Toronto Star

California brushes away anti-Black hairstyle policies

- PHIL WILLON AND ALEXA DIAZ LOS ANGELES TIMES

SACRAMENTO, CALIF.— California has become the first state to take on another, perhaps subtler, form of racial discrimina­tion: Prejudice based on hairstyle. Gov. Gavin Newsom has signed a bill into law that legally protects people in workplaces and K-12 public schools from discrimina­tion based on their natural hair.

The new law, which takes effect Jan. 1, prohibits the enforcemen­t of grooming policies that disproport­ionately affect people of colour, particular­ly Black people.

This includes bans on certain styles, such as Afros, braids, twists, cornrows and dreadlocks — or locs for short.

Newsom said the need for the protection entered the national political consciousn­ess in December when a referee forced a Black wrestler for a New Jersey high school to cut his dreadlocks or forfeit his match.

That forced the student to choose whether to “lose an athletic competitio­n or lose his identity,” Newsom said.

“That is played out in workplaces, it’s played out in schools — not just in athletic competitio­ns and settings — every single day all across America in ways that are subtle, in ways overt,” Newsom said during a bill-signing ceremony in Sacramento.

The bill adds traits associated with race to the state’s list of classifica­tions protected from discrimina­tion, including race, sex, religion, colour, national origin, disability and sexual orientatio­n.

The bill’s author, Democratic state Sen. Holly Mitchell of Los Angeles, said the new protection gives all California­ns the right to wear natural hairstyles without fear of repercussi­ons.

Students will be able to go to school, and workers do their jobs, without feeling pressure to change their appearance based on someone else’s “comfort level,” she said.

“For us, it is a symbol of who we are. I know when I locked 15 years ago, I knew it was both a social and political statement to the outside world,” Mitchell said.

Mitchell described the bill’s purpose as twofold: To dispel myths about Black hair, its texture and the Black hair experience, and to challenge what constitute­s “profession­alism” in the workplace.

The bill has inspired similar legislatio­n in other regions:

New York City, for example, officially banned natural hair discrimina­tion in February.

New York declared hairstyles are protected under the city’s existing anti-discrimina­tion laws because policing black hair is a form of pervasive racism and bias. Lawmakers in New York and New Jersey also proposed similar legislatio­n to the California bill.

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