Houston Chronicle Sunday

Texas lawmakers are drafting a hair discrimina­tion bill

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The Texas Legislativ­e Black Caucus has announced that it’s working on a bill that would ban discrimina­tion based on hair textures and styles commonly associated with race after the suspension of a black high school student in Mont Belvieu.

State lawmakers, accompanie­d by black officials and advocates, introduced the CROWN Act at a news conference Thursday, the Texas Tribune reported.

CROWN stands for Create a Respectful and Open World for Natural Hair, and the bill would protect against “unjust grooming policies that have a disparate impact on black children, women and men” in workplaces and public schools, CROWN Coalition advocate Adjoa Asamoah said. The coalition is a national alliance of organizati­ons working to end hair discrimina­tion.

The bill is a show of support for students such as Deandre Arnold, who was suspended from Hill

High School in Mont Belvieu and won’t be able to attend graduation unless he cuts his dreadlocks.

Barbers Hill Independen­t School District, which includes Hill High, prohibits male students’ hair from falling below their eyebrows or ears.

District Superinten­dent Greg Poole said there is no school policy that prohibits any hairstyles.

“Our policy limits the length. It’s been that way for 30 years,” Poole said.

Democratic Rep. Rhetta Bowers

said the coalition approached her about a year ago to bring such a bill to Texas.

“These conversati­ons are just becoming public now,” Bowers said. “People in our community were having these conversati­ons around the kitchen table or in beauty salons and barbershop­s.”

The bill is expected to be introduced for the 2021 Texas legislativ­e session.

Arnold’s case has received national attention. He recently appeared on the daytime talk show

Ellen and was gifted $20,000 toward his education.

He was expected to attend the Academy Awards on Sunday as a guest of “Hair Love,” a nominated short film about an African American father, his daughter and her hair.

California was the first state to ban workplace and school discrimina­tion against black people for wearing hairstyles such as braids, twists and locks. New York and New Jersey soon followed suit.

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