A federal judge ruled against a lawsuit seeking stricter proof standards for New York City school suspensions, essentially determining that the current system adequately protects student rights. The decision disappointed education advocates who argue the existing standards enable suspensions based on insufficient evidence, disproportionately harming Black students and those with disabilities.
Legal Services NYC filed the lawsuit in May, contending that the current standard of proof—”substantial and competent evidence”—fails to meet constitutional requirements. This standard requires less than 50% likelihood that a student actually committed the alleged offense. The organization sought a “preponderance of the evidence” standard, which would necessitate over 50% certainty before suspending students long-term.
The court’s reasoning
U.S. District Judge J. Paul Oetken ruled that the existing standard is constitutionally adequate, noting the lawsuit failed to reference precedents where courts mandated higher standards for student suspensions. He highlighted that the current system includes safeguards allowing families to present evidence and cross-examine witnesses during suspension hearings.
However, Oetken acknowledged the ongoing debate surrounding school discipline policies, remarking that the Due Process Clause struggles navigating these complex policy decisions. His acknowledgment suggests recognition of legitimate concerns without translating that concern into legal action.
The disproportionate impact problem
Despite the ruling, statistics reveal alarming disparities in suspension rates. Black students and those with disabilities face removal from classrooms at significantly higher rates than their peers, raising serious equity concerns about how discipline standards operate in practice. These disparities suggest that even with existing safeguards, the suspension system produces racially and ability-based discriminatory outcomes.
Legal Services NYC attorney Michaela Shuchman expressed disappointment, emphasizing how suspensions disrupt student education by depriving them of school meals, health support, and special education resources. For vulnerable students already facing systemic barriers, suspensions compound existing disadvantages exponentially.
Real consequences for students
The impact of suspension extends far beyond classroom time lost. Students who experience long-term suspensions face increased dropout risk, worse academic outcomes, and higher involvement with the juvenile justice system. For students with disabilities, suspensions often interrupt critical special education services they depend on for academic access.
Shuchman noted that Legal Services NYC provides free legal assistance to families navigating suspension proceedings, highlighting the fundamental power imbalance in disciplinary hearings. Many families lack resources to effectively challenge suspensions even when evidence is thin, meaning better-resourced families can fight suspensions while lower-income families cannot.
The standard of proof matters
The difference between “substantial and competent” evidence and “preponderance of the evidence” might sound technical, but it carries real consequences. A standard requiring less than 50% certainty means schools can suspend students based on evidence that wouldn’t convince an impartial observer that misconduct actually occurred. This creates space for bias, assumptions, and discriminatory application.
Teachers and administrators making suspension decisions operate within institutional contexts where unconscious bias influences judgment. Lower evidentiary standards enable biased decision-making to proceed unchecked. Higher standards would force more careful evaluation before removing students from education.
NYC’s response and next steps
The NYC Law Department stated they are reviewing the judge’s decision but offered no further comment. Notably, under current system rules, students suspended for more than five days retain the right to receive educational instruction, though advocates argue this provision provides insufficient protection.
Legal Services NYC indicated they are contemplating an appeal, believing that New York City should ensure constitutionally adequate protections before imposing serious suspension consequences. The organization’s willingness to pursue further legal action suggests confidence that higher courts might view the issue differently.
Broader implications for school discipline
The ruling leaves New York City’s suspension standards unchanged despite clear evidence of disparate impact on marginalized students. Education advocates continue pushing for reforms ensuring fair treatment for all students, particularly those from communities experiencing systemic educational inequity.
Judge Oetken’s decision essentially defers policy-making to the education department rather than requiring constitutional alignment with due process principles. This stance places responsibility for reform on institutions that created the current disparate system—institutions unlikely to voluntarily adopt standards constraining their disciplinary authority.
The case highlights fundamental tension between institutional discipline authority and individual student rights. For now, that tension resolves in favor of institutional discretion. Whether appeals courts or legislative action ultimately shift this balance remains uncertain, but the current ruling preserves a system advocates argue perpetuates educational inequity.

