The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Senate drops bid to control race discussion­s in colleges

Fining K-12 school districts is also deleted from bill.

- By Ty Tagami ty.tagami@ajc.com

A Senate version of legislatio­n that seeks to control classroom discussion­s of race would no longer affect Georgia’s public colleges and universiti­es.

In addition, K-12 school districts would no longer face financial penalties for violating the provisions in Senate Bill 377.

The Senate Education and Youth Committee made those amendments Monday before advancing the bill in a 5-4 vote.

The legislatio­n now goes to the Senate Rules Committee before a possible vote on the Senate floor. In its new form, it would apply only to K-12 classrooms and to training for state government employees.

Last week, the Georgia House of Representa­tives adopted House Bill 1084 with similar classroom prohibitio­ns.

The bills come in the wake of vocal outrage over the notion that teachers might promote the college-level academic concept known as critical race theory, which is used to examine the effect of racism on society.

Critics say the legislatio­n would hinder the teaching of history, but the bills’ sponsors say that is not their intent. These two bills, and two others that have not yet had a hearing, identify nine concepts that could not be used in classrooms, including that one race is inherently superior.

The language was drawn substantia­lly from a September 2020 executive order by President Donald Trump that identified what were considered “divisive concepts” and banned them from federal worker training. The order was later reversed by President Joe Biden.

Supporters say the Georgia bills confront a rampant problem in classrooms that they have yet to document to the satisfacti­on of critics. Opponents call it a cynical strategy to pump up turnout in an election year since the pandemic and racial protests have divided the country.

The legislatio­n clarifies that certain things could still be discussed, such as laws that resulted in racial discrimina­tion and segregatio­n.

But Sen. Sonya Halpern, D-atlanta, said at Monday’s hearing that the bill would prohibit teaching something that Halpern, who is Black, said is “factually true” — that the country and state are fundamenta­lly or systemical­ly racist.

Sen. Bo Hatchett, R-clarkesvil­le, disagreed that racism is universal: “Those laws could be taught, however when you put people in a group, when you put the United States as a whole in a group or the state of Georgia in a group and you teach children that their state and their country are racist, that’s something we don’t believe should be taught.”

 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER FOR THE AJC ?? Students protest what they call censorship legislatio­n at a rally last month outside the Capitol.
STEVE SCHAEFER FOR THE AJC Students protest what they call censorship legislatio­n at a rally last month outside the Capitol.

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