Teen booted from basketball game over her hairstyle despite NJ anti-racism law, school says

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The Maplewood-South Orange School District says a varsity girls basketball player was prohibited from entering a game because she had beads in her hair โ€” in violation of an anti-discrimination state law.

โ€œI was shocked when I learned that one of our very own student-athletes was subjected to the same discrimination that New Jerseyโ€™s CROWN Act was established to prevent,โ€ Acting Superintendent Kevin F. Gilbert said in a written statement. On Monday, Gilbert filed a racial bias complaint with the NJSIAA, the association that sets the rules for high school sports in New Jersey.

Gov. Phil Murphy signed the Create a Respectful and Open Workplace for Natural Hair Act, also known as the CROWN Act, in 2019. The law bars discrimination based on traits โ€œhistorically associated with race, including, but not limited to, hair texture, hair type and protective hairstyles.โ€ It followed an incident in which a high school wrestler was forced to cut his dreadlocks off in 2018.

At the Maplewood basketball game Thursday, two white referees refused to allow the player, who is Black, onto the court with beads in her hair, according to Aaron Breitman, head coach of the Columbia High School varsity basketball team in Maplewood. She tried three times to tie her hair back in tighter and tighter ways to appease the referees, Breitman said.

He did not identify the referees or the teen player.

โ€œThe student in question was clearly upset. She was embarrassed and the rest of the team was very confused,โ€ Breitman said. โ€œAnd in all honesty, it took away from the first quarter of the game. We started off very slow because the game was no longer our focus. โ€œ

The girl was allowed to reenter the game in the second quarter, after the Columbia coaches pointed out rules by the National Federation of State High School Associations saying beads and other hard objects are allowed in hair so long as theyโ€™re secured.

The NJSIAA received the letter from the Maplewood-South Orange School…

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