A federal appeals court ends more than 60 years of federal oversight of a Louisiana school system that had been subject to a desegregation order. According to multiple outlets, the order—originally issued to require the district to remove all vestiges of segregation—has been considered no longer necessary. The court’s decision removes the long-running federal monitoring that had governed the district’s compliance with desegregation requirements. The reporting describes the ruling as ending a long period during which federal authorities oversaw steps the district took to address segregation concerns. The decision follows years of litigation and review of whether the district still meets the standards that justify continued court supervision. The outlets characterize the change as the termination of a decades-old oversight framework rather than a new remedy, indicating that the court determines the federal supervision has run its course. The articles do not provide additional context on whether any parties plan to seek further review, focusing instead on the appeals court’s decision to end the order and supervision.