Schools

ACLU Sues Union County School District For Alleged Discrimination

The ACLU claims that Cranford School District's enrollment policies discriminate against immigrants.

UNION COUNTY, NJ — The American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey has filed a lawsuit against 12 school districts, including one in Union County, claiming they unconstitutionally discriminate against immigrants and their children.

The Cranford School District was the only Union County school district sued. The district, along with the 11 others, require state-issued identification such as Social Security numbers as a condition for students to enroll. The ACLU claims this violates the New Jersey Constitution. The organization filed the lawsuit in Union County Superior Court Thursday morning.

“New Jersey’s state Constitution calls for free public education, and that applies to every single child – no exceptions,” said ACLU-NJ staff attorney Elyla Huertas, who filed the lawsuits. “In a state where one in five residents is foreign-born, at a time when our president has made the exclusion of immigrants a key part of his policy agenda, it’s more important than ever for every school district in New Jersey to meet its obligations, both to New Jersey’s families and to the Constitution.”

Find out what's happening in Cranfordfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The ACLU said it sued the 12 districts with the "most restrictive" enrollment policies. It claims several others impose improper requirements that hinder enrollment by immigrant parents.

Cranford School District Superintendent Dr. Scott Rubin could not be immediately reached for comment.

Find out what's happening in Cranfordfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The ACLU's New Jersey chapter audited the state's 560 school districts in 2008 and 2014 to identify problematic enrollment requirements.

Read the ACLU's Superior Court complaint here:

Cranford School District Lawsuit by Alexis Tarrazi on Scribd

(Image via Shutterstock)

Have a news tip? Email alexis.tarrazi@patch.com.

Get Patch breaking news alerts sent right to your phone with our new app. Download here.

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.