Jamaica Gleaner

Lawmakers debate bill that aims to ban hair discrimina­tion

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LEGISLATOR­S IN racially diverse Puerto Rico have opened a public debate on a bill to explicitly prohibit discrimina­tion against hairstyles such as cornrows and Afros, sparking a heated debate.

Local government officials argue the legislatio­n is unnecessar­y because federal and local laws already ban such discrimina­tion. But Puerto Rican activists said at a hearing Tuesday that the island’s Afro Caribbean community still faces discrimina­tion and needs explicit protection when it comes to public services, work, education and housing.

“I’m 23 years old, and I’m tired of this problem,” said Julia Llanos Bultrón, a teacher who wears cornrows. “I’m very disappoint­ed with a system that pushes us to change the hair with which we’re born.”

Llanos said that a school in the northeast town of Fajardo offered her a job last year on condition that she cut her hair because they didn’t allow locks. She declined.

Similar incidents were recounted by others who spoke at a crowded public hearing held at San Juan’s seaside Capitol building, noting that the hairstyles in question are culturally important and carry historical significan­ce.

More than 1.6 million people in the US territory of 3.2 million identify as being of two or more races, while nearly 230,000 identify solely as Black, according to the US Census.

Lorraine León Ramírez, mother of two sons who have Afros, said her younger was banned from attending two different schools until he cut his hair.

“It was one of the worst experience­s we’ve had as a family,” she said.

“The big question is, is it fair that our children have to grow up with regulation­s that undermine their identity? The answer is no,” she said. “It’s time to break these stigmas.”

A community in Texas has been grappling with a similar issue even after the state passed a law that went into effect in September to prohibit racebased hair discrimina­tion.

The family of a Black high school student in Belvieu, Texas, is arguing that his suspension since August has been a violation of the new law. The school says that the length of Darryl George’s hair, falling below his eyebrows and ear lobes, violates the school’s dress code.

In Puerto Rico, government officials have noted that the island’s laws and constituti­on, along with Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, protect from discrimina­tion. But a precedent was set in 2016 when a US Court of Appeals dismissed a discrimina­tion lawsuit after finding that an employer’s no-dreadlock policy in Alabama did not violate Title VII.

In the US mainland, Texas and at least 23 other states have implemente­d a version of the CROWN Act, which stands for “Create a Respectful and Open World for Natural Hair”. It bans hairstyle discrimina­tion within employment, housing, education and public accommodat­ion places. The US House of Representa­tives approved a federal version of it in 2022, but it failed in the Senate.

Some government officials in the Caribbean also have been pushing to relax hair codes at schools, workplaces and government offices.

 ?? AP ?? The Capitol of Puerto Rico stands in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
AP The Capitol of Puerto Rico stands in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

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