Darrin Lewis, Sr. v. Ascension Parish Schoo , 806 F.3d 344 ( 2015 )


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  •      Case: 15-30030     Document: 00513274476      Page: 1   Date Filed: 11/17/2015
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    November 17, 2015
    No. 15-30030
    Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    DARRIN KENNY LEWIS, SR., individually and as natural tutor of his minor
    child B; OSCAR VARNADO,
    Plaintiffs–Appellants,
    v.
    ASCENSION PARISH SCHOOL BOARD,
    Defendant–Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Louisiana
    Before REAVLEY, PRADO, and COSTA, Circuit Judges.
    EDWARD C. PRADO, Circuit Judge:
    This school-redistricting equal protection case is now before us for the
    second time. In the first appeal, in 2011, a divided panel of this Court reversed
    summary judgment in favor of Defendant–Appellee Ascension Parish School
    Board     (“Board”),   holding   that   material   fact   issues   surrounded   the
    discriminatory purpose and effect of the Board’s adoption of a redistricting plan
    that concentrated economically disadvantaged students in a majority-nonwhite
    school district. Lewis v. Ascension Par. Sch. Bd., 
    662 F.3d 343
    (5th Cir. 2011)
    (per curiam). On remand, the district court held a three-day bench trial and
    entered judgment for the Board. It concluded that the plan was facially race
    neutral, that the plaintiffs had failed to prove the redistricting plan treated
    similarly situated students of different races differently, and that, even if he had
    made this threshold showing, he failed to establish that the plan had a
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    discriminatory effect. Discerning no material infirmities in the court’s legal
    conclusions and no clear error in its findings of fact, we affirm the judgment.
    I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    A.     Factual Background 1
    The Ascension Parish School District (“the District”) operates four high
    schools in southeast Louisiana—Donaldsonville High School on the west bank
    of the Mississippi River, and East Ascension High School, Dutchtown High
    School, 2 and St. Amant High School on the east bank. Since at least 1972, the
    District has assigned students to these schools through an attendance-zone-
    based “feeder plan,” whereby specified elementary schools “feed” into specified
    middle schools, which in turn “feed” into one of the high schools. This
    organization allows students to matriculate together to middle school and high
    school.
    In 2004, a federal district court dismissed the District’s longstanding
    desegregation case and declared the District unitary after finding that all
    vestiges of the prior compulsory dual school system had been eliminated to the
    extent practicable.
    Later that year, in response to dramatic population growth in the
    Dutchtown area, the Board convened a “Growth Impact Committee.” Troy
    Gautreau, Sr., a Board member and chairman of the Committee, presented the
    Board with a “Growth Impact Charter,” which included the following
    “objectives”: (1) “develop a plan to address the growth with minimal impact on
    1 The facts of this case were recounted in detail in this Court’s 2011 opinion. This
    opinion incorporates much of the “Background” section of that opinion verbatim, see Lewis v.
    Ascension Par. Sch. Bd., 
    662 F.3d 343
    , 344–45 (5th Cir. 2011) (per curiam), varying only to
    note additional facts found by the district court during the bench trial. The parties do not
    dispute the essential facts underlying this suit.
    2 The District constructed Dutchtown High School in 2002 to address the population
    growth in the Dutchtown area. Correspondingly, that year the District also implemented a
    new school attendance zone “feeder plan” that included Dutchtown High School.
    2
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    residents”; (2) “ensure equal facilities and instructional quality for all children”;
    (3) attain “enrollment maximums” established for the elementary, middle, and
    high school levels; and (4) “maintain unitary status.” (alterations omitted).
    According to then-Superintendent Donald Songy, the District sought to move
    approximately 450 students from Dutchtown Middle School, and thus out of
    Dutchtown High School’s feeder zone, to other east bank schools with capacity
    for growth.
    To facilitate the Board’s consideration of various rezoning options,
    Superintendent Songy, Gautreau, and other Board members requested that
    Demographics Application Specialist David Duplechein generate demographic
    data for several plans. Using the District’s “Edulog” computer program—which
    “geographically code[d] all students actually enrolled in the school system based
    on their physical residential addresses”—Duplechein projected the demographic
    effects of various prospective rezoning plans. Ultimately, the Board, which
    governs the District, narrowed its consideration down to four rezoning plans,
    referred to as Options 1, 2, 2f, and 3.
    Between 2004 and 2007, Gautreau delivered several PowerPoint
    presentations to the Board on the topic of rezoning. In a 2004 presentation,
    Gautreau discussed the persistent overcrowding issues in several of the
    District’s primary and middle schools. The presentation indicated that, since
    the implementation of the 2002 feeder plan that accompanied the construction
    of Dutchtown High School, the percentage of at-risk students 3 at the primary
    and middle schools in the East Ascension High School feeder zone had
    increased and the average School Performance Scores (“SPS”) 4 at those schools
    3 “‘At-risk’ students are those who are eligible for free or reduced-price lunch due to
    disadvantaged socioeconomic status.” 
    Lewis, 662 F.3d at 346
    n.7.
    4 School Performance Scores are calculated according to a formula devised by the
    Louisiana Department of Education. They represent a combination of end-of-course test
    3
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    had decreased. It further highlighted a decline in student enrollment, SPS, and
    standardized test scores, and an increase in the percentage of at-risk students,
    at East Ascension High School. In addition, the presentation delineated the
    negative effects of a higher at-risk student population, emphasizing that “the
    concentration of poverty within a school can be shown to be harmful to all
    students in that school whether or not an individual student comes from a poor
    background.” It concluded that “a higher percentage of majority students
    should increase at[-]risk achievement.” It is unclear whether the presentation
    incorporated demographic data derived from Edulog.
    By 2006, the enrollment of Dutchtown Middle School, a Dutchtown High
    School feeder school, had risen to over 1,000 students, causing severe
    overcrowding. No other east bank middle school had more than 730 students
    enrolled. Accordingly, in 2006 or 2007 Gautreau prepared another PowerPoint
    presentation that examined Options 2f and 3 in detail. The presentation
    compared then-current racial demographics at each of the high schools,
    projected total enrollment at several primary and middle schools, projected
    percentages of “black” and “white” students at several primary and middle
    schools, and projected percentage of “Title I” 5 and “fully paid” students at
    several primary and middle schools. It concluded that Option 3 “clearly offers
    the best opportunity for all students in Ascension Parish and avoids putting
    an undue burden on one particular school by increasing the at[-]risk student
    population.” (alteration omitted). As with Gautreau’s 2004 presentation, it is
    unclear whether the 2006–2007 presentation incorporated Edulog data.
    results, ACT scores, four-year graduation numbers, and graduation credentials (e.g.,
    advanced placement courses, entry-based certifications, etc.).
    5 Title I schools have a high number or a high percentage of students from low-income
    families. They derive this name from Title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act
    of 1965, 20 U.S.C. § 6301 et seq., which authorizes awards of federal financial assistance to
    schools with a qualifying population of low-income students.
    4
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    Sometime after 2007, Gautreau created a chart using Edulog data that
    projected the total enrollment and the percentages of “minority” and at-risk
    students at each of the three east bank high schools under each of the rezoning
    options under consideration. The chart indicated, in relevant part, that: (1)
    under current conditions, with no redistricting, (a) the enrollment of
    Dutchtown High School would increase from 1695 students in 2007 to 2072
    students in 2012, a total student population exceeding the 2012 projections at
    East Ascension High School and St. Amant High School by 700 students and
    400 students, respectively, and (b) the percentage of at-risk students in all
    three high schools would increase, with the largest jump occurring at East
    Ascension High School; and (2) under each of Options 2, 2f, and 3, (a) the total
    enrollment in all three schools would increase but would approach parity, and
    (b) the percentage of at-risk students in all three high schools would increase,
    again with the largest jump occurring at East Ascension High School. 6
    In 2008, Superintendent Songy also compiled a chart with Edulog data,
    titled “Statistical Analysis of Options 1, 2, 2f and 3,” and presented it to the
    Board for consideration. The chart listed the current enrollment, percentage of
    African–American students, and percentage of at-risk students at each school
    in the district, then projected the enrollment, percentage of African–American
    students, and percentage of at-risk students at each school under each of the
    four rezoning options. Unlike Gautreau’s chart, Songy’s chart did not project
    data beyond the 2007–2008 school year. Songy’s chart indicated, in relevant
    part, that: (1) the current African-American population at East Ascension High
    School exceeded that of the other high schools, but would decrease at East
    Ascension High School and would increase at the remaining schools under any
    6Notably, Gautreau’s chart seems to replicate the projected demographics of St.
    Amant High School with no redistricting plan in the projections under Options 2, 2f, and 3.
    5
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    plan; (2) the at-risk population at East Ascension High School would decrease
    under any plan, with the greatest drop under Option 3 and the second greatest
    drop under Option 2f; (3) the at-risk populations at Dutchtown High School and
    St. Amant High School would increase under any plan; and (4) the total student
    enrollment would increase at East Ascension High School and St. Amant High
    School, but not at Dutchtown High School, under any plan. 7
    At its January 15, 2008 meeting, Gautreau discussed the School Board’s
    redistricting efforts and, according to the meeting minutes, told the School
    Board and audience that “the criteria most concentrated on was [sic]
    maintaining our current unitary status with the Department of Justice and
    moving the least amount of kids as possible.” 
    Lewis, 662 F.3d at 345
    . Gautreau
    also “informed the public that Option 2f or Option 3 needed to be passed by the
    School Board that night, and that some people would be upset with the School
    Board’s decision.” 8 Following remarks by each of the eleven Board members and
    by nineteen members of the public, the Board voted on Options 2f and 3. 9 Option
    3 failed by a vote of six to four, then Option 2f passed by a vote of the same
    margin, with precisely the same voting blocs on either side. Each Board member
    was in possession of Songy’s chart at the time of the vote, but it is unclear which
    Board members, if any, were in possession of Gautreau’s chart or presentations.
    Four of the six Board members who voted in favor of Option 2f testified at the
    bench trial, and each Board member who testified stated that, at the time of the
    vote, they were aware of the demographic projections and of the correlation
    between at-risk status and lower academic achievement.
    7  Similarly to Gautreau’s chart, Songy’s chart seems to replicate the same projections
    for St. Amant High School in each plan.
    8 Neither party presented evidence to explain Gautreau’s remark.
    9 Neither party offered a transcript of the Board members’ or the public’s comments.
    6
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    Option 2f employed several means to shift the student population among
    the east bank schools. First, it redrew the District’s geographic attendance lines
    so that a number of students were moved from the Dutchtown and St. Amant
    High School feeder zones to the East Ascension High School feeder zone. In total,
    Option 2f moved 339 students into different feeder zones during the 2008–2009
    school year. Second, Option 2f moved Duplessis Primary School, a Title I school,
    from the Dutchtown feeder zone to the East Ascension feeder zone. As a result,
    all five of the primary schools in the East Ascension feeder zone were now Title
    I schools. Third, Option 2f assigned one new primary school and one new middle
    school to the East Ascension feeder zone, two new primary schools to the
    Dutchtown feeder zone, and three new primary schools to the St. Amant feeder
    zone.
    According to data collected by the Louisiana Department of Education,
    since the implementation of Option 2f, total student enrollment has increased
    at all three east bank high schools; the percentage of at-risk students has
    increased at all three east bank high schools; and East Ascension High School
    has maintained the highest percentages of nonwhite students and at-risk
    students among the east bank high schools, and those percentages have each
    grown from 2007 to 2013. In addition, the percentages of both nonwhite
    students and at-risk students at each primary school and middle school in the
    East Ascension feeder zone have increased during this time.
    Further, it is undisputed that, since the adoption of Option 2f the
    majority of the District’s nonwhite students and a majority of the District’s at-
    risk students attend schools in the East Ascension feeder zone; East Ascension
    High School is the only majority nonwhite and majority at-risk high school in
    the District; a majority of the East Ascension feeder schools are majority
    nonwhite, unlike the Dutchtown and St. Amant feeder schools; and all of the
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    East Ascension feeder schools are majority at-risk, unlike the Dutchtown and
    St. Amant feeder schools.
    The evidence of academic performance under Option 2f is mixed. The
    average ACT score for the 2013 graduating class at East Ascension was 19.4,
    lower than St. Amant’s average score of 20.3 and Dutchtown’s average score of
    21.3, and lower than the state’s average score of 19.5, but average ACT scores
    also declined for all three schools during this time. Additionally, Dutchtown and
    St. Amant high school students performed better than East Ascension students
    on Advanced Placement (“AP”) exams in the 2011-2012 academic year.
    Dutchtown also attained superior SPS to East Ascension High School, both
    before and after the implementation of Option 2f. In the 2007–2008 school year,
    East Ascension’s SPS was 95.1, compared to Dutchtown’s SPS of 109.8. In the
    2012–2013 school year—after the Department of Education revised the SPS
    scale from 150 points to 200 points—East Ascension’s SPS was 135.2, compared
    to Dutchtown’s SPS of 163.3 and St. Amant’s SPS of 149.7. On the other hand,
    East Ascension’s SPS has gradually increased since the implementation of
    Option 2f, and its state school ranking and graduation rate are now at all-time
    highs.
    B.    Procedural Background
    1.    The Suit
    Shortly after the adoption of Option 2f, Lewis, the father of two African–
    American schoolchildren assigned to the East Ascension feeder zone both pre-
    and post-Option 2f, filed suit against the Board in Louisiana state court. 
    Lewis, 662 F.3d at 345
    . Lewis sued under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, asserting violations of his
    children’s Fourteenth Amendment rights to equal protection. 
    Id. at 346.
    He
    essentially raised two challenges to Option 2f: first, he alleged that the Board
    adopted Option 2f “to ensure that East Ascension High School [and its feeder
    8
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    schools] would maintain a disproportionately large non-white minority
    population, leaving the remaining two East Bank schools as predominantly
    white” (the “racial balancing” claim), 
    id. (alteration in
    original) (internal
    quotation marks omitted); and second, he alleged that because Option 2f placed
    a disproportionate number of at-risk students in the East Ascension feeder
    zone, “Option 2f ‘would ensure that the nonwhite minority students at East
    Ascension High School [and in its feeder system] would not, now and in the
    future, be afforded educational opportunities equal to those available to the
    students at either Dutchtown High School or St. Amant High School” (the
    “funneling” claim), 
    id. (alteration in
    original).
    The Board removed the action to federal court and successfully moved
    for summary judgment. 
    Id. The district
    court found Option 2f facially race
    neutral and concluded that Lewis had not presented competent evidence of
    both discriminatory intent and discriminatory effect so as to invoke strict
    scrutiny. 
    Id. It then
    upheld the plan on rational basis review because the Board
    had a legitimate government interest in reducing overcrowding. 
    Id. 2. The
    First Appeal
    A divided panel of this Court reversed. 
    Id. at 352.
    The Court held, first,
    that Lewis’s racial-balancing claim was not preserved and that Lewis’s only
    live claims were his funneling claim and his claim that Option 2f employs
    explicit racial classifications. 
    Id. at 348
    & n.11. It then criticized the district
    court’s analysis, which relied in part on evidence that the Board “considered
    [the race of reassigned students] in an effort at maintaining the racial balance
    already existing among the schools in East Ascension Parish and in
    maintaining the school district’s unitary status, not as part of a racially
    discriminatory motive to allocate a ‘disproportionate number’ of African–
    American students to the East Ascension school zone.” 
    Id. at 349.
    The Court
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    raised two concerns with this reasoning: first, “it is unclear how, on the record
    before us, the court could make a factual finding as a matter of law about the
    Board’s lack of discriminatory purpose”; and second, “the court’s assumption
    that it might be justifiable to use racially-based decisions for the ‘benign’
    purpose of maintaining post-unitary ‘racial balance’ among the schools in the
    system is at least in tension with the Supreme Court’s decision in Parents
    Involved.” 
    Id. The Court
    then identified several pieces of evidence that created a
    genuine issue of material fact concerning the Board’s discriminatory purpose.
    
    Id. at 350–52.
    First, the Court cited the Board’s reliance on Edulog data, noting
    that Edulog “coded each enrolled student in order to predict the ‘statistical
    effects’ of Option 2f’s boundary assignments” and that, in turn, “it is unclear
    how a student assignment plan could calculate the percentage of black
    students at each school without classifying individual students by race.” 
    Id. at 350.
    The Court rejected the Board’s explanation “that the Statistical Analysis
    underlying Option 2f . . . does not constitute Option 2f itself” because “to accept
    that self-serving, summary allegation would be to allow a school district to
    skew reality by selectively including documents in the record and labeling only
    those documents its ‘plan.’” 
    Id. This, the
    Court said, it could not countenance
    on review of a summary judgment. 
    Id. Next, the
    Court quoted the testimony of Superintendent Songy and
    various Board members that “suggest[ed] that the District relied upon the race
    of the individual students residing in different geographic locations when it re-
    zoned its schools.” 
    Id. at 350–51.
    The Court also cited an excerpt from the
    District’s website that referred to “alter[ing] the racial balance” and
    “balanc[ing] the demograph[ics]” at East Ascension. 
    Id. at 351
    (second
    alteration in original). In response to the district court’s finding that “‘only’ 339
    10
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    students, in a district population of 18,000, were affected by Option 2f,” the
    Court observed that, “[i]n light of the testimony, this seems to be a group
    identifiable and identified principally on racial grounds (whether minority or
    not) for assignment to particular schools.” 
    Id. Lastly, the
    Court concluded that there were material questions of fact
    surrounding the discriminatory effect of Option 2f. 
    Id. Criticizing the
    district
    court for basing its finding on a statistical analysis of Option 2f’s impact on
    only the east bank high schools, the Court pointed out that Lewis alleged a
    discriminatory effect on the East Ascension feeder system. 
    Id. The statistics
    in
    the record, the Court said, “provide some support” for Lewis’s funneling claim.
    
    Id. at 352.
    The Court gave particular attention to statistics showing disparities
    between the percentage of the total east bank student population enrolled in
    each feeder system and the percentage of the east bank’s total at-risk student
    population and total nonwhite student population in each feeder system. 
    Id. at 351
    –52. 10 In any event, the Court declined to identify the pertinent standard
    of review, holding that the determination of whether to apply strict scrutiny or
    rational basis review “turns on the factual questions of discriminatory motive
    and impact.” 
    Id. at 352.
           3.      Remand, Pretrial Motions, and the Bench Trial
    On remand, the district court permitted additional discovery; then both
    parties moved for summary judgment. The district court denied Lewis’s motion
    and granted in part and denied in part the Board’s motion. Two aspects of the
    district court’s ruling are relevant here. First, the district court “conclude[d]
    10  Importantly, these statistics appear only in Lewis’s submissions on summary
    judgment. Lewis appears to have derived these statistics from data compiled by Bridget
    Thomas, a “concerned parent,” whose children attended schools within the District and who
    testified as a lay witness at trial. There is no mention of these statistics in Lewis’s post-trial
    briefing or in his appellate briefs.
    11
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    that the School Board’s consideration of projected racial and socioeconomic
    data prior to voting does not amount to a racial classification.” It
    correspondingly denied “Lewis’[s] request that the Court review Option 2f
    under strict scrutiny on this basis” and granted “[t]he School Board’s request
    that the Court dismiss Lewis’[s] claim that Option 2f employs a racial
    classification.” Second, the district court denied “the School Board’s request
    that the Court dismiss Lewis’[s] remaining Equal Protection claim on th[e]
    basis” that “Lewis cannot establish that [his children] were treated differently
    than similarly situated students of a different race”—namely, white students
    in the Dutchtown and St. Amant feeder zones. Despite announcing that it was
    “unable to consider all of the evidence presented until after a full trial on the
    merits,” the district court “conclude[d],” based on “the evidence presented here,
    [the] context of this matter, and factors considered by the School Board when
    it adopted Option 2f,” that the plaintiff’s children “are, in fact, similarly
    situated to white students in the Dutchtown High School and St. Amant High
    School feeder zones.”
    The case proceeded to a three-day bench trial. At the opening of the trial,
    the Board orally requested that the district court reconsider several of its rulings
    in its summary-judgment order, including its conclusion on the “similarly
    situated” issue. The district court denied the Board’s requests without prejudice
    to the Board’s right to reurge them in its post-trial briefs. Lewis made no request
    that the district court reconsider its ruling that Option 2f did not employ racial
    classifications.
    At trial, Lewis called ten witnesses: five members of the Board who voted
    on Option 2f, Demographics Application Specialist Duplechein, Lewis, Lewis’s
    son, Bridget Thomas (a “concerned parent” who compiled statistics on the
    rezoning options), and Dr. Percy Bates (an expert witness in educational
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    psychology). The Board, in turn, called two witnesses: Patrice Pujol, current
    Superintendent of the Board, and former Superintendent Songy.
    Following post-trial briefing, the district court issued Rule 52 findings of
    fact and conclusions of law. The court’s findings of fact are summarized in Part
    
    I(A), supra
    . The court opened its conclusions of law with a summary of Lewis’s
    theory:
    “Here, the gravamen of Lewis’s section 1983 claim is that the School
    Board has denied nonwhite students in the East Ascension High
    School attendance zone equal educational opportunities, in
    violation of the Fourteenth Amendment, by adopting a school
    rezoning plan that ‘feeds’ a disproportionate number of at-risk
    students into the East Ascension High School attendance zone.”
    The court then held that: (1) Option 2f does not employ explicit racial
    classifications, (2) Lewis failed to prove that nonwhite students in the East
    Ascension attendance zone are similarly situated to white students in the
    Dutchtown and St. Amant attendance zones, and, in turn, that Option 2f accords
    disparate treatment to similarly situated students of a different race, and (3)
    even if Lewis had proven that Option 2f treats similarly situated students
    differently on the basis of race, the record evidence does not support the
    conclusion that Option 2f has had a discriminatory effect on nonwhite students
    in the East Ascension feeder zone. Accordingly, the court omitted discussion of
    whether the Board acted with a discriminatory purpose. In addition, the court
    did not identify the level of scrutiny it would apply to Lewis’s challenge to Option
    2f; it held only that “Lewis has not satisfied his burden of proving by a
    preponderance of the evidence that [the Board’s] adoption of Option 2f violates
    the Equal Protection Clause.” Lewis timely appealed.
    II. JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
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    The district court had jurisdiction over Lewis’s suit pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
    § 1331. This Court has jurisdiction to review the district court’s final judgment
    pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
    “The standard of review for a bench trial is well established: findings of
    fact are reviewed for clear error and legal issues are reviewed de novo.” Bd. of
    Trs. New Orleans Emp’rs Int’l Longshoremen’s Ass’n v. Gabriel, Roeder, Smith
    & Co., 
    529 F.3d 506
    , 509 (5th Cir. 2008) (quoting Water Craft Mgmt. LLC v.
    Mercury Marine, 
    457 F.3d 484
    , 488 (5th Cir. 2006)). “A finding is clearly
    erroneous if it is without substantial evidence to support it, the court
    misinterpreted the effect of the evidence, or this court is convinced that the
    findings are against the preponderance of credible testimony.” 
    Id. III. DISCUSSION
           The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment mandates
    that “[n]o State shall . . . deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal
    protection of the laws.” U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1. “Its central purpose is to
    prevent the States from purposefully discriminating between individuals on
    the basis of race.” Shaw v. Reno, 
    509 U.S. 630
    , 642 (1993). Accordingly, “[l]aws
    that explicitly distinguish between individuals on racial grounds fall within
    the core of that prohibition,” 
    id., and are
    subject to strict scrutiny, Hunt v.
    Cromartie, 
    526 U.S. 541
    , 546 (1999). “Strict scrutiny also applies to
    government action that is ‘ostensibly neutral,’ but only if the neutral law has
    a ‘disproportionately adverse effect’ that ‘can be traced to a discriminatory
    purpose.’” 
    Lewis, 662 F.3d at 348
    (quoting Pers. Adm’r of Mass. v. Feeney, 
    442 U.S. 256
    , 272 (1979)). 11 Under strict scrutiny, “the burden [is] on the
    11Strict scrutiny also applies to “a classification that is ostensibly neutral but is an
    obvious pretext for racial discrimination.” 
    Feeney, 442 U.S. at 272
    (citing, inter alia, Yick Wo
    v. Hopkins, 
    118 U.S. 356
    (1886)). This class of actions refers to facially neutral laws that are
    applied in a discriminatory fashion—as, for instance, “a laundry permit ordinance . . .
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    government to prove that its actions are narrowly tailored to achieve a
    compelling government interest.” 
    Id. By contrast,
    where there is no proof of
    either discriminatory purpose or discriminatory effect, the government action
    is subject to rational basis review, 
    id., and the
    burden is on the challenger to
    rebut the “strong presumption of validity” accorded the action and prove that
    the action is not rationally related to a legitimate government purpose, Heller
    v. Doe, 
    509 U.S. 312
    , 319–20 (1993).
    At trial, Lewis mounted a two-pronged attack on Option 2f: he alleged
    that Option 2f was subject to strict scrutiny (1) because it contains explicit
    racial classifications, and, alternatively, (2) because its funneling feature was
    motivated by racial animus and had a disproportionately adverse impact on
    nonwhite students in the East Ascension feeder zone. On appeal, he contends
    that the district court committed numerous errors in entering judgment
    against him. We address each claim of error in turn.
    A.     Option 2f and Explicit Racial Classifications
    Lewis first urges that the district court erred in holding that Option 2f
    does not explicitly classify students on the basis of race.
    Although the district court granted summary judgment to the Board on
    Lewis’s claim that Option 2f should be subjected to strict scrutiny because it
    employs express racial classifications, it rejected this argument anew in its
    Rule 52 findings of fact and conclusions of law. It cited three grounds for its
    decision: (1) the court had previously ruled against Lewis, and Lewis had not
    requested reconsideration; (2) “a review of the evidence supports the conclusion
    that Option 2f does not employ an explicit racial classification” because the
    administered in a deliberate way to exclude all Chinese from the laundry business.” Miller v.
    Johnson, 
    515 U.S. 900
    , 913 (1995) (citing Yick Wo, 
    118 U.S. 356
    ). The district court held that
    Lewis did not advance this theory of discrimination at trial and Lewis does not argue to the
    contrary on appeal.
    15
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    No. 15-30030
    plan is facially race neutral and “Lewis failed to point to any provision of
    Option 2f that classifies students on the basis of race[ ] or uses race as a factor
    in school assignment”; and (3) “the School Board’s consideration of the
    projected enrollment and percentage of nonwhite and ‘at-risk’ students . . . does
    not amount to a rezoning plan that assigns students on the basis of race.”
    Given these ostensible alternative rulings—one procedural and one on
    the merits—we requested supplemental briefing on the ruling subject to appeal
    and the corresponding standard of review. The parties agreed that the district
    court reconsidered its summary judgment ruling sua sponte when it announced
    a post-trial merits holding, see, e.g., Zarnow v. City of Wichita Falls, Tex., 
    614 F.3d 161
    , 171 (5th Cir. 2010), and our standard of review therefore tracks that
    applicable to an ordinary bench trial: we review findings of fact for clear error
    and legal issues de novo, Bd. of 
    Trs., 529 F.3d at 509
    .
    “It is well established that when the government distributes burdens or
    benefits on the basis of individual racial classifications, that action is reviewed
    under strict scrutiny.” Parents Involved in Cmty. Schs. v. Seattle Sch. Dist. No.
    1, 
    551 U.S. 701
    , 720 (2007). “A statute or policy utilizes a ‘racial classification’
    when, on its face, it explicitly distinguishes between people on the basis of some
    protected category.” Hayden v. Cty. of Nassau, 
    180 F.3d 42
    , 48 (2d Cir. 1999)
    (citing Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Pena, 
    515 U.S. 200
    , 227 (1995); Wygant v.
    Jackson Bd. of Educ., 
    476 U.S. 267
    , 282–84 (1986); Loving v. Virginia, 
    388 U.S. 1
    , 11–12 (1967)).
    Although the Supreme Court has not addressed the facial neutrality of
    school district boundaries in the context of a post-desegregation equal
    protection challenge, 12 we find its precedents on electoral redistricting
    12Significantly, in Parents Involved, a case on which Lewis places great emphasis,
    “the school district[s] relie[d] upon an individual student’s race in assigning that student to
    16
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    instructive. In this context, the Court has repeatedly made clear that
    redistricting plans do not classify individuals and are therefore facially race
    neutral. 13 As a result, “a more searching inquiry is necessary before strict
    scrutiny can be found applicable in redistricting cases than in cases of
    ‘classifications based explicitly on race.’” 
    Bush, 517 U.S. at 958
    . Moreover, the
    Court has unequivocally stated that a legislative body’s mere awareness or
    consideration of racial demographics in drawing district boundaries will not
    alone trigger strict scrutiny. 14 To the contrary, the challenger must
    demonstrate that race was “the predominant factor motivating the
    legislature’s decision.” 
    Miller, 515 U.S. at 916
    . To make this showing, the
    challenger is obligated to prove—using direct or circumstantial evidence, or a
    combination of the two—“that ‘the legislature subordinated traditional race-
    neutral districting principles, including . . . compactness, contiguity, and
    respect for political subdivisions or communities defined by actual shared
    interests, to racial considerations[.]’” 
    Hunt, 526 U.S. at 547
    (quoting Miller,
    a particular school, so that the racial balance at the school f[ell] within a predetermined range
    based on the racial composition of the school district as a 
    whole.” 551 U.S. at 710
    . In both
    student-assignment plans at issue in Parents Involved, students applied to or were assigned
    to individual schools and their race was taken into consideration in the district’s admission
    decision. 
    Id. at 711–12,
    716–17. The school districts’ geographical boundaries were not at
    issue.
    13 See 
    Hunt, 526 U.S. at 547
    (“Districting legislation ordinarily, if not always, classifies
    tracts of land, precincts, or census blocks, and is race neutral on its face.”); Bush v. Vera, 
    517 U.S. 952
    , 958 (1996) (plurality opinion) (“Electoral district lines are ‘facially race neutral’ . .
    . .”); 
    Shaw, 509 U.S. at 646
    (“A reapportionment statute typically does not classify persons at
    all; it classifies tracts of land, or addresses.”).
    14 See 
    Bush, 517 U.S. at 958
    (plurality opinion) (“Strict scrutiny does not apply merely
    because redistricting is performed with consciousness of race. Nor does it apply to all cases
    of intentional creation of majority-minority districts.” (internal citation omitted)); Miller v.
    Johnson, 
    515 U.S. 900
    , 916 (1995) (“Redistricting legislatures will, for example, almost
    always be aware of racial demographics; but it does not follow that race predominates in the
    redistricting process.”); 
    Shaw, 509 U.S. at 646
    (“[R]edistricting differs from other kinds of
    state decisionmaking in that the legislature always is aware of race when it draws district
    lines . . . . That sort of race consciousness does not lead inevitably to impermissible race
    discrimination.”).
    17
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    No. 
    15-30030 515 U.S. at 916
    ). One form of circumstantial evidence is the shape of the
    district, which may, in some cases, be so “bizarre” or “highly irregular that, on
    its face, it rationally cannot be understood as anything other than an effort to
    segregat[e] . . . voters on the basis of race.” 
    Miller, 515 U.S. at 914
    (alteration
    and ellipsis in original) (quoting 
    Shaw, 509 U.S. at 646
    –47) (internal quotation
    marks omitted). 15
    While there is no post-Parents Involved law in this Circuit assessing
    whether school redistricting plans like Option 2f contain express racial
    classifications, the Third and Sixth Circuits have recently held that school
    zoning plans that divide the student population by geography are facially race
    neutral. See Spurlock v. Fox, 
    716 F.3d 383
    , 394–96 (6th Cir. 2013); Doe ex rel.
    Doe v. Lower Merion Sch. Dist., 
    665 F.3d 524
    , 545–48 (3d Cir. 2011).
    Importantly, both of these cases affirmed bench-trial verdicts in favor of the
    school districts, 
    Spurlock, 716 F.3d at 385
    ; Lower 
    Merion, 665 F.3d at 539
    , 558,
    and both cases were decided after this Court issued its first opinion in Lewis.
    In both Spurlock and Lower Merion, the courts distinguished Parents Involved
    as a case speaking only to student-assignment plans that explicitly use a
    student’s race as a factor in assignments; a plan that, on its face, relies
    exclusively on a student’s home address is necessarily race neutral, and
    Parents Involved has no application. 
    Spurlock, 716 F.3d at 394
    ; Lower 
    Merion, 665 F.3d at 545
    –46. Additionally, both courts rejected the students’ arguments
    that the rezoning bodies’ consideration of racial demographic data in
    15 It is not clear from the Court’s discussion whether evidence of “predominance” can
    establish an express racial classification, or whether this evidence is used to prove that the
    facially neutral districts are nonetheless the product of discrimination. The Court’s analysis
    in Hunt, which opened with the observation that the challenged redistricting plan was “race
    neutral on its face” and described the challengers’ burden to prove that “race was the
    ‘predominant factor’ motivating the legislature’s districting decision,” suggests the 
    latter. 526 U.S. at 547
    . The same does not seem to be true of evidence of “bizarreness,” which, the Court
    said in Miller, may evince discrimination “on its 
    face.” 515 U.S. at 913
    , 914.
    18
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    formulating the district boundaries amounted to an express racial
    classification. 16 To this end, the Third Circuit relied in part on the Supreme
    Court’s electoral redistricting precedents. See Lower 
    Merion, 665 F.3d at 547
    .
    And, notably, the Sixth Circuit held that its conclusion was not inconsistent
    with this Court’s opinion in Lewis. 
    Spurlock, 716 F.3d at 395
    –96. 17
    Before this Court, Lewis contends that the record evidence and the trial
    court’s findings of fact “clearly show that race was an important stand alone [sic]
    factor in the adoption of Option 2f and that a main goal of Option 2f was to keep
    a specific balance of racial groups in each East Bank school in order to maintain
    unitary status.” This, Lewis says, is contrary to Parents Involved, in which the
    Court “held that a unitary school district’s decision to classify students by race
    16  See 
    Spurlock, 716 F.3d at 394
    (observing that the rezoning body “obtained data on
    the racial breakdown of students . . . under the old student-assignment plan, as well as
    projections of student enrollment by race in the event that various modifications were
    adopted” but rejecting the argument that “obtaining this data and including some of it in the
    Rezoning Plan shows that the Plan classifies students by race” because “[r]acial classification
    requires more than the consideration of racial data”); Lower 
    Merion, 665 F.3d at 548
    (criticizing the students for “conflat[ing] a school assignment policy that explicitly classifies
    based on race with the consideration or awareness of neighborhood racial demographics
    during the development and selection of a policy” and holding that “[d]esigning a policy ‘with
    racial factors in mind’ does not constitute a racial classification if the policy is facially neutral
    and is administered in a race-neutral fashion”).
    17 The Sixth Circuit interpreted Lewis’s holding—that factual issues regarding
    discriminatory purpose and effect precluded summary judgment—as “a holding with respect
    to the issue of de jure segregation, not racial classification.” 
    Spurlock, 716 F.3d at 395
    .
    However, the Sixth Circuit criticized this Court’s opinion as internally inconsistent in its
    express-classification analysis: although “[t]he court nowhere opined that the consideration
    of demographic data alone amounts to a classification by race . . . , certain confusing
    pronouncements in the Lewis per curiam opinion appear to suggest the 
    contrary.” 716 F.3d at 395
    (citing 
    Lewis, 662 F.3d at 350
    (“Indeed, it is unclear how a student assignment plan
    could calculate the percentage of black students at each school without classifying individual
    students by race.”)). The Sixth Circuit resolved this ambiguity by crediting the Lewis dissent
    and observing that “if the court majority had truly believed that there was racial
    classification at play, it would have ordered the district court on remand to subject the
    challenged policy to strict scrutiny, which it did not do.” 
    Id. at 395–96.
    Moreover, the Spurlock
    court remarked, “to the extent that certain statements in Lewis conflict with Supreme Court
    precedent, the latter obviously prevails.” 
    Id. at 396.
                                                    19
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    and to rely on that classification in determining school assignments is subject to
    strict scrutiny.” Lewis’s position hinges on the premise that Option 2f is more
    than the maps and written descriptions laying out the geographic boundaries of
    the feeder zones; in his view, the demographic analysis underlying Option 2f
    classifies students on the basis of race, and this data, as well as the race-
    conscious motives of the Board members, evince express racial classifications in
    the plan.
    The Board counters that the district court correctly looked only to the
    face of Option 2f to assess its race neutrality, and it contends that the court’s
    finding that none of the documents that make up Option 2f include any
    reference to race is not clearly erroneous. The Board urges this Court to follow
    the Third and Sixth Circuits and hold that a school zoning plan that assigns
    students to schools based on their home addresses is facially race neutral, and
    the rezoning body’s consideration of demographic data in drawing the relevant
    geographic boundaries does not amount to making an express classification.
    Lastly, the Board posits that even if Option 2f incorporated Gautreau’s or
    Songy’s statistical analysis, the plan would still not contain any express racial
    classifications because there is no provision that “identif[ies] any classification
    by individual student or group for purposes of school assignment” or that
    “require[s] the consideration of race when enrolling students in any school.”
    We agree with the Board and find no error in the district court’s ruling
    that Option 2f contains no explicit racial classifications. Lewis provides no basis
    for this Court to conclude that the district court’s factual finding that Option 2f
    is facially race neutral and assigns students to schools on the sole basis of
    geography is clearly erroneous. The only evidence he points to on appeal relates
    to the Board’s awareness of racial demographics and its alleged desire to
    maintain the District’s unitary status through racial balancing. Under the
    20
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    No. 15-30030
    Supreme Court’s electoral-redistricting precedents, and consistent with the
    Third and Sixth Circuit’s reasoning, this evidence has no bearing on the facial
    neutrality of the Board’s action—at least absent evidence that the geographic
    boundaries are explicable only as the product of intentional segregation, see
    
    Miller, 515 U.S. at 914
    ; see also supra note 16; cf. 
    Spurlock, 716 F.3d at 394
    ;
    Lower 
    Merion, 665 F.3d at 548
    . Even accepting Lewis’s position that Option 2f
    incorporated the demographic data and projections, this does not establish that
    the plan explicitly classified students by race; it shows only that the Board
    considered the same sort of data that the Supreme Court has refused to equate
    to a facial racial classification, albeit in the electoral context. 18 See 
    Bush, 517 U.S. at 958
    ; 
    Miller, 515 U.S. at 916
    ; 
    Shaw, 509 U.S. at 646
    . It also does not
    bring the plan within the ambit of Parents Involved, as that case addressed
    individualized student assignments that took into account the student’s race
    and the overall racial makeup of the school. See supra note 13.
    Likewise, the district court’s legal conclusion that the Board’s
    consideration of demographic data in formulating Option 2f “does not amount to
    [adopting] a rezoning plan that assigns students on the basis of race” conforms
    to Supreme Court case law, see, e.g., 
    Bush, 517 U.S. at 958
    , and is in accord with
    the decisions of this Court’s sister circuits, see 
    Spurlock, 716 F.3d at 394
    ; Lower
    
    Merion, 665 F.3d at 548
    . Accordingly, we hold that the district court did not err
    in concluding that Option 2f does not make express racial classifications and so
    is not subject to strict scrutiny on that basis.
    B.     The Discriminatory Purpose and Effect of Option 2f
    18  Lewis has not argued that Option 2f’s boundaries are so “bizarre” or “highly
    irregular” that, on its face, the plan “rationally cannot be understood as anything other than
    an effort to segregat[e] . . . on the basis of race.” 
    Miller, 515 U.S. at 914
    (alteration in original)
    (quoting 
    Shaw, 509 U.S. at 646
    –47) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    21
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    Lewis next contends that the district court erred in rejecting his
    alternative theory that, despite Option 2f’s facial neutrality, the redistricting
    plan’s funneling feature is nevertheless subject to strict scrutiny because it had
    both a discriminatory purpose and a discriminatory effect. See Vill. of Arlington
    Heights v. Metro. Hous. Dev. Corp., 
    429 U.S. 252
    , 264–66 (1977) (holding that
    an equal protection claim premised on an outwardly neutral law requires proof
    of both a discriminatory effect and a discriminatory purpose). Relevant to this
    determination, the district court first found that the pertinent comparator group
    for Lewis’s equal protection claim was white students within the East Ascension
    feeder zone—not white students in the other feeder zones, as it had originally
    ruled on post-remand summary judgment. It then found that, even if Lewis had
    successfully established that nonwhite students in the East Ascension feeder
    zone were similarly situated to their white counterparts in the other feeder
    zones, he had not proven that Option 2f had a discriminatory adverse effect on
    nonwhite students in the East Ascension feeder zone. Lewis urges that the
    district court erred in both regards.
    Because we resolve the district court’s treatment of Lewis’s alternative
    equal protection theory on the discriminatory-effect finding, we need not
    address either the court’s similarly situated finding or Lewis’s proffered
    evidence of discriminatory purpose. See id.; Palmer v. Thompson, 
    403 U.S. 217
    ,
    224 (1971) (“[N]o case in this Court has held that a legislative act may violate
    equal protection solely because of the motivations of the men who voted for
    it.”); Lower 
    Merion, 665 F.3d at 549
    –50 (“[D]iscriminatory impact must be
    shown to establish an equal protection violation because ‘plaintiffs must show
    that they have been injured as a result’ of the governmental action to ensure
    that courts ‘can impose a meaningful remedy.’” (quoting Garza v. Cty. of Los
    Angeles, 
    918 F.2d 763
    , 771 (9th Cir. 1990))). We simply assume without
    22
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    No. 15-30030
    deciding that it was Lewis’s burden to identify a similarly situated comparator
    group and that he met this burden, 19 and we proceed to the district court’s
    finding on the issue of discriminatory impact.
    As a preliminary matter, we note a disagreement between the parties
    concerning the standard of review applicable to the district court’s
    determination. On one hand, there is general agreement that a finding of
    discriminatory effect is a finding of fact subject to review for clear error. 20 On
    the other hand, there is authority for the proposition that where, as here, the
    facts are essentially undisputed, the question of whether those facts evince a
    discriminatory effect is ultimately one of law that this Court reviews de novo. 21
    19  We note that there is uncertainty in the law regarding the circumstances under
    which an equal protection plaintiff alleging racial discrimination is required to identify a
    similarly situated comparator group and the showing required to discharge this burden. See
    generally Giovanna Shay, Similarly Situated, 18 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 581 (2011). Although
    the Third Circuit in Lower Merion conducted a similarly situated analysis—which informed
    the district court’s analysis in this case—it did so without citation to authority. 
    See 665 F.3d at 550
    . Moreover, Lower Merion addressed a different type of claim—that “targeting” a
    particular area for redistricting “in part because that Community has one of the highest
    concentrations of African–American students in the District” violates the Equal Protection
    
    Clause, 665 F.3d at 540
    —and it grounded its similarly situated analysis in relevant part on
    evidence that the redistricting affected both white and nonwhite students in the “targeted
    area,” 
    id. at 550.
    Not only does this formulation of the inquiry seem to preclude a finding of
    disparate treatment, but it does not neatly track Lewis’s novel funneling theory. Accordingly,
    we express no view on the district court’s treatment of this issue and merely assume without
    deciding that Lewis proved that the nonwhite students in the East Ascension feeder zone are
    similarly situated to white students in the other feeder zones, as his theory of discrimination
    presumes.
    20 See, e.g., Ortiz v. City of Phila. Office of City Comm’rs Voter Registration Div., 
    28 F.3d 306
    , 308 (3d Cir. 1994) (“A district court’s conclusion that a challenged electoral practice
    has a discriminatory effect is a question of fact subject to review for clear error.”); Velasquez
    v. City of Abilene, Tex., 
    725 F.2d 1017
    , 1021 (5th Cir. 1984) (“We have no doubt that the
    finding of discriminatory effect or result under the Voting Rights Act amendments of 1982 is
    also governed by the clearly erroneous standard, and while appellants try to argue that
    dilution     cases      involve      a mixed question of law    and fact not     governed      by
    the clearly erroneous standard, we cannot embrace this argument.”).
    21 See, e.g., Anderson ex rel. Dowd v. City of Bos., 
    375 F.3d 71
    , 80 (1st Cir. 2004)
    (“[W]hen the issues on appeal ‘raise[ ] either questions of law or questions about how the law
    applies to discerned facts,’ such as whether the proffered evidence establishes a
    23
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    We assume without deciding that our review is de novo, as affirmance under
    this standard compels the same result as under the more deferential
    alternative standard.
    To subject a facially race neutral government action to strict scrutiny, the
    plaintiff must establish both discriminatory intent and a disproportionate
    adverse effect upon the targeted group. 
    Feeney, 442 U.S. at 272
    . The
    discriminatory-impact element of an equal protection claim may be satisfied
    with statistical evidence. See, e.g., Chavez v. Ill. State Police, 
    251 F.3d 612
    , 638
    (7th Cir. 2001) (“While few opinions directly acknowledge that statistics may be
    used to prove discriminatory effect, the Court has repeatedly relied on statistics
    to do just that.” (citing Yick 
    Wo, 118 U.S. at 374
    and Hunter v. Underwood, 
    471 U.S. 222
    , 227 (1985))); accord Bennett v. City of Eastpointe, 
    410 F.3d 810
    , 818
    (6th Cir. 2005). “Of course, parties may not prove discrimination merely by
    providing the court with statistical analyses. The statistics proffered must
    address the crucial question of whether one class is being treated differently
    from another class that is otherwise similarly situated.” 
    Chavez, 251 F.3d at 638
    . Further, statistical analysis, like other expert testimony, must be “both
    relevant and reliable,” and “[d]etermining the validity and value of statistical
    evidence is firmly within the discretion of the district court.” 
    Id. at 641.
          Although this Court has not spoken on the quantum of evidence sufficient
    to prove discriminatory impact as a matter of law, cases from other circuits shed
    some light on the subject. In Chavez, the Seventh Circuit affirmed summary
    judgment in favor of the state-police defendants in a class action alleging that
    the officers “utilize[d] impermissible racial classifications in determining whom
    to stop, detain, and 
    search.” 251 F.3d at 635
    . The plaintiffs had obtained records
    discriminatory purpose or a disproportionate racial impact, ‘our review is essentially
    plenary.’”).
    24
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    of citations and police field reports, which were used to document traffic stops,
    and had compared the race of the targets with various population benchmarks,
    including the Census and the Nationwide Personal Transportation Survey. 
    Id. at 642–44.
    After holding that the plaintiffs could utilize statistics to show
    discriminatory effect, 
    id. at 640,
    the court independently reviewed the proffered
    statistics and found them inadequate as a matter of law to carry the plaintiffs’
    burden, 
    id. at 641,
    645. As relevant here, the court cited the absence of evidence
    of the total number of field reports prepared (or even the number analyzed by
    the plaintiffs) and the lack of an adequate population benchmark against which
    to measure whether the plaintiffs’ racial groups were stopped at a rate
    disproportionate to their representation in the driving population. 
    Id. at 643–
    44.
    Similarly, in a case with facts closer to those presented here, the First
    Circuit in Anderson affirmed a bench-trial judgment in favor of the city
    defendant in an equal protection challenge to a school-rezoning 
    plan. 375 F.3d at 74
    , 79. To establish the discriminatory effect of the rezoning plan, the
    plaintiffs relied exclusively on the testimony of a single witness. 
    Id. at 88.
    The
    witness, who lacked formal training in statistical analysis, “testified that she
    reviewed admissions data from ‘every school in the city,’ [but] she only presented
    data for the 2002–03 admission rounds for one class in each of three schools.”
    
    Id. The witness
    prepared charts for each of these schools, comparing the racial
    demographics of students admitted under the new plan with those of students
    who would have been eligible for admission under an alternative plan. 
    Id. at 88–
    89. These charts showed that “in the three elementary schools—out of the 85 or
    so in the [public school] system—a total of twenty white students . . . were not
    admitted under the actual [plan].” 
    Id. at 89.
    Further, the plaintiffs declined to
    “engage in any systemwide analysis of the racial impact” of the plan, resting
    25
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    instead on the “individual examples of the racial effect” evident in the witness’s
    charts. 
    Id. The First
    Circuit held this evidence insufficient to show
    discriminatory effect—and, as a corollary, discriminatory purpose inferable
    from a gross statistical disparity. 
    Id. Here, the
    district court held that Lewis’s proffered evidence failed to
    establish that Option 2f worked a discriminatory effect on nonwhite students in
    the East Ascension feeder zone by funneling a disproportionate number of at-
    risk students to their schools. Even accepting the undisputed evidence that the
    percentage of at-risk students in the East Ascension feeder zone increased after
    the implementation of Option 2f, the court found that this was insufficient,
    standing alone, to carry Lewis’s burden. The court found that the objective
    evidence of student performance adduced at trial—ACT scores, SPS, and AP
    classes and exam results—was unpersuasive. Lewis only offered average ACT
    scores for a single year; although the scores placed East Ascension 0.1 point
    below the state average, 0.9 point below St. Amant, and 1.9 points below
    Dutchtown, these results were neither broadly representative of student
    performance nor relevant to the educational experiences of students in the East
    Ascension feeder zone’s primary and middle schools. East Ascension High
    School’s SPS had “gradually increased since the implementation of Option 2f,”
    and although it was outpaced by Dutchtown’s and St. Amant’s SPS—by 28.1
    points and 14.5 points, respectively—“Lewis failed to introduce evidence to
    establish that these differences are statistically significant, or that such
    differences are the result of unequal educational opportunities[.]” The AP scores
    were similarly unavailing: Lewis presented evidence of inferior performance by
    East Ascension High School students in one academic year, but he again failed
    to establish statistical significance. And, as with the ACT scores, the SPS and
    AP performance related only to East Ascension High School and not its feeders.
    26
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    Finally, the court rejected the opinion of Lewis’s expert, Dr. Percy Bates,
    as “meaningless.” Although Dr. Bates was qualified as “an expert on the impact
    of a disproportionate number of at-risk students on an academic environment,”
    he based his expert report solely on “the general research findings of other
    experts, student performance scores from 2006 and 2007, iLEAP test scores
    from 2006 and 2007, and Gautreau’s projections.” 22 He claimed that his opinion
    was confirmed—and, indeed, strengthened—by the evidence he observed at
    trial, but he conceded that he had not considered any post-Option 2f data in
    rendering his opinion in the first instance. In particular, he acknowledged that
    he had not researched the quality of instruction or the course offerings in the
    East Ascension schools relative to their counterparts in the other feeder zones,
    he had not interviewed Lewis’s children, and he had not done any calculations
    of the actual effect of Option 2f on the at-risk population. As for Dr. Bates’s
    “research findings in other districts” and his consideration of “the general
    research findings of other experts,” the court noted that this research could be
    “instructive,” but “his failure to conduct an independent analysis in this case
    renders his opinion meaningless.”
    Lewis essentially makes two arguments on appeal. First, he contends
    that the objective evidence of student performance he presented at trial,
    coupled with Dr. Bates’s expert testimony, proved as a matter of law that
    Option 2f’s funneling caused a disproportionate adverse effect on the nonwhite
    population in the East Ascension feeder zone. Second, he asserts that the
    district court committed legal error by faulting him for failing to prove
    discriminatory purpose, despite the court declining to reach that issue in the
    first instance.
    22Notably, the district court observed that Lewis failed to introduce Dr. Bates’s expert
    report into the trial record.
    27
    Case: 15-30030        Document: 00513274476          Page: 28      Date Filed: 11/17/2015
    No. 15-30030
    We find that Lewis failed to prove as a matter of law that Option 2f’s
    funneling feature had a racially discriminatory effect. Lewis’s statistical
    evidence is stronger than that offered in Anderson, as it at least offers a glance
    at the system-wide effects of Option 2f, but it suffers from many of the same
    flaws identified in Chavez (e.g., nonrepresentativity and difficulty isolating the
    operative factor). Many of the statistics are limited in scope (e.g., one year of
    ACT and AP scores), and those that are not (e.g., SPS) do not clearly support
    Lewis’s theory. 23 In addition, the statistical evidence of at-risk-population
    figures is only inferentially related, at best, to the conditions at the East
    Ascension feeder schools. Importantly, the district court observed that Lewis
    offered no evidence of statistical significance at trial, 24 and he makes no
    colorable argument to the contrary on appeal—nor, for that matter, does he cite
    any case law in support of his contention that his evidence proved
    discriminatory impact as a matter of law. Moreover, we agree with the district
    court that the expert testimony of Dr. Bates was not specific enough to establish
    discriminatory impact. Dr. Bates based his conclusions on general research
    findings from other school districts and the findings of other experts, and failed
    to evaluate the specific impact of Option 2f on the nonwhite population in the
    23  Lewis makes much of the growing disparity between the SPS attained by East
    Ascension, Dutchtown, and St. Amant. However, he fails to account for the recent change to
    the SPS scale, so it is unclear to what extent the 14.3-point gap between East Ascension and
    Dutchtown that prevailed in 2007–2008 differs from the 28.1-point gap between the schools
    in 2012–2013.
    24 “Statistical significance” refers to a showing that a numerical difference is unlikely
    to be the product of chance. See 
    Chavez, 251 F.3d at 642
    –43. Lewis could demonstrate
    significance by showing, for example, that 1) East Ascension feeder zone performance
    declined after the implementation of Option 2f, or that the gap between the East Ascension
    feeder zone performance and other feeder zones’ performances has increased since the
    implementation of Option 2f, and 2) that such performance variations were unlikely to be
    caused by random fluctuations from year to year. See 
    id. 28 Case:
    15-30030   Document: 00513274476       Page: 29   Date Filed: 11/17/2015
    No. 15-30030
    East Ascension feeder zone. This general evidence is insufficient to establish
    discriminatory impact as a matter of law.
    Lewis’s claim of legal error is similarly unavailing. It is true that the
    district court’s discussion could be read to suggest that statistical evidence of
    racial disparities cannot prove discriminatory effect absent evidence of
    discriminatory purpose. Indeed, while explaining that “evidence of an increase
    in the percentage of nonwhite and at-risk students at schools in the East
    Ascension High School zone, without more, is insufficient to establish disparate
    impact[,]” the district court cited portions of Feeney and Washington v. Davis,
    
    426 U.S. 229
    (1976), that indicate that a violation of equal protection cannot be
    founded solely on disparate impact. This construction provides the impetus for
    Lewis’s claim that “[t]he ‘more’ referenced by the Trial Court is ‘discriminatory
    intent’ . . . [and] not additional ‘disparate impact.’” However, immediately after
    making this pronouncement, the court proceeded to assess the remainder of
    Lewis’s evidence of discriminatory effect and it ultimately held that Lewis failed
    to carry his burden to prove a discriminatory impact. Accordingly, viewed in the
    context of its entire discussion, the district court’s legal framework is sound, and
    we affirm its determination on this dispositive issue.
    C.     Lewis’s Other Claims of Error
    Lewis’s remaining arguments—that the district court erroneously failed
    to consider his racial balancing and de jure segregation arguments—relate to
    claims not properly before us. In the first appeal, this Court held that Lewis’s
    claim of racial balancing or racial gerrymandering was not preserved. 
    Lewis, 662 F.3d at 348
    & n.11. The waiver doctrine barred the district court from
    considering this claim anew on remand, and it bars this Court’s review now. See
    Lindquist v. City of Pasadena, Tex., 
    669 F.3d 225
    , 239 (5th Cir. 2012) (“The
    waiver doctrine holds that an issue that could have been but was not raised on
    29
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    No. 15-30030
    appeal is forfeited and may not be revisited by the district court on remand. The
    doctrine also prevents us from considering such an issue during a second
    appeal.” (footnote and internal quotation marks omitted)). As for Lewis’s de jure
    segregation claim, Lewis never advanced this theory of relief in the district
    court, and he correspondingly cannot do so now. See, e.g., Leverette v. Louisville
    Ladder Co., 
    183 F.3d 339
    , 342 (5th Cir. 1999) (per curiam).
    D.     The Appropriate Level of Scrutiny
    Although the district court did not announce the level of scrutiny it was
    applying to Lewis’s equal protection claim, it may be inferred from the court’s
    subsidiary rulings that it deemed rational basis review appropriate. When a
    government action is facially race neutral and there is no proof of either
    discriminatory purpose or discriminatory effect, that action is subject to rational
    basis review. See 
    Lewis, 662 F.3d at 348
    . On rational basis review, the burden
    is on the challenger to rebut the “strong presumption of validity” accorded the
    action and prove that the action is not rationally related to a legitimate
    government purpose. 
    Heller, 509 U.S. at 319
    –20. We agree with the district
    court that rational basis review applies to the funneling aspect of Option 2f and
    that the plan survives this limited scrutiny. Given that the Board has cited at
    least one legitimate governmental purpose animating its adoption of Option 2f—
    alleviating overcrowding in the Dutchtown feeder zone 25—and Lewis has made
    no effort to “negative every conceivable basis which might support” the Board’s
    action, 
    id. at 320,
    we concur in the district court’s conclusion that rational basis
    review is satisfied.
    25 Our sister circuits have treated mitigating school overcrowding and optimizing
    school utilization as legitimate government purposes. See 
    Spurlock, 716 F.3d at 403
    ; Lower
    
    Merion, 665 F.3d at 557
    .
    30
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    No. 15-30030
    IV. CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment.
    31
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 15-30030

Citation Numbers: 806 F.3d 344

Filed Date: 11/17/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (24)

Anderson Ex Rel. Dowd v. City of Boston , 375 F.3d 71 ( 2004 )

William Hayden v. County of Nassau, United States of ... , 180 F.3d 42 ( 1999 )

Board of Trustees New Orleans Employers International ... , 529 F.3d 506 ( 2008 )

Zarnow v. CITY OF WICHITA FALLS, TEX. , 614 F.3d 161 ( 2010 )

Lindquist v. City of Pasadena Texas , 669 F.3d 225 ( 2012 )

angel-ortiz-a-member-of-the-philadelphia-city-council-in-his-individual , 28 F.3d 306 ( 1994 )

Yick Wo v. Hopkins , 6 S. Ct. 1064 ( 1886 )

Washington v. Davis , 96 S. Ct. 2040 ( 1976 )

peso-chavez-and-gregory-lee-individually-and-on-behalf-of-all-persons , 251 F.3d 612 ( 2001 )

Donald Bennett v. City of Eastpointe , 410 F.3d 810 ( 2005 )

maria-velasquez-isaiah-moreland-amelia-aguirre-ben-aguirre-and-john , 725 F.2d 1017 ( 1984 )

Parents Involved in Community Schools v. Seattle School ... , 127 S. Ct. 2738 ( 2007 )

Personnel Administrator of Mass. v. Feeney , 99 S. Ct. 2282 ( 1979 )

Leverette v. Louisville Ladder Co , 183 F.3d 339 ( 1999 )

Loving v. Virginia , 87 S. Ct. 1817 ( 1967 )

Village of Arlington Heights v. Metropolitan Housing ... , 97 S. Ct. 555 ( 1977 )

Palmer v. Thompson , 91 S. Ct. 1940 ( 1971 )

Hunter v. Underwood , 105 S. Ct. 1916 ( 1985 )

Miller v. Johnson , 115 S. Ct. 2475 ( 1995 )

Bush v. Vera , 116 S. Ct. 1941 ( 1996 )

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