Supreme Court Republican
Justices Rule for White
Firefighters over Promotions
WASHINGTON (By Mark Sherman, AP)
June 29, 2009
—
The Supreme Court Republican
Justices ruled today white
firefighters in New Haven,
Conn., were unfairly denied
promotions because of their
race, reversing a decision that
high court nominee Sonia
Sotomayor endorsed as an appeals
court judge.
New Haven was wrong to scrap a
promotion exam because no
African-Americans and only two
Hispanic firefighters were
likely to be made lieutenants or
captains based on the results,
the court said Monday in a 5-4
decision. The city said that it
had acted to avoid a lawsuit
from minorities.
The ruling could alter
employment practices nationwide
and make it harder to prove
discrimination when there is no
evidence it was intentional.
"Fear of litigation alone cannot
justify an employer's reliance
on race to the detriment of
individuals who passed the
examinations and qualified for
promotions," Republican Justice
Anthony Kennedy said in his
opinion for the court. He was
joined by Republicans Justices
John Roberts, Samuel Alito,
Antonin Scalia and Clarence
Thomas.
In dissent, Justice Ruth Bader
Ginsburg said the white
firefighters "understandably
attract this court's sympathy.
But they had no vested right to
promotion. Nor have other
persons received promotions in
preference to them."
Justices Stephen Breyer, David
Souter and John Paul Stevens
signed onto Ginsburg's dissent,
which she read aloud in court
Monday.
Kennedy's opinion made only
passing reference to the work of
Sotomayor and the other two
judges on the 2nd U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals who upheld a
lower court ruling in favor of
New Haven.
But the appellate judges have
been criticized for producing a
cursory opinion that failed to
deal with "indisputably complex
and far from well-settled"
questions, in the words of
another appeals court judge,
Sotomayor mentor Jose Cabranes.
"This perfunctory disposition
rests uneasily with the weighty
issues presented by this
appeal," Cabranes said, in a
dissent from the full 2nd
Circuit's decision not to hear
the case.
Monday's decision has its
origins in New Haven's need to
fill vacancies for lieutenants
and captains in its fire
department. It hired an outside
firm to design a test, which was
given to 77 candidates for
lieutenant and 41 candidates for
captain.
Fifty six firefighters passed
the exams, including 41 whites,
22 blacks and 18 Hispanics. But
of those, only 17 whites and two
Hispanics could expect
promotion.
The city eventually decided not
to use the exam to determine
promotions. It said it acted
because it might have been
vulnerable to claims that the
exam had a "disparate impact" on
minorities in violation of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964.
The white firefighters said the
decision violated the same law's
prohibition on intentional
discrimination.
Kennedy said an employer needs a
"strong basis in evidence" to
believe it will be held liable
in a disparate impact lawsuit.
New Haven had no such evidence,
he said.
The city declined to validate
the test after it was given, a
step that could have identified
flaws or determined that there
were no serious problems with
it. In addition, city officials
could not say what was wrong
with the test, other than the
racially skewed results.