Toledo Public Schools, U.S. Education Department Reach Agreement to Address Issues of African American Student Access to Resources
Press Release dtd. January 21, 2016



The U.S. Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights and Toledo Public Schools announced today that the district has entered into a resolution agreement to ensure compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 in providing equitable resources to African American students.

The agreement, reached before OCR had completed its investigation, identifies concerns about access to experienced teachers, teachers with master's degrees, library access for K-8 students, and distance learning classes for high school students.

"Toledo Public Schools' commitment through this resolution agreement, together with steps the district had begun during the course of our review, spotlight their important pledge to equity," said Catherine Lhamon, assistant secretary for civil rights. "Superintendent Romules Durant's efforts to examine and address racially equitable access to Toledo's resources is critical to all the district's students' academic and long-term success."

She added, "We applaud and are grateful for his and his board's leadership toward ensuring that all students receive the opportunity our nation's civil rights laws promise to them. And we look forward to working with the district to ensure that all terms of this agreement are fully and effectively implemented."

The agreement acknowledges the district's on-going efforts to ensure equitable resources and provides opportunities to further enhance the focus on giving all students' equitable access to district resources and supporting student success.

OCR's compliance review, begun in 2010, indicated that the district increased facility equity through a building plan started in 2005 which rebuilt or renovated nearly every district school, developed programs to recruit and retain strong building leadership across all district schools, offered substantially equal access to strong teachers at least in the measures of teacher certification and highly qualified status, and made efforts to provide the same textbooks to students at all of its schools.

However, OCR's review also uncovered a number of potential Title VI compliance concerns regarding equitable access to resources for African American students, including experienced teachers, teachers with master's degrees, library access for K-8 students and distance learning classes for high school students.

The terms of the resolution agreement address the office's concerns identified during its investigation. The agreement provides that the district will:

Read the Resolution Letter PDF (252.60K) | Read the Resolution Agreement PDF (41.58K)


Last Modified: 01/15/2020