Daily Press

Apologizin­g for history of racism, segregatio­n

Loudoun County school district issues letter and video

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ASHBURN — A public school system in Virginia apologized for its history of racial segregatio­n and a more recent pattern of discrimina­ting against

Black students.

The Washington Post reported that the Loudoun County Public Schools addressed its apology on Friday to the county’s Black community in a letter and video.

The county fought a school desegregat­ion order for more than a decade after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled it illegal.

“The additional effort required and resources provided by the Black community to obtain an equal education created hardships to which other community members were not subjected,” the letter read. “Black people were denied rights and equal treatment.”

Michel l e Thomas, president of the local NAACP, questioned whether the apology is genuine.

“We feel it is more words than acti on,” Thomas said.

Rob Doolittle, a spokesman for the schools system, said the apology is only one step in the county’s plan to fight systemic racism.

The school district, one of the country’s wealthiest, is 7% African American, 18% Hispanic, 25% Asian and 44% white.

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