Judge Orders Promotions For Firefighters Who Claimed Discrimination

The Supreme Court's ruling to be implemented "as soon as practicable."

ByABC News
November 25, 2009, 10:58 AM

Nov. 25, 2009— -- Five months after winning a landmark ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court, 14 white and Hispanic firefighters in New Haven, Conn., will soon receive the promotions they were denied on the basis of their race.

Federal Judge Janet Bond Arterton -- the same judge who threw out the firefighters' lawsuit in 2006 -- issued an unambiguous ruling Tuesday, ordering Connecticut officials to promote the men.

"The New Haven Civil Service Board shall certify the results of the 2003 promotional examinations for the positions of Lieutenant and Captain in the New Haven Fire Department, and shall certify the promotional lists for each position derived from these examination results," Arterton's two-page order reads.

A city spokeswoman told ABC News that New Haven intends to promote the firefighters "as soon as practicable." The city's civil service board still has to meet and approve the promotions.

"To see these heroic men finally receive the status and the badges that belong to them will be a very meaningful moment," Karen Torre, the firefighters' attorney, told ABC News, "and a fitting capstone to a Supreme Court ruling that we hope will prevent others from having to endure what they did to get them."

Judge Arterton's ruling brings to a close five years of litigation and recent legal wrangling to prevent the promotions from taking place. It also closely follows the Supreme Court's instructions.

In June, the court ruled 5-4 that New Haven violated a landmark civil rights law when the city threw out the results of a promotions exam after it was determined that none of the black firefighters who took the test scored well enough to be promoted.

Justice Anthony Kennedy, writing for the majority, said New Haven had violated the landmark Title VII Civil Rights Act of 1991. The city had no good reason to throw out the test results, he said, even if it was threatened by lawsuits by the black firefighters. Its decision to do so, he wrote, amounted to a "de facto quota system," where it was making decisions based on "raw racial statistics."