Texas student suspended over his loc hairstyle days after state's Crown Act takes effect

ADevilYouKhow

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ORDER_66

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:snoop: these white schools with those hairstyles rules should be punished...:mjpls: they always put that on the black folks always...
 

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School officials told George his loc hairstyle violated the Barbers Hill Independent School District dress and grooming code which states, “Male students’ hair will not extend, at any time, below the eyebrows or below the ear lobes.”

The policy goes on to state, “Male students’ hair must not extend below the top of a t-shirt collar or be gathered or worn in a style that would allow the hair to extend below the top of a t-shirt collar, below the eyebrows, or below the ear lobes when let down.”

His mother said the school told the 17-year-old he could change his clothes, but he would also have to cut his hair. When the teen did not cut his hair, he was put on in-school suspension.


On September 8, George received an additional five days of punishment because he had “hair below his eyebrows when let down,” his mother said.

He now faces being placed in a Disciplinary Alternative Education Program, also known as alternative school, if he doesn’t cut his hair by the end of this week, she added.



How the fukk is this a real thing in 2023? This isn't the 1950s. What kind of educator could be so fukking stupid as to think that suspending a kid from school for having hair "below the ear lobes" was part of a valid education?
 
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At the time the district’s Superintendent Greg Poole told CNN the policy was fully within the realms of the law.

“People want to call us racist, but we’re following the rules, the law of the land,” he said.



This is Greg Poole:

6316133_071320-ktrk-rafique-oberg-barbers-hill-super-on-UIL-participation-vid.jpg



Well, no wonder he's salty about a Black man's locs. He should be placed on administrative leave until he fixes that hairline. :picard:



Also, so far as "we're following the rules, the law of the land", back in 2008 this same superintendent was arrested for refusing to make his 16yo son available for questioning after his son got in a single-car accident and then left the scene. The son may have been drunk driving, but we'll never know because daddy kept him hidden from the cops.

 

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School officials told George his loc hairstyle violated the Barbers Hill Independent School District dress and grooming code which states, “Male students’ hair will not extend, at any time, below the eyebrows or below the ear lobes.”

The policy goes on to state, “Male students’ hair must not extend below the top of a t-shirt collar or be gathered or worn in a style that would allow the hair to extend below the top of a t-shirt collar, below the eyebrows, or below the ear lobes when let down.”

His mother said the school told the 17-year-old he could change his clothes, but he would also have to cut his hair. When the teen did not cut his hair, he was put on in-school suspension.


On September 8, George received an additional five days of punishment because he had “hair below his eyebrows when let down,” his mother said.

He now faces being placed in a Disciplinary Alternative Education Program, also known as alternative school, if he doesn’t cut his hair by the end of this week, she added.



How the fukk is this a real thing in 2023? This isn't the 1950s. What kind of educator could be so fukking stupid as to think that suspending a kid from school for having hair "below the ear lobes" was part of a valid education?

this is not the first time this school has done this....:mjpls: that barber school targeted this black kid like 2 years ago for like the same shyt... no hair below your eyebrows sounds like some crazy military shyt
 

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this is not the first time this school has done this....:mjpls: that barber school targeted this black kid like 2 years ago for like the same shyt... no hair below your eyebrows sounds like some crazy military shyt


Yup, the quote I took from him above was from the first incident. Stupid as fukk to use the "we're following the law of the land" excuse as if he's not the superintendent of the board who decides what the law is.

The Crown Act wasn't in effect the first time they did this, but it is now. I can't believe they're so fukking stupid (racist) to do it again after all the bad publicity the first time around AND after the law was passed.

And yeah, it sounds like military school shyt. I can't believe this is a real thing, I never heard of any shyt like this in L.A. even as the schools with strict dress codes and/or uniforms.
 

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@the next guy @Rhakim
Can't cut your hear without government permission brehs
Can't indulge in your culture but at least you have low taxes

Live down south brehs!
 

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Black Student’s Suspension Over Hairstyle Didn’t Violate Law, Texas Judge Rules

The trial was the latest development in a case that has prompted scrutiny of education policies and race in the United States.


A portrait shows Darryl George wearing his hair in locs, or long ropelike strands of hair, that he pins on his head in a barrel roll. He has a diamond earing in his left ear.

Darryl George, a high school student in Texas, was suspended for violating a dress code because he has locs, or long ropelike strands of hair, that he pins on his head in a barrel roll.Credit...Michael Wyke/Associated Press

By Christine Hauser and Patrick McGee

Patrick McGee reported from Anahuac, Texas.

Feb. 22, 2024Updated 4:26 p.m. ET

A Texas judge ruled on Thursday that a school district’s dress code, which it used to suspend a Black student last year for refusing to change the way he wears his hair, did not violate a state law meant to prohibit race-based discrimination against people based on their hairstyle.

The student, Darryl George, 18, has locs, or long ropelike strands of hair, that he pins on his head in a barrel roll, a protective style that his mother said reflected Black culture. Since the start of his junior year last August, he has faced a series of disciplinary actions at Barbers Hill High School in Mont Belvieu, about 30 miles east of Houston, after refusing to cut his hair. He was separated from his classmates, given disciplinary notices, placed in in-school suspension and sent to an off-campus program.

The hearing on Thursday, in the 253rd Judicial District Court in Anahuac, was in response to a lawsuit filed in September by the Barbers Hill Independent School District. The lawsuit argued that Mr. George was “in violation of the District’s dress and grooming code” because he wears his hair “in braids and twists” at a length that extends “below the top of a T-shirt collar, below the eyebrows, and/or below the earlobes when let down.”

The district asked State District Judge Chap B. Cain III to clarify whether the dress code violated a state law called the Texas CROWN Act, as the defendants, Mr. George and his mother, Darresha George, assert. The act, which took effect on Sept. 1, says a school district policy “may not discriminate against a hair texture or protective hairstyle commonly or historically associated with race.” It does not specifically mention hair length.

“The CROWN Act does not render unlawful those portions of the Barbers Hill dress and grooming restrictions limiting male students’ hair length,” Judge Cain said.


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“I am not going to tell you that this has been an easy decision to make,” the judge said. Addressing the family, he encouraged them to “go back to the Legislature or go back to the school board because the remedy you seek can be had from either of those bodies.”

Allie Booker, a lawyer for the Georges, said she would appeal the ruling and seek an injunction to prevent the district from punishing Mr. George pending the outcome of a federal civil rights lawsuit that he and his mother filed last year against the state’s governor and attorney general.

The Georges left without commenting to reporters, more than a dozen of whom had gathered at the courthouse. State Representative Jolanda Jones said she walked them to their car.

“When I accompanied Darryl and his mom to the car, I saw a child that was crying, and he was upset and he didn’t understand,” Ms. Jones, a Democrat, said in an interview. “His mother was visibly shaking.”

Dr. Greg Poole, the superintendent of the Barbers Hill Independent School District, said in an emailed statement that the ruling “validated our position” that the dress code does not violate the state law, which “does not give students unlimited self-expression.”

The trial was the latest development in a case that has prompted scrutiny of education policies and race in the United States. At least 24 states have adopted laws that make it illegal to discriminate against students or workers because of their hairstyle.

The case involving Mr. George began soon after officials at the school objected to his locs and told Ms. George that the length of her son’s hair, even though it was pinned, violated the district’s dress code. The district subjected him to punishments, including suspension, after he refused to cut it.

Ms. George and her son filed a federal civil rights lawsuit in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas in September against Texas’ governor, Greg Abbott, who signed the law, and the state’s attorney general, Ken Paxton, saying they allowed the school to violate the act.

Their lawsuit is seeking a temporary order to stop Darryl’s suspension while the case moves through the federal court system, and accuses Mr. Abbott and Mr. Paxton of “purposely or recklessly” causing Ms. George and Darryl emotional distress by not intervening.

Supporters of the family, including legislators and activists, also said the measures violated the CROWN Act.

The family’s lawsuit said that Mr. George wears locs as an “expression of cultural pride” and claims that his protections under the federal Civil Rights Act are being violated because the dress code policy disproportionately affects Black male students.

In October, Mr. George was transferred to an off-campus disciplinary program. In December, he was allowed to return to his high school but then was given another in-school suspension, this time for 13 days.

In January, Mr. Poole, the superintendent, defended the policy in an advertisement published in The Houston Chronicle, saying that districts with dress codes are safer and have higher academic performance, and that “being an American requires conformity.”

Kitty Bennett contributed research.
 

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Black teenager suspended over dreadlocks in Texas heads to court in CROWN Act case​

BY LEXI LONAS - 02/22/24 6:00 AM ET

A Black teenager in Texas repeatedly suspended for his dreadlocks will get his day in court Thursday in a case that advocates say has broad implications for racial hair discrimination.

Darryl George, 18, has been in in-school suspension for months after Barbers Hill High School said his hair violates policy. His family sued, saying the school’s regulations go against Texas’s newly established CROWN Act.

Allie Booker, George’s attorney, says the case ties into a larger movement “regarding discrimination of minority groups as a whole.”

The case is based on a section in the school’s handbook that contains a rule stating male students cannot have their hair past their eyebrows or earlobes. George wears his dreadlocks on the top of his head, away from his face and neck.

Victoria Kirby York, director of public policy and programs at the National Black Justice Coalition, said Texas’s “law highlights the importance of cultural hairstyles but does not take into consideration the gender expression component.” Barbers Hill High, she said, “was able to opt out of the policy” by saying it did not apply specifically to the hair length of male students.

“They’re saying that this isn’t about the African heritage, this is about the length of the hairstyle, and that the length is inappropriate. But when you ask the question, ‘Why is the length inappropriate?’ The answer is because it, and let’s be clear, the length is only inappropriate for boys,” York said.

For years there have been efforts to get a national version of the CROWN Act, which prevents racial discrimination based on hairstyles, through Congress, but they have been unsuccessful.

The White House said in 2022 it “strongly supports” CROWN Act legislation and that the president “believes that no person should be denied the ability to obtain a job, succeed in school or the workplace, secure housing, or otherwise exercise their rights based on a hair texture or hair style.”

The goal, according to the National Urban League, is to create “a more equitable and inclusive experience for Black people through the advancement of anti-hair discrimination legislation.” To that effort, the group says there has been “tremendous success elevating the public narrative around this important issue and inspiring a movement to end hair bias.”

State District Judge Chap Cain said in January that arguments in the case would be heard Feb. 22 but did not issue a temporary injunction, leaving George in suspension through much of his junior year as the case plays out.

George’s family has also filed suit against Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) and Attorney General Ken Paxton (R), accusing them of failing to enforce the CROWN Act.

“We look forward to the Texas judicial system clarifying the CROWN Act,” said Greg Poole, superintendent of the Barbers Hill school district. “Hair length of male students is only constitutionally protected for Native American students. Length of hair is not protected in the Texas CROWN nor in any of the CROWN Acts in the 24 states that have one.”

“The Texas CROWN Act protects hair texture and the wearing of braids, twists and locs. Those with agendas wish to make the CROWN Act a blanket allowance of student expression. Again, we look forward to this issue being legally resolved,” Poole added.

William Hill, a legal strategist who worked on the law in Texas, acknowledges it does not directly address the length of hair because “in certain circumstances, the length of one’s hair could be a safety hazard” in a work setting.

“They’re correct, it doesn’t address length because length really isn’t what we’re talking about. What we’re talking about those hairstyles that protect curly and coily hair,” Hill said, arguing “it seems that what the principal is trying to do is to impose his cultural aesthetic on the student body. It has nothing to do with safety. It has nothing to do with disrupting class, because George’s hair is not all over the place.”

Booker said the school previously had a rule that hair could be longer, but it had to be tied up, which students complied with.

“What these individuals were doing was being able to tie up and sew up and put up their locs just like Darryl George is doing in an effort to comply with the dress and the grooming code,” Booker said. “Once [the principal] saw that a person could still have locs and be able to tie them up,” language was changed in the handbook so hair had to be a certain length when let down.

“Well, if somebody’s hair can’t come below the eyebrow, it’s not gonna be long enough for you to braid. It’s not going to be long enough for you to loc, especially coarse, Black hair,” she said.

Booker says there has been “tremendous support” from the public over this case, and she is confident George will win in court.

“One of the things that George constantly says is, ‘I just want to be a regular kid. I just want to be a child, and they’re not letting me be a regular child. And then they’re discussing things with me that are just way above my head. They want to talk to me about constitutional rights and my role in my hair,’ and he’s like, ‘I’m just a kid,’” Booker said, adding “he’s just really frustrated.”

While the hope for advocates is this case both strengthens and clarifies the CROWN Act, some think it may not be an easy process.

As an elected official in Texas, the judge, Hill said, will face “social and political pressures” to side with the school policy, and then the “case will need to be appealed.”

“If the judge is courageous enough to follow the law, then I think it means that these challenges to the CROWN Act will become more sophisticated, because it’s not going to discontinue challenges,” he said.

TAGS CROWN ACT CROWN ACT HAIR DISCRIMINATION HAIR DISCRIMINATION
 

88m3

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imagine if they did this to your kids or your employer tried this bs on you


I'm not going @ogc163 @the next guy


personal freedom and liberty for who?
 
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ogc163

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imagine if they did this to your kids or your employer tried to bs on you


I'm not going @ogc163 @the next guy


personal freedom and liberty for who?

Damn beloved this is a super strong argument. The high rents and low income dynamic most Black New Yorkers find themselves can just be handwaved away...amirite?
 
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