Fort Worth Star-Telegram Reports on Brewer Storefront Voting Rights Efforts in Tarrant County

March 13, 2024 – The Fort Worth Star-Telegram newspaper reports on Brewer Storefront and its newly-announced Texas Voting Rights Initiative (TVRI). As reported, the Storefront sent warning letters to two school districts in Tarrant County – Arlington Independent School District and Eagle Mountain-Saginaw Independent School District.

The letters accuse the school districts of violating the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and denying voters of color an equal opportunity to elect candidates of their choice.  Brewer Storefront is the community service affiliate of Brewer, Attorneys & Counselors.  Announced on March 7, 2024, the TVRI will continue to analyze voting systems used for electing school board trustees and city council members across Texas, advance written scholarship, and pursue legal action to uphold and strengthen voting rights.  

“What we’re hoping is that the letters would be greeted with a positive response and that the outcome would be an invitation to work with our experts to help define a voting system that actually encourages participation and engender change,” William Brewer III told the Star-Telegram.

The report noted that Brewer stated that he hopes the school districts will work with his team to address the issues, but the firm is also prepared to effect change through the courts.

 Read more here.

 

Brewer Storefront Launches Texas Voting Rights Initiative; Calls on Communities to Comply With Voting Rights Act of 1965

March 7, 2024, Dallas, Texas…The Brewer Storefront today announced the launch of the Texas Voting Rights Initiative (“TVRI”), a statewide effort focused on ensuring that Texas school boards operate in compliance with the Voting Rights Act of 1965 (“VRA”). The Storefront undertook an extensive analysis of voting systems across Texas and believes that many operate in violation of the VRA.

The TVRI will continue to analyze voting systems used for electing school board trustees and city council members across Texas, advance written scholarship, and pursue legal action to uphold and strengthen voting rights.  

The TVRI is supported by the Brewer Storefront, the public service legal affiliate of the national litigation firm Brewer, Attorneys & Counselors. Since its establishment in 1995, the Storefront has brought numerous successful voting rights lawsuits on behalf of Latino, African American and Asian voters across North Texas.

“The Texas Voting Rights Initiative will promote democratic principles and voter equality at an important time,” said William A. Brewer III, chairman of the Storefront. “We believe our political institutions work best when they give all voters an opportunity to elect candidates of their choosing.”    

Why It Matters – Equality and Opportunity in Education

A lack of diversity and equitable geographic representation on school boards often leads to underfunded schools, school and student achievement gaps, and disenfranchised voters.

In Texas, a considerable academic achievement gap still exists between white and minority students. In 2023, 64% of white students met grade level across all grades and subjects tested on the STAAR exam, compared to 42% of Hispanic students and 36% of African American students who met grade level. Given this disparity, Brewer Storefront believes the communities of color that Texas school districts educate deserve fair representation on elected school boards.

The need for a statewide voting rights initiative in Texas is critical, given its status as the nation’s second largest state, with a population exceeding 30 million people. Texas is a majority-minority state, with Hispanics as its largest population group. Despite this, many elected bodies, including local school boards and city councils, fail to reflect the state’s demographics, especially as voters of color continue to make up an increasing share of the electorate.

The TVRI’s initial focus is on school boards since as of last year, nearly three-quarters of the students enrolled in Texas public schools were children of color, and about 53% of all students were Hispanic.

The Storefront has successfully challenged many at-large election systems and inequitably drawn single-member districts. Through lawsuits filed under the Voting Rights Act, these challenges have argued that such systems deprive voters of color of a fair opportunity to meaningfully participate in the electoral process and to elect school board representatives or city council members of their choosing.   

  

The Storefront pursues its voting rights cases under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, which prohibits voting practices or procedures that discriminate based on race, color, or membership in a language minority group.   This advocacy frequently results in the establishment of single-member districts, ensuring minority voters have a fair opportunity in the electoral process and enabling them to actively participate in shaping the political landscape.

Following its assessment, the TVRI, through the Storefront, issued warning letters to 11 Texas school districts alleging violations of the Voting Rights Act. The school districts are Alamo Heights Independent School District, Angleton Independent School District, Arlington Independent School District, Corsicana Independent School District, Dumas Independent School District, Eagle Mountain-Saginaw Independent School District, Garland Independent School District, Humble Independent School District, Lufkin Independent School District, New Braunfels Independent School District, and Texarkana Independent School District.

“We urge these school districts to take proactive steps in adopting election systems that comply with the Voting Rights Act and create districts that give voters of color a fair opportunity to participate in the electoral process,” Brewer said. “Elected school boards should reflect the diversity of the communities they serve.”

The letters request that the school boards in these districts take corrective actions and implement opportunity districts where a majority of eligible voters are Hispanic or African American.

The Storefront previously achieved winning outcomes in Voting Rights Act cases with the Lewisville Independent School District in August 2023, Richardson Independent School District in 2019, Carrollton-Farmers Branch Independent School District in 2015; City of Grand Prairie in 2015; Irving Independent School District in 2014; Grand Prairie Independent School District in 2014; City of Farmers Branch in 2012; and City of Irving in 2009. These school districts and city councils now utilize remodeled voting systems.   

 

 Contact:  

  

Katherine Leal Unmuth  

Brewer Storefront Associate Director

214.653.4832  kunmuth@brewerattorneys.com

  

Dallas Morning News Reports on Brewer Storefront Texas Voting Rights Initiative

March 7, 2024 – The Dallas Morning News reports that Brewer Storefont sent warning letters to 11 Texas school districts alleging that their election systems violate the Voting Rights Act. 

Brewer Storefront is the community service affiliate of Brewer, Attorneys & Counselors. The article reports that the letters emphasize that at large election systems used by many school districts to elect school board trustees deny voters of color an equal opportunity to elect candidates of their choice. 

In an Interview with the Morning News, Partner William A. Brewer III emphasized the importance of diversity in school board representation, noting that "We've picked districts where we believe that the performance gaps really compel us, if we care, to try to engender a change." 

The article noted that the firm, along with sending the letters, is launching the Texas Voting Rights Initiative, a statewide effort to ensure trustee elections comply with the law.

"Our demographics have changed," Brewer said. "And our systems need to respond to that." 

Read more here.

Brewer Storefront Files Motion for Leave to File Amicus Brief in Fifth Circuit Voting Rights Case

February 22, 2024 —Brewer Storefront filed a motion for leave to file an amicus brief in support of plaintiffs in the Petteway v. Galveston County case before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. The Storefront is the pro bono community service affiliate of Brewer, Attorneys & Counselors.

The matter at issue concerns whether coalitions of minority voters – in this case Latino and Black voters – can continue to together bring Section 2 Voting Rights Act (VRA) claims. This includes situations where they constitute a group that is geographically compact and politically cohesive that forms a majority in a single member district. The Petteway case concerns Galveston County Commissioner redistricting maps.  The Storefront typically brings its voting rights cases under Section 2, which prohibits voting practices or procedures that discriminate based on race, color, or membership in a language minority group.   

The amicus notes that the Fifth Circuit was the first Federal Circuit to expressly allow minority coalition claims and has continued to do so. The brief cites the history of the Fifteenth Amendment and the suppression of minority voter rights that followed it. The brief states, “it is clear that the VRA is intended to broadly protect minority voting rights, including coalition claims, not limit protections of certain minority groups based on the composition of the group facing disenfranchisement.”

The brief adds that barring coalitions would gut the VRA, concluding that, “If Defendants are successful in this appeal, coalitions of minority litigants will have no meaningful opportunity to challenge demonstrably discriminatory practices that abridge their right to vote or dilute the power of their votes across the Fifth Circuit. Such action would frustrate Congress’ clearly stated purpose for enacting the VRA in 1965 and subsequently reauthorizing it 5 times over the next 40 years—effectively gutting the VRA as to a wide array of minorities.”

Since it opened in 1995, the Storefront has brought numerous successful Section 2 VRA cases lawsuits on behalf of Latino, African American and Asian voters across North Texas. The Storefront has brought coalition claims before, including in the current Shafer v. Pearland Independent School District case. Most recently, on August 18, 2023, it was announced that the Storefront successfully resolved a Voting Rights Act case with the Lewisville Independent School District (LISD) – paving the way for a new electoral system in LISD. 

The Storefront has successfully challenged many at-large election systems and unfairly drawn single-member districts. Under the Voting Rights Act, those lawsuits alleged that such systems deny voters of color a fair opportunity to meaningfully participate in the electoral process – and to elect school board representatives or city council members of their choosing.   

 “We ask the Fifth Circuit to uphold the standing of voters of color to combine in coalition classes to challenge voting systems that deny minorities an equal opportunity to vote,” said William A. Brewer III, partner at Brewer Storefront. “Given the increasingly multiracial composition of our democracy, coalition cases should be allowed to continue under the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Any effort to bar coalition claims is a transparent effort to suppress minority votes.”

 

Law360 Publishes Expert Analysis by William Brewer on Threat to the Voting Rights Act

January 19, 2024 – Partner William Brewer writes in Law360’s “Access to Justice” section about a split among circuit courts regarding private citizens’ ability to sue under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act (VRA). Section 2 of the VRA prohibits voting practices and procedures that discriminate on the basis of race, color or membership in a language minority group.

“If allowed to stand, the ruling imperils the ‘foundational’ right to self-government and creates a split among circuit courts regarding the standing of private citizens’ ability to sue – casting doubt on the future protection of voting rights in the United States,” Brewer writes.

He writes that while the Supreme Court upheld the VRA in Allen v. Milligan in June 2023, a ruling by the Eighth Circuit in Arkansas State Conference NAACP v. Arkansas Board of Apportionment threatens the VRA by finding that only the federal government can bring Section 2 VRA cases, not individuals and groups. Days before the Eighth Circuit decision, the Fifth Circuit affirmed the existence of a private right of action in Robinson v. Ardoin, creating the circuit court split.

Brewer emphasizes that since Section 2’s passage, hundreds of suits have been brought by private citizens serving as plaintiffs.

“If the case proceeded to the Supreme Court and the court were to rule that there is no private right of action, it would gut Section 2 and offer voters of color no individual power to seek remedies under the law. Such a ruling would nearly destroy the VRA,” Brewer writes.

Brewer concludes by urging that the private right of action must be clarified and that, “The prioritization of fairness and equal access to the voting process should ultimately prevail – to protect the rights of private plaintiffs and the freedoms that define our democracy.”

Read the article here.


Associate Malvina Palloj and Brewer Storefront Associate Director Katherine Leal Unmuth contributed to the article. The Storefront is the Brewer firm’s community service affiliate and has brought many successful Section 2 VRA cases in North Texas.


Dallas Morning News Publishes Brewer Op-Ed on Voting Rights Act Decision

December 4, 2023 — The Dallas Morning News published an op-ed in the Opinion section Monday by partner William A. Brewer III about a new court decision that poses a threat to the Voting Rights Act. The opinion piece, “A dangerous precedent for the Voting Rights Act,” reflects the Brewer Storefront’s continued dedication to enforcing and upholding the Voting Rights Act in Texas communities. The Storefront is the firm’s community-service legal affiliate.

The commentary follows:

Just months after the U.S. Supreme Court upheld Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, which safeguards against voting schemes that demonstrably dilute the votes of minorities, the law is again under attack.

Recently, a three-judge 8th Circuit Court of Appeals panel ruled 2-1 in a redistricting case filed in Arkansas, that only the federal government can bring a Section 2 voting rights challenge, thereby denying individuals and civil rights groups the right to file lawsuits challenging discriminatory election systems.

The lawsuit brought by the Arkansas State Conference NAACP and others alleges that a proposed redistricting map for the Arkansas House of Representatives denies Black voters an equal opportunity to elect candidates of their choice.

The decision is binding in seven states. The risk is obvious. North Dakota, one of the states covered by the decision, intends to appeal a recent federal judge’s ruling that protected Native American voting rights in the state after tribes and tribal members sued last year seeking a joint majority Native American state House district. State leaders are already seeking to leverage their self-interests over that of Native voters.

The 8th Circuit decision, if affirmed by the Supreme Court, could potentially lead to voters of color across the country being denied any ability to challenge voting systems that overtly deny fair representation.

Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act prohibits voting practices that discriminate based on race, color or membership in a language minority group. Since its passage in 1965, most Section 2 cases concern voters of color filing lawsuits that challenge at-large election systems, arguing that they deny voters of color a fair opportunity to elect candidates of their choosing. By an overwhelming margin, private plaintiffs (individual voters and groups), not the government, bring most Section 2 cases.

The 8th Circuit panel ruling in Arkansas State Conference NAACP vs. Arkansas Board of Apportionment reflects bad jurisprudence and poor historical research. Even worse, it is a potentially damaging outcome for the nation. Since 1965, the Voting Right Act has served as an important tool to protect the votes of those excluded from power by voting systems that deliver power to the few — and keep it from the many.

The Voting Rights Act is particularly relevant in Texas, where the population continues to diversify while, at the same time, elected bodies such as school boards and city councils employ voting schemes that frustrate outcomes that mirror the state’s demographics. Census figures reveal this year that Hispanics make up the largest share of the population in Texas, and yet this reality is not reflected among the political leadership on local and statewide elected bodies.

If this decision stands, it will leave only the U.S. Department of Justice and U.S. Attorney General empowered to bring cases, denying eligible voters the right to challenge their local election systems in court. We know that private lawsuits brought by citizens whose community employs inequitable voting schemes have compelled positive change.

In his dissent in the Arkansas ruling, 8th Circuit Chief Judge Lavenski Smith writes, “Rights so foundational to self-government and citizenship should not depend solely on the discretion or availability of the government’s agents for protection.” Smith is a 2002 George W. Bush appointee, and is African American.

He added that the private plaintiff issue is best left to the Supreme Court.

Importantly, in June 2023, the Supreme Court upheld Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act in a 5-4 vote in Allen vs. Milligan, which was brought by private plaintiffs to protect Black voters.

Our firm is familiar with the importance of the private right of action. Our community service legal affiliate, the Brewer Storefront, has brought numerous voting rights cases in Texas challenging at-large election systems on behalf of Hispanic, Black, Asian and white plaintiffs.

The successful cases have resulted in revamped election systems, often by way of the creation of geographically drawn single-member district seats that include the creation of minority “opportunity” district seats where minority voters make up a majority.

Most importantly, these cases have created a pathway of opportunity: They have resulted in greater representation of minority voters and the election of minority candidates across North Texas.

For example, a Richardson Independent School District voting rights case brought by Brewer Storefront resolved in 2019 resulted in a previously all-white school board becoming majority-minority, better reflecting the majority-minority students the school district educates.

David Tyson, plaintiff in the Richardson ISD case, is a former RISD board member and the first Black American to ever serve on the board. He bravely stepped forward to sue. Tyson was honored this year by the Texas Legislature for his contributions to Richardson, following his voting rights achievement.

Yet, if this 8th Circuit ruling prevails, Tyson’s voice would have been silenced. The inequities of the voting system he challenged would remain today, to the detriment of schools, students and the broader community.

Removing the right of private individuals and organizations to sue under the Voting Rights Act would undermine the civil rights of voters not only in Texas, but nationally. Voting rights are central to civil rights in our democracy. We should fight to protect them at all costs.

Dallas Morning News Publishes Brewer Storefront Op-Ed on Election Timing

August 31, 2023 — The Dallas Morning News published an op-ed in the Opinion section Thursday by partner William A. Brewer III and Marie Brewer calling for the elimination of off-cycle May local elections in Texas and moving elections on-cycle to November to improve voter participation. The article reflects the Brewer Storefront’s continued dedication to enforcing and promoting the Voting Rights Act in Texas communities. The Storefront is the firm’s community-service legal affiliate.
 
The commentary follows:

In Texas, discriminatory voting practices that depress minority voter participation remain the norm. The Supreme Court’s recent decision in Allen vs. Milligan, upholding Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, could spark legal challenges to our state’s local and state election systems going forward.

In our state, the Election Code mandates that general and special elections be held on one of the uniform election dates: the first Saturday in May, or the Tuesday after the first Monday in November. Although the code allows for elections to be held “on-cycle” (when state and federal elections occur), many local school board and city council elections are still held in May rather than November.

The timing of elections significantly impacts voter turnout. Experts, like political scientist Sarah F. Anzia, argue that the date of an election is the single greatest factor impacting voter turnout and composition. Other states recognize this and have adjusted their local elections accordingly. New York recently joined California, Arizona and Nevada in moving off-cycle local elections to coincide with statewide and national elections. These states point to increasing voter turnout and opportunity, specifically minority turnout, as the reason for the shift.

Fewer than 25% of Americans vote in elections for their local mayor and city council members, and turnout in off-cycle local elections averages over 30% lower than local elections held during presidential elections. In Texas, the situation is even more alarming. This past May, several major counties could not even reach 10% voter turnout.

All voting systems should aim to increase voter participation, and off-cycle elections especially warrant particular attention due to their disproportionate impact on minority voters. When off-cycle elections are moved on-cycle, minority groups increase their share of the electorate by up to 10 percentage points. Moreover, when local elections coincide with presidential elections, a larger share of voters come from families earning under $30,000 annually, while the share of voters earning more than $100,000 decreases.

When local elections are synchronized with national or statewide elections, the election date garners greater attention and accessibility across all voter groups. Conversely, off-cycle elections result in lower participation by large portions of eligible voters, and minority groups are disproportionately affected.

The past decade of social science research establishes that off-cycle elections undeniably affect voter participation and the makeup of voters who turn up at the ballot box, producing a voter pool that is not representative of the entire community.

As the courts have recognized, factors such as homeownership, education and income are strongly associated with voter turnout. Racial disparities in those factors can therefore contribute to racial disparities in political participation as well.

Although there may have been legitimate concerns in the 1800s and early 1900s that prompted off-cycle elections, such as the desire to separate local races from corrupt and partisan elections held at the federal and state level, there were also more problematic reasons aimed at discouraging voter participation from certain demographics.

Many local Texas communities, with a long history of racial discrimination, still experience disparities in wealth, education and homeownership. It is evident that under the totality of circumstances, off-cycle elections violate Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. This was not a direct argument in Allen vs. Mulligan, but the case is instructive on many levels: It fosters the belief that voting rights should be protected and any barriers to equal opportunity should be eliminated. And with such a viable alternative of switching to on-cycle elections, there is no reason for this practice to persist where minority groups already struggle to make their voices heard.

Our institutions work best when they are welcoming and inclusive. Texas should embrace the learnings of the recent Supreme Court decision — and awaken to the many ways in which the Voting Rights Act can be used to foster political opportunity.

NBC DFW Reports on Voting Rights Settlement, Brewer Storefront

August 23, 2023 – NBC DFW reported on Brewer Storefront reaching a positive outcome with the Lewisville Independent School District (LISD) in a voting rights lawsuit against the district. NBC interviewed Dallas Morning News education reporter Talia Richman about the case and its importance to the community.  

Richman noted that the lawsuit alleged the school board’s at large elections resulted in a primarily white Lewisville ISD school board and denied some people of color the opportunity to elect candidates of their choosing. Richman stated that, “The law firm, the Brewer Storefront, has been taking these cases on in suburban districts across North Texas.” She mentioned how the Storefront has brought Voting Rights Act lawsuits against the Richardson and Irving school districts and, “a whole host of districts, that all employed this at large system saying instead of having everyone elect each seat you should have districts based on where you live.” Those school districts and others adopted election systems that included single member districts  and minority “opportunity” districts in which a majority of voters are people of color. As a result, minorities have been elected to the school boards in those communities.

Speaking of school boards across North Texas and the importance of their composition, Richman said, “These are the people who are making huge decisions, they’re hiring the superintendent, and they’re setting the budget. We’ve seen how much political infighting has taken place on school boards when it comes to these education culture wars. So they’re saying we really have to make sure that representatives match the makeup of the student body in Texas, which is increasingly becoming more diverse.”

Learn more about the Brewer Storefront’s voting rights work here.