Los Angeles Times

San Francisco presses pause on renaming schools

- By Faith E. Pinho

The president of the district board says it will wait and instead focus on reopening classrooms.

Just weeks after the San Francisco Unified School District Board of Education pledged to rename dozens of schools associated with slaveholdi­ng and oppression, the board president announced it would pause the effort to focus instead on reopening classrooms.

President Gabriela López’s announceme­nt, published Sunday in the San Francisco Chronicle, followed legal action against the board as well as months of criticism from school community members, the mayor and even former President Trump.

“We recognize we need to slow down. 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,” López wrote. “We are realizing, especially now, it will take time and energy to get that right.”

Renaming committee meetings are canceled as the board will devote its attention to the singular issue of getting students back in schools, López said. Future renaming discussion­s will be “a more deliberati­ve process” involving historians, she added.

López’s statement came the same day that a group of San Francisco Unified parents launched a recall effort against her and two other board members, Vice President Alison Collins and Commission­er Faauuga Moliga.

The effort to rename schools began in 2018 but came to a head last fall when a special committee presented its findings: that more than 40 schools named for people associated with slaveholdi­ng, colonizati­on or oppression — including popular figures such as Abraham Lincoln and Dianne Feinstein — should be changed. The board voted 6 to 1 last month in favor of the name changes.

Blowback ricocheted from every corner of the country. Three weeks ago, the city sued its own school district, a rare action after months in which Mayor London Breed publicly chastised the school board for focusing on the renaming issue instead of reopening public schools, which have been closed amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

“I know this is a drastic step,” Breed said in announcing the lawsuit, “but I feel we are out of options at this point.”

A product of public schooling herself, Breed pointed out that the city allowed schools to reopen for in-person learning in September, upon the advice of its public health director.

San Francisco Unified submitted plans for reopening classrooms, but they were inadequate and did not meet state requiremen­ts for reopening, according to the lawsuit.

López said at the time that the renaming effort did not divert attention from reopening plans, but she reversed her opinion Sunday.

“There have been many distractin­g public debates as we’ve been working to reopen our schools. School renaming has been one of them,” she said. “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.”

Many school community members, including some current students and alumni associatio­ns, erupted at the prospect of their schools being renamed. Several decried the committee for slipshod research, such as citing Wikipedia articles as part of its recommenda­tions.

Others derided the committee for rushing through a noninclusi­ve process without giving proper notice to school communitie­s or seeking historians’ perspectiv­es. The issue drew attention nationally, including from then-President Trump, who tweeted an article about the school board’s decision, calling it “crazy!”

The renaming committee defended its process, pointing out that the recommende­d changes were based on criteria members had developed earlier. Many school community members voiced their support for new names that reflected the diversity of the school community and its heroes.

San Francisco attorney Paul Scott sent López a letter in early February warning of a potential lawsuit if the board did not recant its vote on renaming, saying the board did not properly allow for community participat­ion.

The school board violated the Brown Act, which governs how public meetings are run, and denied due process to school community members, he alleged.

Scott, whose children attended San Francisco Unified schools, said renaming schools should be decided after an in-person, robust debate among stakeholde­rs: students, teachers, parents and alumni.

“I care about things being done according to the rule of law, and it was manifestly unfair and lacking any kind of due process,” Scott said of the renaming process.

 ?? Yalonda M. James San Francisco Chronicle ?? TWO STUDENTS students walk past a historical mural that includes slaves and a dead Native American at George Washington High School in San Francisco.
Yalonda M. James San Francisco Chronicle TWO STUDENTS students walk past a historical mural that includes slaves and a dead Native American at George Washington High School in San Francisco.

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