
Ruth Batson was appointed as METCO’s executive director in 1968.

As METCO marks its 60th anniversary, it stands as one of the longest-running voluntary desegregation programs in the United States — born out of protest, sustained by community, and still confronting the same structural inequities that made it necessary.
What we see today can make it easy to forget that METCO was the result of a hard-fought struggle led by many of Boston’s major Black leaders. It did not emerge from policy consensus or political goodwill.
It emerged because Black families, backed by a network of organizers, refused to accept a system that consigned their children to under-resourced schools while others benefited from opportunity.
To understand METCO, we have to start with an uncomfortable truth: segregation in Boston was not accidental — it was the result of deliberate policy choices.
Through redlining, discriminatory lending, and exclusionary housing practices, Black families were concentrated in neighborhoods like Roxbury, while white families gained access to suburban communities with better-funded schools, safer environments, and greater long-term opportunity. Education inequality followed housing inequality, and both were shaped by these systemic decisions.
By the 1950s and early 1960s, Black parents in Boston saw clearly what many in power refused to acknowledge: their children were being systematically denied equal educational opportunity.
And they organized. The history of METCO is a story of integration, community leadership, institution-building, and sustained resistance. Black women, in particular, played central and often underrecognized leadership roles in this work. Their contributions were operational, strategic, and essential.
Their leadership spanned a broad ecosystem. There were strategists like Melnea Cass, who helped coordinate movement-wide efforts through the NAACP and broader civic networks. There were program builders like Ellen Jackson and Elizabeth Johnson, who created Operation Exodus— organizing transportation, logistics, and community support to move hundreds of Black children into better-resourced schools shortly before METCO’s formal launch.
There were operators like Viola McLeod, doing the day-to-day work that kept these efforts running. Educators like Peggy Dammond Day helped build Freedom Schools that taught Black history, civic responsibility, and nonviolence during student boycotts. Cultural leaders like Elma Lewis reinforced the importance of identity and affirmation alongside access. Bridge-builders like Katherine Jones connected Boston families with suburban communities willing to participate in integration efforts.
Institutional leaders like Jean McGuire would later sustain and expand METCO for decades, transforming it from an experiment into an
enduring institution. Today, leaders like Dr. Kandice Sumner continue to
adapt the program for a new generation.
At
the same time, male leaders — including Paul Parks, Thomas Atkins, Mel
King, Hubie Jones, Rev. Vernon Carter, Rev. James Breeden, Noel Day,
Royal Bolling, Dr. Leon Trilling, and administrators like Charles Brown
and Joseph Killory — played critical roles in providing legal,
political, and institutional leverage. They helped scale and formalize
efforts and opened access to systems of power that were otherwise
closed.
This was a coordinated effort across roles, sectors, and communities.
It emerged in direct response to resistance.
The
Boston School Committee — led by Louise Day Hicks — took a hard line.
They denied that segregation existed at all. Even as Black parents,
researchers, and civil rights leaders presented clear evidence of
unequal schools, the Committee publicly insisted that Boston schools
were not segregated and that disparities were not systemic.
That denial functioned as strategy.
It removed the basis for reform.
It protected existing resource distributions.
It
blocked accountability. In 1963, Ruth Batson and others presented
detailed evidence of inequality in a seven-hour hearing before the
School Committee. The result was refusal. The Committee declined to
acknowledge even the existence of the problem.
When institutions deny reality, communities escalate.
The
response from Black Boston was swift and organized. Protests, sit-ins,
and boycotts followed. The “Stay Out for Freedom” campaigns mobilized
thousands of students to boycott segregated schools, while Freedom
Schools provided meaningful education in their place.
These efforts created parallel systems—designed to resist and replace what was failing.
Operation Exodus extended that work further.
Black
parents organized transportation networks to move their children into
better schools across the city — without government mandate or formal
support, driven by necessity and collective action.
METCO built on that foundation.
In
1966, the program formally launched, sending Black students from Boston
to suburban school districts with available seats. It created access
within a segregated system.
For many families, that access was life-changing.
The broader system, however, remained intact.
In
1974, when a federal court ordered Boston to desegregate its schools,
the city’s resistance became undeniable. Black students were met with
hostility and, in many cases, violence. White families boycotted
schools, and entire neighborhoods mobilized against integration.
Public
narratives that followed centered on “forced busing,” obscuring the
decades of organizing that led to that moment. A civil rights struggle
was reframed as a logistical disruption rather than a response to
systemic injustice.
Through all of this, METCO continued.
It
provided an alternative pathway. It reduced exposure to the most
visible forms of resistance. It also required Black students to navigate
long commutes, cultural isolation, and the burden of integration
itself.
That burden was real. Black children were asked to adapt, to perform,
and to succeed in environments that were not designed for them—all
while the system that created the inequality remained largely unchanged.
And
yet, they did succeed. Over six decades, METCO has served tens of
thousands of students. It has built relationships across communities,
expanded access to opportunity, and helped shape generations of leaders
who have learned to navigate multiple worlds.
But success does not equal completion.
Today,
Boston’s schools remain deeply segregated by race, income, and
geography. Housing patterns continue to shape educational access.
Structural inequities persist.
METCO stands as both a success and a signal.
It demonstrates what is possible.
It reveals what remains unfinished.
METCO
emerged as a response to a system that refused to change. Its future
calls for a system redesigned to deliver equity, access, and belonging
at scale.
That future
requires confronting housing segregation, funding disparities, and the
structural inequities that continue to shape educational opportunity.
It also requires a clearer vision of success—one grounded in the lived experience of students and families.
As METCO looks toward its next 60 years, its leadership is clear about that vision. As CEO Dr. Kandice Sumner puts it:
“My
overall goal as METCO enters its next 60 years is to make sure METCO
students experience the fullness of their humanity in their
education—that they can be excellent, joyful, and themselves without
compromise. I want to make sure METCO’s parents and families affirm
their ownership and build their power as our strongest educational
advocates, and for alumni to be co-stewards of the growth, development,
and sustainability of the program.”
This vision marks a shift. From access to belonging. From participation to power.
From persistence to full humanity.
Integration,
in this next chapter, is measured by whether students thrive as their
full selves—and whether families and alumni shape the systems that serve
them.
The next chapter of METCO is defined by human dignity, shared power, and institutional accountability.
That is the standard. Because the ultimate goal has always been justice.
And rights, as METCO’s history reminds us, are never given.
They are fought for — and built.