Chicago Sun-Times

RESPECTING HAIR AND HERITAGE

Gov. J.B. Pritzker gives a pen to 4-year-old Jett Hawkins as he signs the Jett Hawkins Act to protect kids from hair discrimina­tion in schools

- BY RACHEL HINTON,

Gov. J.B. Pritzker on Friday signed into a law a bill that bars hair discrimina­tion in schools, saying it will help ensure that students statewide feel “comfortabl­e and confident in their own skin.”

But the mother whose son was an inspiratio­n for the law — a 4-year-old Black child who was told his braids were a violation of school dress codes — said the moment “is bigger than just hair.”

“Our hair is an extension of who we are as a race and is deeply connected with our cultural identity,” said Ida Nelson, who had a front-row seat at the bill signing, holding son Gus “Jett” Hawkins in her lap.

“This is one huge step towards improving the mental health outcomes for our children, as it ensures that they will be in healthier learning environmen­ts,” she said.

The governor signed the bill at Uplift Community High School, saying the new law will allow students to “embrace the power of their heritage rather than compromise their identities.”

“For so many people, how you dress and how you look is an expression of who you are,” Pritzker said. “For others, the choice is as simple as deciding what makes them the most comfortabl­e and confident in their own skin.

“That should be the beginning and the end of the conversati­on . ... Nobody should be made to feel less than for how they express themselves, let alone miss out on school days, dances and after-school sports are how they style their hair.”

Ida Nelson characteri­zed the Jett Hawkins Act as an important first step.

“The work must continue to proactivel­y create safe spaces in schools where children of color are accepted completely and also in the workplace,” she said.

Nelson said it’s time for similar laws to be enacted nationwide because “our hair, our blackness, our existence deserves to be celebrated — not just tolerated.”

The new law would ensure the state’s schools don’t apply their school uniform or other dress code policies to hairstyles, “including hairstyles historical­ly associated with race, ethnicity, or hair texture, including, but not limited to, protective hairstyles such as braids, locks, and twists.”

Under the law, which takes effect Jan. 1, the Illinois State Board of Education will be directed to produce educationa­l resources about protective and natural hairstyles and host them on their website.

State Sen. Mike Simmons, D-Chicago, read about Jett’s story and the stories of other children who were barred from wearing their hair in braids or other natural styles and sponsored the legislatio­n in part because “we can’t paper over such stinging injustices any longer.”

“I know from my own childhood what it’s like to be regularly belittled, humiliated isolated and shamed by adults in the school setting, and it’s something that we can no longer accept in Illinois,” said Simmons, who wears his hair in freeform locs.

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 ??  ?? With Jett Hawkins and his mother, Ida Nelson, standing next to him, Gov. J.B. Pritzker signs the Jett Hawkins Act.
With Jett Hawkins and his mother, Ida Nelson, standing next to him, Gov. J.B. Pritzker signs the Jett Hawkins Act.

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