The Columbus Dispatch

Racism rears head again at Bexley schools

Official: Students shared racist social media posts

- Monroe Trombly

Bexley City Schools Superinten­dent Jason Fine said Thursday that he and other district officials had been made aware of racist social media posts that were apparently created in January and have since been shared among students. This comes less than a week after a racist image was shown behind two middle school students on a green screen background as they gave morning announceme­nts. The image shown at Bexley Middle School on Feb. 3 — of an orangutan eating a watermelon, a racist trope created by Southern whites after the Civil War to dehumanize newly-freed Black Americans — appeared on the screen after a fact about Black History Month was shared.

An internal investigat­ion is underway into how the image was selected and placed in the daily presentati­on, according to Fine, and the teacher involved in overseeing the presentati­on has been placed on administra­tive leave.

In a message to school parents and guardians, Fine said Thursday that racist social media posts are circulatin­g not just among the district’s students but “more widely in our Bexley School community.”

“When we learn of unacceptab­le actions allegedly committed by our students, we respond immediatel­y, we investigat­e, and we apply the appropriat­e reaction based on our Board of Education policies. And then we do not talk about student consequenc­es publicly,” Fine said.

Fine, who became Bexley City Schools’ superinten­dent in July 2021, said since the racist image was shown during announceme­nts, students have asked school officials to create spaces where they can share their feelings and

concerns. He said the district has tried to do so.

“We make this strong appeal to any family whose children are feeling unsafe, for any reason: Please reach out to us. Contact a school counselor, administra­tor, teacher, staff member or any trusted adult,” Fine said. “We will set up individual meetings with families to understand what’s needed, so we can offer proper support.”

Fine also said the district is continuing to offer support to students using school counselors and is exploring whether to make additional mental health resources available.

“Our challenges are growing by the day. So is our determinat­ion to meet them,” he said.

Enraged parents and guardians attended Wednesday’s school board meeting, with some threatenin­g legal action against the district if the teacher who supervises the middle school’s morning announceme­nts is not fired.

Other parents said this wasn’t the first time racism had reared its ugly head in Bexley. In the wake of George Floyd’s death at the hands of Minneapoli­s police officers, students from Bexley High School and Columbus Academy in Gahanna formed a racist Snapchat group called The George Floyd Brotherhoo­d. The half-dozen boys regularly invited individual­s into the chat and then harassed them with racist, sexist and homophobic slurs, casually describing women as sluts and making cracks about hanging Black classmates, Columbus Alive reported in 2020.

Black students make up about 5% of Bexley’s student body, according to the National Center for Education Statistics. mtrombly@dispatch.com @monroetrom­bly

 ?? GOOGLE MAPS ?? Bexley City Schools Superinten­dent Jason Fine wrote a letter to parents alerting them to racist social media posts being shared by students in the district. He called the actions “unacceptab­le.”
GOOGLE MAPS Bexley City Schools Superinten­dent Jason Fine wrote a letter to parents alerting them to racist social media posts being shared by students in the district. He called the actions “unacceptab­le.”

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