Current:Home > NewsA Black student punished for his hairstyle wants to return to the Texas school he left -StockSource
A Black student punished for his hairstyle wants to return to the Texas school he left
View
Date:2025-04-12 02:48:20
HOUSTON (AP) — A Black high school student in Texas who was punished for nearly all of his junior year over his hairstyle has left his school district rather than spend another year of in-school suspension, according to his attorney.
But Darryl George, 18, would like to return to his Houston-area high school in the Barbers Hill school district for his senior year and has asked a federal judge to issue a temporary restraining order that would prevent district officials from further punishing him for not cutting his hair. It would allow him to return to school while a federal lawsuit he filed proceeds.
George’s request comes after U.S. District Judge Jeffrey Brown in August dismissed most of the claims the student and his mother had filed in the federal lawsuit alleging school district officials committed racial and gender discrimination when they punished him.
The judge only let the gender discrimination claim stand and questioned whether the school district’s hair length rule causes more harm than good.
“Judge Brown please help us so that I can attend school like a normal teenage student during the pendency of this litigation,” George said in an affidavit filed last month.
Brown has scheduled an Oct. 3 court hearing in Galveston on George’s request.
In court documents filed last week, attorneys for the school district said the judge does not have jurisdiction to issue the restraining order because George is no longer a student in the district.
“And George’s withdrawal from the district does not deprive him of standing to seek past damages, although the district maintains that George has not suffered a constitutional injury and is not entitled to recover damages,” attorneys for the school district said.
The district defends its dress code, which says its policies for students are meant to “teach grooming and hygiene, instill discipline, prevent disruption, avoid safety hazards and teach respect for authority.”
In court documents filed last week, Allie Booker, one of George’s attorneys, said the student was “forced to unenroll” from Barbers Hill High School in Mont Belvieu and transfer to another high school in a different Houston area district because Barbers Hill officials placed him on in-school suspension on the first and second day of the new school year, which began last month.
This “caused him significant emotional distress, ultimately leading to a nervous breakdown. As a result, we had no choice but to remove him from the school environment,” Booker said.
George’s departure “was not a matter of choice but of survival” but he wishes to return, as his mother moved to the area because of the quality of the district’s schools, Booker said.
George was kept out of his regular high school classes for most of the 2023-24 school year, when he was a junior, because the school district said his hair length violated its dress code. George was forced to either serve in-school suspension or spend time at an off-site disciplinary program.
The district has argued that George’s long hair, which he wears to school in tied and twisted locs on top of his head, violates its policy because if let down, it would fall below his shirt collar, eyebrows or earlobes. The district has said other students with locs comply with the length policy.
George’s federal lawsuit also alleged that his punishment violates the CROWN Act, a recent state law prohibiting race-based discrimination of hair. The CROWN Act, which was being discussed before the dispute over George’s hair and which took effect in September 2023, bars employers and schools from penalizing people because of hair texture or protective hairstyles including Afros, braids, locs, twists or Bantu knots.
In February, a state judge ruled in a lawsuit filed by the school district that its punishment does not violate the CROWN Act.
Barbers Hill’s hair policy was also challenged in a May 2020 federal lawsuit filed by two other students. Both withdrew from the high school, but one returned after a federal judge granted a temporary injunction, saying there was “a substantial likelihood” that his rights to free speech and to be free from racial discrimination would be violated if he was barred. That lawsuit is still pending.
___
Follow Juan A. Lozano: https://twitter.com/juanlozano70
veryGood! (2275)
Related
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- InsideClimate News Wins SPJ Award for ‘Choke Hold’ Infographics
- This urban mosquito threatens to derail the fight against malaria in Africa
- Project Runway Assembles the Most Iconic Cast for All-Star 20th Season
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Allergic To Cats? There's Hope Yet!
- It's a bleak 'Day of the Girl' because of the pandemic. But no one's giving up hope
- Amazon Fires Spark Growing International Criticism of Brazil
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Climate Legal Paradox: Judges Issue Dueling Rulings for Cities Suing Fossil Fuel Companies
Ranking
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- Today’s Climate: July 22, 2010
- Sea Level Rise Will Rapidly Worsen Coastal Flooding in Coming Decades, NOAA Warns
- NASA mission to the sun answers questions about solar wind that causes aurora borealis
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- InsideClimate News Wins National Business Journalism Awards
- Omicron keeps finding new evolutionary tricks to outsmart our immunity
- Reward offered for man who sold criminals encrypted phones, unaware they were tracked by the FBI
Recommendation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
It cost $38,398 for a single shot of a very old cancer drug
'Where is humanity?' ask the helpless doctors of Ethiopia's embattled Tigray region
Why Vanessa Hudgens Is Thinking About Eloping With Fiancé Cole Tucker
Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
Early signs a new U.S. COVID surge could be on its way
Jay Johnston, Bob's Burgers and Arrested Development actor, charged for alleged role in Jan. 6 attack
Pigeon Power: The Future of Air Pollution Monitoring in a Tiny Backpack?