S-4535-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions.
Sponsored by Christopher Murphy (D-CT)
What it does
This bill would create the Strength in Diversity Program, a competitive federal grant program administered by the Department of Education. It would award planning grants (up to 1 year) and implementation grants (up to 3 years, extendable to 5) to state and local education agencies that have significant achievement gaps and racial or socioeconomic segregation. Grantees would use funds to develop and carry out strategies — such as revised school boundaries, weighted lotteries, inter-district transfers, and transportation plans — aimed at reducing racial and economic isolation in public pre-K through 12th grade schools. The bill authorizes "such sums as may be necessary" for fiscal years 2027 through 2032.
Who benefits
Students of color and low-income students in racially or economically isolated schools, who may gain access to higher-resourced schools. School districts and state agencies that receive grant funding for planning and implementation. Teachers hired or trained under grant-funded programs. Families in high-poverty districts who gain access to enrollment information and one-stop school choice systems. Tribal communities, which are explicitly included in required community engagement. Transportation providers contracted under grant-funded plans. Researchers and technical assistance organizations funded through the 5% national activities reservation.
Who is hurt
Families in lower-poverty or higher-performing schools whose children may be reassigned or whose schools may absorb students from other districts, potentially changing school demographics or resource allocation. Taxpayers who would fund the program, though the total cost is unspecified. Students who benefit from entrance-exam-based school admissions, as the bill explicitly encourages replacing such exams with diversity-promoting assignment methods. Districts not selected for grants that still face pressure to address segregation metrics under state ESEA plans. Local communities that prefer neighborhood-based school assignment, whose preferences may be overridden by grant-driven redesign.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that decades of research — including studies by the Century Foundation and the National Bureau of Economic Research — show that racially and economically integrated schools produce measurable gains in graduation rates, test scores, and long-term earnings for low-income students, with no significant harm to higher-income peers. They contend that residential segregation has re-intensified since the end of court-ordered busing, leaving millions of students in high-poverty, under-resourced schools through no choice of their own, and that voluntary, community-driven integration strategies funded by this bill offer a proven, non-coercive path to closing persistent achievement gaps.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill uses federal grant incentives to steer local school assignment decisions — including boundary redesign, lottery weighting, and elimination of merit-based admissions — in ways that override community preferences and parental choice. They contend that post-SFFA (2023), any grant criteria or program activities that use race as a factor in individual student assignment could face Equal Protection challenges, and that the bill's explicit prioritization of programs addressing "racial isolation" may cross the line from race-neutral socioeconomic integration into constitutionally suspect racial classification. They further argue that neighborhood schools reflect legitimate community investment and that busing-era evidence showed mixed academic results at significant social cost.
Constitutional context
The bill operates under the Spending Clause (Art. I, §8, cl. 1), attaching conditions to federal education grants — a mechanism upheld under South Dakota v. Dole (1987) provided conditions are unambiguous, related to the federal interest, and not coercive. However, because the bill explicitly prioritizes programs addressing racial isolation and encourages race-conscious student assignment strategies, it raises Equal Protection questions under the 14th Amendment. After Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard (2023), race-conscious assignment programs face heightened scrutiny, and the line between permissible socioeconomic integration and impermissible racial classification in K-12 assignment remains actively contested.
Checks and balances
The Executive Branch (Secretary of Education) gains significant discretionary authority to set grant criteria, evaluate applications, and extend grants — while Congress retains oversight through annual reporting requirements, and courts may review race-conscious assignment programs under Equal Protection doctrine.
Historical precedent
The federal Magnet Schools Assistance Program (first authorized in 1984) similarly provided competitive grants to school districts to reduce racial isolation through specialized schools, and has been reauthorized multiple times under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act.