Oroville Mercury-Register

Plan to rename many SF schools is put on hold

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SAN FRANCISCO >> The head of the San Francisco school board has put on hold controvers­ial plans to rename 44 schools until students are back on campus after months of virtual learning during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Board of Education President Gabriela López announced the decision in Monday’s editions of the San Francisco Chronicle and on SFChronicl­e.com on Sunday, the newspaper reported.

“There have been many distractin­g public debates as we’ve been working to reopen our schools,” López wrote. “School renaming has been one of them. It was a process begun in 2018 with a timeline that didn’t anticipate a pandemic. I acknowledg­e and take responsibi­lity that mistakes were made in the renaming process.”

The board’s 6-1 vote in late January to remove the names of Abraham Lincoln, George Washington from schools along with other prominent figures triggered debate on whether it took the national reckoning on America’s racist past too far.

A few days later, the city of San Francisco sued the San Francisco Unified School District and the board to force the reopening of schools to students. San Francisco teachers, like those in many big districts, are resisting a return to classrooms until they are vaccinated.

Since then, the issue of returning students to inperson learning has loomed ever larger as COVID-19 infection and hospitaliz­ation trends have greatly improved in California.

López said reopening will be the “only focus” until children are back in school and that renaming committee meetings are being canceled for the time being.

She also said the there will be a “more deliberati­ve process” in the future, including engaging historians from nearby universiti­es.

“There have been many distractin­g public debates as we’ve been working to reopen our schools.”

— Board of Education President Gabriela López

“We recognize we need to slow down,” she wrote. “And we need to provide more opportunit­ies for community input. We are working with educators at all levels to involve and educate our school communitie­s about the renaming process. We are realizing, especially now, it will take time and energy to get that right.”

The board’s January resolution called for removing names that honored historical figures with direct or broad ties to slavery, oppression, racism or the “subjugatio­n” of human beings.

In addition to Washington and Thomas Jefferson — former presidents who owned slaves — the list includes naturalist John Muir, Spanish missionary Junipero Serra, American Revolution patriot Paul Revere and Francis Scott Key, the composer of the “Star Spangled Banner.”

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