KAMEHAMEHA
SCHOOLS READY TO DEFEND
PREFERENCE POLICY BEFORE APPEALS PANEL
October
16, 2004
Oral
arguments scheduled for Nov. 4; KS planning statewide prayer
service
Kamehameha Schools will defend its right to
grant admissions preference to Hawaiian applicants before
the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals at a hearing on November
4, school leaders announced today.
A three-judge appeals court panel will hear
oral arguments in the Doe vs. Kamehameha Schools case at the
University of Hawaii Richardson School of Law. The three judges
who will sit on the panel have not been announced.
“Kamehameha Schools will argue that the
appeals court should uphold the ruling issued by Federal Judge
Alan Kay last November, and let our preference policy stand,’
said Nainoa Thompson, Chairman of the Kamehameha Schools Board
of Trustees. “We are prepared to defend our policy for
as long as it takes to correct the educational imbalances
suffered by Hawaiians.”
“The same excellent legal team that defended
our policy before Judge Kay will present our arguments before
the appeals court. They are well-prepared and ready,”
added Kamehameha Schools Chief Executive Officer Dee Jay Mailer.
In his ruling from the bench last year, Judge
Kay held that Kamehameha Schools’ preference policy
is legally justified as a means of correcting societal imbalances
suffered by Hawaiians as the result of Western contact. The
judge held that Kamehameha Schools’ history and mission
are “exceptionally unique,” and noted that the
school is privately funded and its efforts to correct imbalances
have been recognized by Congress.
“It’s absolutely fitting that the
arguments be held here in Hawaii, in the homeland of Princess
Pauahi and the children she gave her wealth to educate,”
said Mailer. “Hawaiians have made tremendous strides.
There are Hawaiian leaders in every industry and field in
this state. Pauahi has helped make that possible. But we still
have work to do.”
Added Thompson, “We’re a private
school. We don’t accept federal money and we’re
not asking for any. All we want is to finish the job Pauahi
started 117 years ago. I see this as an issue of equality.
We need to restore the balance that has been lost. That’s
good for Hawaiians and its good for all of Hawaii.”
Kamehameha Schools – Kapalama Campus president
and headmaster Michael J. Chun, PhD, joined Trustee Thompson
and CEO Mailer in affirming Kamehameha’s resolve to
defend the policy on behalf of the students it serves. To
illustrate the impact of the Schools within the Hawaiian community,
Dr. Chun shared a moving essay written by a recent Kamehameha
graduate that described the student’s struggle to succeed
in school despite many challenges in his personal life.
Kamehameha Schools is inviting all who wish
to show their support for the Schools’ mission to attend
services planned for October 31st – the day the Pauahi
signed her will – and Nov. 4 – the day of the
hearing, which is also the 117th birthday of the Schools’
founding. The Oct. 31 event, called “Legacy Day,”
will be held at the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Memorial Chapel
on the Kapalama campus. The chapel will be open to the public
from 1:30p.m. to 5:00 p.m. A prayer service will be held in
the chapel starting at 3:00 p.m.
Kamehameha Schools is also organizing simultaneous
prayer services for the morning of Nov. 4 on the UH Manoa
campus, the Kamehameha Schools campuses on Hawaii Island and
Maui, and at churches throughout the state. The services will
begin at 7 a.m. and end by 8:15 a.m. The public is invited
to both the October 31 and Nov. 4 services. More details will
be posted at www.ksbe.edu as they are finalized.
“We will use these services to reflect
on what Pauahi’s gift means to all of us – Hawaiians
and non-Hawaiians -- and we invite all who wish to do the
same to join us,” said Mailer. “Pauahi was a devout
Christian. We believe that praying to Ke Akua for guidance
and support is what she would have done and would want us
to do.”
“This case is critical to allowing us
to fulfill our mission,” said Thompson. “There
is an opportunity here for all of us who believe in this mission
and its benefit to our entire society, to stand together to
support it. I hope our entire community can come together
for this purpose.”
Kamehameha Schools was created in 1884 by the
will of Princess Bernice Pauahi Bishop. Its policy of giving
admissions preference to Hawaiian applicants was adopted by
the first board of Trustees, led by Pauahi’s widower,
Charles Reed Bishop, and was in place when The Kamehameha
School for Boys opened its doors in 1887. Kamehameha’s
mission is to improve the capability and well-being of Hawaiians
through education.
Excerpts From Federal Judge Alan Kay's Ruling
News Conference Statements
Nainoa Thompson
Dee Jay Mailer
Michael J. Chun, Ph.D.
Letter from
Dee Jay Mailer to KS 'Ohana
SHOW YOUR SUPPORT
Legacy Day: Oct. 31, 2004
Prayer Service: Nov. 4, 2004
O'ahu: Download
Event Flyer (Acrobat PDF 552 KB)
Maui: Download
Event Flyer (Acrobat PDF 467 KB)
Hawai'i: Download
Event Flyer (Acrobat PDF 93 KB)
[ Back to Top
] [ Back to Doe vs. KS
] |