Bill banning ‘hairstyle discrimination’ in schools passes House
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[May 28, 2021]
By TIM KIRSININKAS
Capitol News Illinois
tkirsininkas@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – The Illinois House passed a
bill Thursday to prevent “hairstyle discrimination” in schools, sending
it back to the Illinois Senate.
Senate Bill 817, originally introduced by Sen. Mike Simmons, D-Chicago,
prevents Illinois schools from enforcing dress codes that prohibit
hairstyles historically associated with race, ethnicity or texture,
including braids, locks and twists.
Rep. Greg Harris, D-Chicago, who served as the bill’s lead sponsor in
the House, said the bill aims to address “historical wrongs.”
Harris cited instances of Black students who were required to change
their natural hairstyles as a result of school policies, or who were
prevented from participating in school activities outright until they
changed their hair.

“I think it’s time to redress those issues, to correct them, and make
sure that all our young people when they go to school, anxious to
learn…that they’re welcome there, they’re respected there, and they’re
all treated equally there,” Harris said on the House floor Thursday.
The bill has been dubbed the “Jett Hawkins Law,” named for the young boy
who brought the issue to Simmons’ attention with his mother earlier this
session. Hawkins was sent home from school after his hair was deemed in
violation of school dress code.
Hawkins’ mother, Ida Nelson, said during a committee hearing on Tuesday
that the bill addresses historic inequities in school discrimination,
adding that restrictive hair policies disproportionately target Black
children and negatively affect self-image and mental health for children
of color.
“These policies skew their perception of self and create a feeling of
something about them needing to be fixed,” Nelson said. “That is not a
good message to send to young, impressionable children, and it is up to
all of us adults to protect children, regardless of their phenotype,
from any threat to their mental or emotional well-being.”
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House Majority Leader Greg Harris (front), D-Chicago
and Sen. Mike Simmons, D-Chicago, listen to debate on Senate Bill
817 on Thursday. The bill would prohibit schools from enacting dress
code policies which discriminate against hairstyles "historically
associated with race, ethnicity or texture" (Credit:
Blueroomstream.com)

Opponents of the bill raised concerns that it would
affect private and military schools, which often have uniform dress
code and hairstyle requirements in place.
Rep. La Shawn Ford, D-Chicago, pushed back on that criticism
Thursday, saying children should be made to feel comfortable
regardless of their school.
Ford said the bill is about “treating people right, respecting
people, allowing people to be who they want to be.”
“(Hair) gives you confidence, it gives you strength, it gives you
power, and to force someone that believes in what gives them power
to cut it off is bad,” he said.
Rep. Cyril Nichols, D-Chicago, said hair is important to freedom of
expression, and should have no impact on a student’s performance in
school activities.
“A person wearing their hair is not going to affect anybody learning
what two plus two is,” Nichols said. “This allows people to be free,
allows people to live their life in a way they want to, private or
not.”
The bill passed 89-22. It already passed the Senate, but will be
sent back for concurrence on a minor amendment before being sent to
the governor.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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