Congress approves Public Housing reforms to
reduce segregation by race and income, encourage and reward work, bring more working families into public housing, and increase the availability of subsidized housing for very poor families.
Not exact matches
In 1975, Coleman published a follow - up study that concluded that the main impediment to school desegregation was the growing residential
segregation «between central city and suburbs,» and that the «current means
by which schools are being desegregated are intensifying that problem, rather than
reducing it.»
The report presents arguments and solutions largely driven
by ideology, not evidence, offering little value for policymakers or educators meaningfully engaged in the critical search for strategies to
reduce school
segregation.
May 19, 2016
by Brett Kittredge As the United States marks the 62nd anniversary of the landmark Brown vs. Board of Education decision which declared state laws establishing separate public schools for black and white students to be unconstitutional, a new study looks at the effect school choice has had in
reducing racial
segregation in schools.
Legal efforts to correct the effects of past official discrimination were followed
by sporadic attempts, initiated
by local governments and school districts, to
reduce school
segregation by voluntarily adopting race - conscious school - assignment plans.
While the State of Connecticut spends hundreds of millions of dollars every year to
reduce racial isolation in our urban school districts, as required
by Connecticut's Constitution and Courts, Governor Dannel Malloy is pumping more than $ 100 million a year into Connecticut Charter Schools despite the fact that they have become a primary vehicle for the
segregation of our public school system.
The cost
segregation helps this minority
by generating greater depreciation deductions to
reduce the tax on their rental income and, in some cases,
reduce the tax on other income if they are considered active real estate investors.