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Notes -
The trial court verdict on the issue of whether the tests were discriminatory was in 2012. Gulino v. Bd. of Educ. of City School Dist. of NY, 907 F. Supp. 2d 492 (SD New York 2012). That was during the Bloomberg Administration. DeBlasio took office in 2014.
The DeBlasio administration appealed the damages award in 2019. See timeline here
As noted in the current version of the Post article, the City initially prevailed in 2003, but the decision was reversed in part on appeal. As described by the trial court in 2012: "In 2003, after five month bench trial, Judge Motley entered judgment in favor of the Board and SED, finding that their use of the Core Battery exam and the LAST did not violate Title VII. In 2006, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals vacated the District Court's judgment with respect to the LAST, and remanded the case."
As for g being correlated with everything, that might well be true, but is it legally relevant? Because this is how the court described the governing law in 2012:
Honestly, the argument that the City rolled over on a case that was filed in 1996 but not settled until 2023 is difficult to take seriously unless there is a ton of evidence marshaled in its favor.
All of these are applicable to generic IQ tests (verbal and spatial skills are fully representative of a lot of work eg. teachers or really anyone with a job that involves words/numbers/metrics can do).
But the test was not a generic IQ test, was it? The complaint was about a specific test. The issue is whether that test meets the criteria, not whether a generic IQ test would have.
In fact, the plaintiffs originally challenged two tests, but prevailed only re one of them. The other one apparently met the criteria.
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