Board OKs $1.2 Million To Rename Schools Honoring Confederacy
Texas School Board To Spend $1.2 Million To Rename Schools Honoring Confederate Leaders
The Houston Independent School District voted in favor of providing more than $1.2 million to pay for the renaming of schools that honor Confederate leaders, The San Antonio Express-News reports.
Eight schools, named for Confederate leaders like Generals Robert E. Lee and Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson, are slated for name changes. The high price tag includes the expense of changing signage, as well as replacing sports and band uniforms, The Express-News said.
The change has been divisive. Nine plaintiffs from the district sued the school board in June, alleging that the name changes were illegal and politically motivated, according to The Houston Chronicle.
Back in January, after voting 5-4 in favor of the name change, the board issued a statement explaining that the move was necessary “to represent the values and diversity of the school district,” the largest in the state, reported KXAN-TV. Most of those who spoke at the meeting opposed the decision.
The name changes go into effect for the 2016-17 school year.
SOURCE: San Antonio Express-News, Houston Chronicle, KXAN-TV | PHOTO CREDIT: Getty, Twitter
SEE ALSO:
Harvard Acknowledges Its Role In Slavery
Yale: College Named For Slavery Defender Stays
- The Blackest Binge-Worthy Shows To Watch Over The Holidays
- ‘Sinners’: Black Horror Scholars Discuss The Blockbuster Film
- The Tragic Case Of Rodney Hinton Jr. And The Trauma Of Black Grief In America
- The African American Policy Forum’s 5th Annual CRT Summer School Series Was A Call To Action For Social Justice
- Black Voters Matter x Me Too PSA