An incident that a representative from the National Parents Union equated to a โmodern day scalpingโโor at the very least, a violation of a young childโs bodily autonomyโhas been dismissed as a misfiring of โgood intentions.โ That is, according to officials from Michiganโs Mount Pleasant Public Schools.
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As The Root reported in April, the controversy began when 7-year-old Jurnee Hoffmeyer came home from school in tears and with significantly shorter hair, after the schoolโs librarian had taken it upon herself to โeven outโ the girlโs asymmetrical curly hairstyle. The incident added insult to existing injury, as Jurneeโs hair had also been snipped just days before by a classmate on the bus, causing her father to take her to get the asymmetrical style professionally cut.
โI asked what happened and said โI thought I told you no child should ever cut your hair,โโ explained father Jimmy Hoffmeyer. โShe said, โbut Dad, it was the teacher.โ The teacher cut her hair to even it out.โ
Compounding the issue, both the classmate and the librarian are white, while Jurnee is biracial. The incident quickly went viral, with Jimmy, who is of Black and white ethnicity himself (Jurneeโs mother is white) making the media rounds in defense of his daughter, who heโd removed from the school as a result.
โIโm not one to try to make things about race,โ he said at the time. โIโve pretty much grown up with only white people, myself.โ Nevertheless, after a rash of incidents in which the hair of Black students has been policed and often violated in similar ways, many understandably felt bias might be at playโespecially given that the racial demographics of Mount Pleasant are currently only four percent Black.
Per the New York Post, โA staffer for the National Parents Union, a network of groups and activists advocating on behalf [of] children, equated the March haircutting incidents to a โmodern-day scalpingโ while insisting they were racially motivated.โ
Unsurprisingly, the results of an MPPS investigationโwhich reportedly โincluded interviews with district staff, students and their families, as well as a review of video, photographic evidence and social media posts, district officials saidโโcame to a different conclusion.
โItโs clear from the third-party investigation and the districtโs own internal investigation that MPPS employees had good intentions when performing the haircut,โ school board officials said in a statement issued Friday to MLive.com. โRegardless, their decisions and actions are unacceptable and show a major lack of judgment. The employees involved have acknowledged their wrong actions and apologized.โ
While denying that the librarian acted with racial bias, she has reportedly been placed on a โlast chanceโ employment agreement, โmeaning any future infraction will likely result in her termination,โ reports the Post. Two other school employees who failed to report the incident received โwritten reprimands.โ
โWe believe a last chance agreement is appropriate given that the employee has an outstanding record of conduct and has never once been reprimanded in more than 20 years of work at MPPS,โ said the schoolโs board.
However, according to Jimmy Hoffmeyer, the districtโs investigations did not include interviews with either father or daughter. โThey never questioned my daughter or me,โ he told the Associated Press on Friday. โWho did they talk to? Did they really do an investigation?โ
โA white employee and white administrators being investigated by a nearly all-white school board who hired an unknown โindependent investigatorโ is not an appropriate lens by which to evaluate this situation,โ NPU officials added via a statement to MLive.com, calling the results of the investigation a โslap on the wristโ compared to the potential โlifelong traumaโ for Jurnee.
โJurnee must and will have justice,โ the statement added.
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