Hoover schools consider prohibiting racist language by students off campus

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Hoover school officials are proposing changes to their code of conduct that include a prohibition against racist or sexist conduct or language, whether it occurs on or off campus or at school events.

This comes after a video was released online in March showing Hoover and Spain Park high school students making racist and anti-Semitic comments in someone’s home.

In the video, one student said that without the Holocaust, Jews would be running the world. Other students used racial slurs against black people, saying that they needed them gone and that they should be placed in concentration camps. The video was shared broadly across the country and sparked outrage.

Schools Superintendent Kathy Murphy said then that she was sad and disappointed that young people would have such attitudes but said she had no control over things people choose to do outside of the school system’s jurisdiction.

A proposed change in the code of conduct would make it a class 3 infraction for a student to engage in any conduct or language “that has the purpose or effect (or that could be reasonably perceived as having the purpose or effect) or disparaging, insulting, degrading, or demeaning any person or class of persons based on race, ethnicity, national origin, religion, disability, gender, sexual orientation, or any other trait or characteristic that enjoys protection from discrimination or harassment as a matter of law or board policy — including but not limited to emails, social media postings and other forms of communication that creates or substantially contributes to disruption in the school setting, whether or not it takes place on school property or at a school-related event, and whether or not it was intended as a private communication or for a limited audience.”

School officials also propose to add a new disciplinary option for class 3 infractions: prohibiting students from attending extra-curricular activities or a graduation ceremony.

Other options for class 3 infractions already in place include placement in alternative school, expulsion, permanent removal from a school bus and revocation of technology privileges.

Take our poll about the proposed code of conduct change related to off-campus conduct and speech here.

Assistant Superintendent Tera Simmons shared these and other proposed changes in the code of conduct with the Hoover school board Tuesday night. Murphy said she plans to ask the school board to approve the changes at its meeting on June 4 but is open to any questions or discussions school board members want to have regarding the proposed changes.

The school board’s attorney helped draft the language for the proposed changes, and the changes have been forwarded to the U.S. Department of Justice and NAACP Legal Defense Fund for their review as well, Murphy said.

There were many other changes recommended in the code of conduct, including:

This article was updated to add additional proposed changes to the dress code and to clarify several other proposed changes to the code of conduct.

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