Lawsuit: State's emergency manager law discriminates against black communities

December 6, 2017
Michigan Radio

Michigan's emergency manager law violates the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution and should be struck down, according to a lawsuit recently filed in federal court.

The suit charges that the law, formally known as the Local Financial Stability and Choice Act (Public Act 436), discriminates against majority black communities. 

The lawsuit claims the state unequally applied the emergency manager law to majority black cities and school districts – even when majority-white communities had the same or worse financial problems.

"Since 2013, at one point or another, 56% of the black population of the state of Michigan has lived under emergency management," said Darius Charney of the Center for Constitutional Rights. He is one of the lawyers representing the Michigan public officials and residents challenging the law.

Read the full piece here

Last modified 

December 7, 2017