Some Connecticut schools may be forced to reshuffle their student bodies over “racial imbalance.”
Data from Connecticut’s Department of Education highlighted 17 schools at risk of violating the state’s desegregation law in academic year 2025-2026, CT Insider reported Thursday. However, legislative hurdles have made the statute nearly unenforceable for the time being.
Connecticut’s Department of Education reported the data during the State Board of Education (SBE) meeting on June 3. If SBE finds that racial imbalance exists in a public school, the local board must “prepare a plan to correct the imbalance and submit it to SBE for approval,” according to the state’s racial imbalance law.
“Under Connecticut law, racial imbalance exists when the proportion of students of color for any school exceeds twenty-five percentage points more than the comparable proportion for the school district,” according to the department’s report. If that imbalance is at least 15%, then the school is flagged as having an “impending [racial] imbalance.”
Three out of the five school districts in Connecticut with the highest absolute racial imbalances that year are within the Greenwich School District, according to CT Insider. Sixty percent of students at Julian Curtiss School are reportedly students of color. Eighteen percent of Old Greenwich School and Parkway School students are as well. As 39% of the school district’s population are people of color, that would make the “racial imbalance” for each school around 21% if the data is accurate.
