Legislature(2021 - 2022)DAVIS 106

03/14/2022 08:00 AM House EDUCATION

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* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ SB 36 U OF A REGENTS REPORTING REQUIREMENTS TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Invited & Public Testimony --
+= HB 108 CONCURRENT SECONDARY & TRADE SCHOOL TELECONFERENCED
Scheduled but Not Heard
+= HB 48 AK PERFORMANCE SCHOLARSHIP; ELIGIBILITY TELECONFERENCED
Scheduled but Not Heard
+= HB 350 SCHOOL BOND DEBT REIMBURSEMENT TELECONFERENCED
Scheduled but Not Heard
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
*+ HB 312 ALLOW NATURAL HAIRSTYLES TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Invited & Public Testimony --
                HB 312-ALLOW NATURAL HAIRSTYLES                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
8:06:34 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR STORY announced  that the first order  of business would                                                               
be  HOUSE BILL  NO.  312, "An  Act relating  to  dress codes  and                                                               
natural hairstyles."                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
8:06:50 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  GERAN TARR,  Alaska State  Legislature, as  prime                                                               
sponsor,  presented  HB  312.    She  stated  that  the  proposed                                                               
legislation would  prohibit schools and workplaces  from enacting                                                               
dress codes  that would restrict  individuals from  wearing their                                                               
natural  hair.   She recalled  that  she presented  to the  House                                                               
Education    Standing   Committee    on   school    climate   and                                                               
connectedness,   noting  that   students'  academic   achievement                                                               
improves  when they  feel welcome  and included  in their  school                                                               
environment.  She suggested that HB  312 is important as it would                                                               
improve   school  climate   across  Alaska.     She   stated  the                                                               
legislation would  ensure that  no employee  or student  would be                                                               
prohibited from work  or school for wearing  a natural hairstyle.                                                               
She  argued  that the  legislation  defines  which standards  are                                                               
unacceptable  for schools  and  employers to  place  on hair  and                                                               
provides  clarity for  school districts  in  a policy  statement.                                                               
She  stated  that 14  states  and  34 municipalities  across  the                                                               
country  have  adopted  these  policies.    She  cited  that  the                                                               
national version  of the legislation  is the CROWN Act,  which is                                                               
sponsored by the  soap company, Dove.  She suggested  it would be                                                               
great if Alaska could join others in passing a policy like this.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
8:09:41 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DAVID   SONG,   Staff,    Representative   Tarr,   Alaska   State                                                               
Legislature,  on behalf  of Representative  Tarr, prime  sponsor,                                                               
gave a  sectional analysis of  HB 312 [included in  the committee                                                               
packet], which read as follows [original punctuation provided]:                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     Section  1:  Adds  a new  section  (.135.  Dress  code;                                                                    
     natural hairstyles)  to AS 14.03 (Title  14. Education,                                                                    
     Libraries, and Museums, 03. Public Schools Generally)                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     This section disallows a  school district from adopting                                                                    
     a  school  dress code  that  prohibits  a student  from                                                                    
     wearing a  hairstyle that  is commonly  or historically                                                                    
     associated  with  race,  wearing  a  natural  hairstyle                                                                    
     regardless of  the student's hair  texture or  type, or                                                                    
     that  requires  a  student   to  permanently  or  semi-                                                                    
     permanently alter their natural hair.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     This bill makes an  exception to allow school districts                                                                    
     to restrict  hairstyles in any way  necessary to comply                                                                    
     with health or safety laws.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     Section  2:  Adds  a new  section  (.450.  Dress  code;                                                                    
     natural hairstyles)  to AS 23.10  (Title 23.  Labor and                                                                    
     Workers  Compensation  10.   Employment  Practices  and                                                                    
     Working Conditions)                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     This  section  is identical  to  section  1, except  it                                                                    
     deals  with  an   employee  and  employer  relationship                                                                    
     rather than school and students.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE TARR,  in response to Co-Chair  Story, stated that                                                               
there is  a zero  fiscal note, as  the legislation  would require                                                               
compliance only from school districts.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
8:11:34 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  STORY asked  for  an  example of  a  policy that  would                                                               
restrict hair for health or safety.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE TARR  responded that working in  a cafeteria would                                                               
be  an example,  as all  employees would  be required  to wear  a                                                               
hairnet, and a  policy here would make sure hair  does not get in                                                               
the  food.   She  added that  some students  work  in the  school                                                               
cafeteria.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
8:12:25 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  PRAX voiced  concern that  the term  "natural" in                                                               
statute  would  be vague.    He  stated  that the  committee  may                                                               
understand the  meaning relative  to the current  discussion, but                                                               
in  a  larger  context  there may  be  confusion,  especially  to                                                               
employers.    He  questioned  whether there  could  be  a  better                                                               
definition.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  TARR referred  to  invited  testimony to  address                                                               
this concern.   She stated that Legislative  Legal Services could                                                               
also address the definition to provide clarity.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
8:13:40 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
The committee took a brief at-ease at 8:13 a.m.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
8:13:56 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
WENDY GREENE,  Professor of  Law, Thomas R  Kline School  of Law,                                                               
Drexel University, testified  in support of HB 312.   She thanked                                                               
the bill sponsor  for the opportunity and shared that  she is one                                                               
of   the  nation's   leading  antidiscrimination   law  scholars,                                                               
specializing in  grooming-code discrimination.   She  stated that                                                               
over the past decade legal  publications have circulated her work                                                               
on  the   social  construction  of  race   and  the  contemporary                                                               
operation of  racial discrimination, and  she is a  co-drafter of                                                               
the  federal  CROWN  Act.    She said  that,  on  the  state  and                                                               
municipal level, she serves as a  legal advisor for cases on hair                                                               
discrimination in workplaces  and schools, supporting legislation                                                               
like  HB 312.   She  shared that  she has  devoted her  career to                                                               
activating reforms in legislation  and enhancing public awareness                                                               
around the harms of  unchecked, discriminatory grooming policies.                                                               
She  stated  that  policies that  denigrate  African  descendants                                                               
often  describe  natural   hairstyles  as  distracting,  extreme,                                                               
excessive,  unkempt,   and  unprofessional.    She   referred  to                                                               
examples of  natural hairstyles as  locs, braids,  twists, afros,                                                               
and  banshee  knots.   She  provided  the  example of  a  manager                                                               
telling a Black employee to "remove  her braids or lose her job,"                                                               
as the woman's braids were too "ghetto."                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MS. GREENE  stated that grooming  policies are often  enforced to                                                               
deprive  African descendants  of employment,  education, housing,                                                               
and access  to public  accommodation.   She stated  that African-                                                               
descendant males have  often been required to cut  off their hair                                                               
to  keep  a  job,  to  receive  a  high  school  diploma,  or  to                                                               
participate   in  sporting   competitions.     African-descendant                                                               
females,  while donning  natural hairstyles,  have been  likewise                                                               
deprived  of   opportunities,  along  with  being   subjected  to                                                               
heightened scrutiny and policing  in disproportionate levels than                                                               
counterparts.   She stated that  being subjected to this  type of                                                               
discipline  and   scrutiny  in  schools  and   workplaces  affect                                                               
emotional,  psychological, and  physical wellbeing.   She  stated                                                               
that  Black  females,  when faced  with  natural-hair  bans,  are                                                               
required  to   either  cut   their  hair   or  wear   their  hair                                                               
straightened.   She  stated that  straight-hair expectations  are                                                               
usually met with the use  of toxic chemicals, extreme heat, wigs,                                                               
and  weaves.    She  described these  methods  as  laborious  and                                                               
painful,  as African-descendant  females  often  suffer hair  and                                                               
scalp  burns from  chemical relaxers.   Not  only do  they suffer                                                               
pain, but the relaxers, wigs,  weaves, and extreme heat may cause                                                               
hair breakage, balding, and scalp disorders.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
8:18:17 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS.  GREENE  stated  that research  also  indicates  a  potential                                                               
correlation   between   hair-straightening   products   and   the                                                               
increased   occurrence  of   uterine  fibroids,   hormone-related                                                               
infertility, and  aggressive forms of breast  and uterine cancer.                                                               
Natural-hair bans in workplaces  and schools often leave African-                                                               
descendant females  in a "Catch-22"  situation: either  they wear                                                               
natural hair at  the risk of being deprived  of opportunities for                                                               
employment or education,  or they wear straight hair  at the risk                                                               
of  enduring   consequential  harm  to  their   psychological  or                                                               
physiological wellbeing.   She asserted  that many  Black females                                                               
are  put in  this lawful  bind under  federal jurisprudence  that                                                               
resulted  from a  "hair-splitting" legal  distinction created  in                                                               
the federal  court.  She stated  that after the enactment  of the                                                               
1964 Civil  Rights Act, federal  courts adopted what is  known as                                                               
the  mutability  doctrine.    Due to  this  doctrine,  she  said,                                                               
federal courts have repeatedly declared,  for 40 years, that when                                                               
an employer  denies an  African descendant  a job  because he/she                                                               
adorns   an  afro,   the  employer   engages  in   unlawful  race                                                               
discrimination; however, the moment  the individual twists, locs,                                                               
or  braids the  afro,  and he/she  suffers  adverse treatment  on                                                               
these  grounds, the  employer's discrimination  would be  lawful.                                                               
She   stated  that   this   is  a   pervasive   form  of   racial                                                               
discrimination that harkens back to  the era of racial slavery in                                                               
this country.  She argued  that HB 312 ensures that unjustifiable                                                               
gaps  in  federal civil  rights'  protection  does not  exist  in                                                               
Alaska.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS.  GREENE stated  that for  many  African descendants,  donning                                                               
natural hairstyles  is a critical  feature of racial  or cultural                                                               
identity, or  simply how  their hair grows.   She  continued that                                                               
the  legislation  ensures  clear protection  by  eliminating  the                                                               
possibility of  being deprived  an equal  opportunity due  to the                                                               
expression of racial or cultural  identity.  She thanked the bill                                                               
sponsors  for  advancing the  civil  rights  legislation for  all                                                               
those  who  experience  racial discrimination  on  the  basis  of                                                               
characteristics associated with their  racial or ethnic identity,                                                               
such as  skin complexion, hair  texture, hairstyle,  language, or                                                               
accent.   She continued that  this is the policy  stance "notably                                                               
advanced  by Alaska's  Department  of  Administration for  public                                                               
employees."     She  urged  committee  members   to  support  the                                                               
legislation  as   it  provides  clear  and   effective  statutory                                                               
protection   when  these   forms  of   discrimination  occur   in                                                               
workplaces and schools.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
8:22:38 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ROZLYN  GRADY-WYCHE, Vice  President, Alaska  Coalition of  BIPOC                                                               
Educators, testified in  support of HB 312.  She  shared that she                                                               
graduated  from  high   school  in  Anchorage  and   works  as  a                                                               
paraprofessional  at   Mountain  View  Elementary   School  while                                                               
pursuing a  teacher certification.   She stated she is  the owner                                                               
of a hair  salon and a fourth-generation hair stylist.   She also                                                               
shared that she  is the founder of the Alaska  Coalition of BIPOC                                                               
[Black, Indigenous, and  people of color] Educators.   She stated                                                               
that  she  supports  the  bill,   as  it  reflects  her  personal                                                               
experience in high  school.  In an effort to  control a "bad hair                                                               
day," she  stated that  the school  administration sent  her home                                                               
for wearing  a pink  bandana in  her hair.   She  related another                                                               
personal story that,  while recently at work,  she complimented a                                                               
kindergartener  on her  afro.   She said  that later  the child's                                                               
mother told her that the little  girl did not like the hairstyle,                                                               
but after the compliment at  school, the kindergartener came home                                                               
happy.   She stated that image  is important to students,  and it                                                               
starts early.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
8:26:54 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. GRADY-WYCHE stated that during  the history of slavery in the                                                               
U.S. most  African Americans styled  their hair in an  attempt to                                                               
mimic  the  styles of  White  society.    She stated  that  Black                                                               
peoples' hair is  characterized by texture and  tightness and has                                                               
been  described as  kinky, coarse,  nappy, or  like wool.   These                                                               
characteristics have led  to negative views of  kinky hair, which                                                               
is  the opposite  of the  European-American  standard of  beauty.                                                               
She  stated that,  as  a result,  the  practice of  straightening                                                               
Black  hair  gained  popularity among  African  Americans.    The                                                               
process of  straightening Black hair  uses caustic  relaxers that                                                               
contain lye, which  often damages hair and results  in hair loss.                                                               
She  added that  African slaves  did  not have  the resources  to                                                               
practice hair  grooming and used  sheep-fleecing tools  to detail                                                               
their hair.   She stated  that they often suffered  scalp disease                                                               
and  infection  due to  their  living  conditions and  would  use                                                               
cornmeal on their scalp, shave their  hair, or wear hats, as they                                                               
were often  expected to appear  well groomed.  The  men sometimes                                                               
would wear wigs  to mimic their master's  hairstyles, while women                                                               
typically plated  or braided  their hair.   After  slavery, Black                                                               
people learned  to use  lard to moisturize  the hair,  hot butter                                                               
knives  to curl  their hair,  and lye  to straighten  their hair.                                                               
She stated  that kinky hair and  the afro hairstyle in  the 1960s                                                               
represented  a political  statement synonymous  with Black  pride                                                               
and  beauty, and,  by default,  a fundamental  tool in  the Black                                                               
power movement.  She stated  that the phrase "Black is beautiful"                                                               
expresses an  affirmation of African heritage,  and wearing kinky                                                               
hair today  embraces "one's natural  self."  She  described that,                                                               
since the  late 20th  century, the  Black community  has promoted                                                               
the idea of  identity with hairstyles as  cornrows, locs, braids,                                                               
hair spritz,  short chopped,  and kinky.   She stated  that, even                                                               
though this  expression of  identity has been  joyful, it  is not                                                               
celebrated  in American  culture.   She voiced  the opinion  that                                                               
disapproval  of Black  hairstyles is  still present  today.   She                                                               
expressed the  concern that,  due to the  ideal of  White beauty,                                                               
reserved,  straight hairstyles  seem to  be more  accepted, while                                                               
other  styles face  scrutiny.   She expressed  the idea  that the                                                               
White-beauty  ideal  is  pervasive  in everyday  life,  but  more                                                               
specifically  the workplace  and school.   She  described herself                                                               
and  her  children as  having  natural  hair.   She  offered  her                                                               
support  of HB  312 because  "Black is  beautiful" and  should be                                                               
accepted.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
8:30:57 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ALYSSA QUINTYNE,  representing self,  testified in support  of HB
312.   She thanked the  community for the opportunity  to testify                                                               
and  shared  that many  African  Americans  in Alaska  suffer  in                                                               
silence  due to  discrimination.   She  stated  that every  Black                                                               
acquaintance she has in Alaska  has been harassed, sent home, and                                                               
spoken to about their hair in  the workplace.  She shared that at                                                               
school in Fairbanks teachers,  administrators, and classmates put                                                               
her  "through  the  ringer."   She  stated  that  classmates  and                                                               
teachers would touch her hair  without permission, and they would                                                               
ask inappropriate  questions about  her hair's texture  and odor.                                                               
She stated  that [due  to her  hair] the  school barred  her from                                                               
participating in  classes and  sporting events.   She  added that                                                               
other students  physically harassed her by  cutting, burning, and                                                               
pulling her hair.  She stated  that her mother went to the school                                                               
district  about  the  harassment,  but the  school  district  did                                                               
nothing "to  address the ignorance  and bigotry" of  the teachers                                                               
and administrators.  She stated  that there were never any amends                                                               
"for  the decades  of harm  they  had to  put up  with from  that                                                               
district."    With no  other  authority  to consult,  her  mother                                                               
finally  threatened legal  action.   As  a  result, the  district                                                               
spoke with the teacher.   She stated that afterwards she suffered                                                               
retaliation from the  teacher.  She added that  experiences as an                                                               
adult  in the  workplace  have  been no  better,  except for  her                                                               
current job.  She shared  that a human resources department wrote                                                               
a policy targeting her hairstyle,  and she received the ultimatum                                                               
in another job to "come to  work with your hair straight or don't                                                               
come at  all."  She  indicated that  she has worked  many diverse                                                               
jobs  and  has always  worn  her  hair  in reasonable  styles  as                                                               
braids, twists,  pressed hair,  and plaits,  and her  hair always                                                               
fits into  a hairnet, as needed.   She shared that  she has lived                                                               
paycheck to paycheck as a young adult with few options.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS. QUINTYNE  stated that  she has made  attempts to  address the                                                               
problem  in her  community, beginning  at 13  years old  when she                                                               
gave testimony  "begging" the  school board  to change  the dress                                                               
code because  it was discriminatory.   She stated that  for three                                                               
years  she served  on  the [North  Star  Borough School  District                                                               
Diversity Committee] and worked on  the dress code for the entire                                                               
district.   She stated  that she educated  the committee  and the                                                               
school board  about bonnets, doo  rags, and gang  affiliation, of                                                               
which  she described  as "racial  microaggression rooted  in fear                                                               
that  targets Black  and Brown  students."   She stated  that she                                                               
supplied resources  and suggestions on the  responsibility of the                                                               
district  concerning  a   student's  financial  access,  culture,                                                               
identity, and  expression.  She  stated that she shared  the idea                                                               
about how language, such as  "presentable" and "neat," reinforces                                                               
a European beauty standard that  does not apply to every student.                                                               
She related the belief that her attempts were to no avail.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
8:37:35 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. QUINTYNE  expressed the belief  that it is easier  for people                                                               
to dismiss and belittle children  and young adults who experience                                                               
hair discrimination.  She stated that  she has been told to stand                                                               
up for  herself, tell the  teacher, or tell human  resources; but                                                               
the authority figures  were the ones perpetuating the  harm.  She                                                               
stated  that the  city council  would not  address the  issue and                                                               
referred to it as "a Lower  48 problem," and the borough assembly                                                               
"threw  their hands  up" but  then  passed a  Black Lives  Matter                                                               
resolution.  She voiced the  opinion that the assembly passed the                                                               
resolution because  "our lives are  only as  worthy as it  is for                                                               
them  to  be performative."    She  expressed the  difficulty  in                                                               
understanding  how young  people  are supposed  to  learn from  a                                                               
community  and its  adults  when the  authority  figures are  the                                                               
source of pain and trauma,  and the legislature and congress does                                                               
nothing  in response  to a  constituent who  testifies and  sends                                                               
emails.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS.  QUINTYNE  put forth  the  opinion  that Black  students  [in                                                               
Alaska] are  unwelcome and  unseen, but then  they are  told that                                                               
there  is not  a racial  problem.   She expressed  exhaustion and                                                               
futility.   She stated that  when she  shared HB 312  with people                                                               
she has  known for years,  who have witnessed her  struggle, they                                                               
responded that they  "didn't even know that was a  problem."  She                                                               
expressed  hope  that  the  legislation  would  allow  those  who                                                               
understand to  teach others about  the issue, as  the legislation                                                               
would open  the conversation on  discrimination, microaggression,                                                               
and lateral  violence.  She  stated that, instead of  waiting for                                                               
marginalized communities  to come  forth and offer  their trauma,                                                               
legislators need to  actually look at what is  happening in their                                                               
communities and  make sure constituents  are being  protected the                                                               
way that they  exist, and not the way they  are allowed to exist.                                                               
Most  importantly,  she  offered   the  hope  that  future  Black                                                               
children in  Alaska would  feel welcomed  and respected  by their                                                               
peers and the  adults in their lives, and they  could grow up out                                                               
of love, not survival.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
8:42:25 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE PRAX stated  that he would like  to understand how                                                               
to define  the conversation  in law, so  that people  without the                                                               
benefit of  the committee's discussion  could understand  what is                                                               
to  be expected  of  them.   He  stated  that  "for some  reason,                                                               
throughout history,  we have divided  ourselves into  groups that                                                               
look like each  other and talk like each other  and act like each                                                               
other and  would like to  remain separate."   He stated  that, as                                                               
the  population increases,  there needs  to be  accommodation for                                                               
everyone, and  "we have to decide  how to get along  better".  He                                                               
expressed  that there  has  to be  a  balance between  individual                                                               
recognition and conformity in a standard others have to accept.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
8:44:05 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  TARR,  responding  to an  earlier  question  from                                                               
Representative  Prax, referred  to the  language in  the bill  on                                                               
page  1, lines  8-10.   She  stated that  this language  provides                                                               
qualifiers  to  the  definition  of a  natural  hairstyle.    She                                                               
inquired whether  these lines need  more clarity.   She indicated                                                               
that this would  be the stage to develop clarity,  and any issues                                                               
should  be  addressed  now.    She voiced  the  belief  that  the                                                               
language of the  bill is similar to what other  states have done.                                                               
She asked that Ms. Greene address this.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
8:45:09 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. GREENE  responded that the  definition in HB 312  mirrors the                                                               
federal and state legislation, but  without the phrase "includes,                                                               
but  is not  limited  to".   She advised  if  this language  were                                                               
included in the  proposed legislation, it would  not only provide                                                               
a  more expansive  understanding  of what  constitutes a  natural                                                               
hairstyle,  but also  encompass individuals  of different  racial                                                               
ethnic  identities   who  may  be   experiencing  this   kind  of                                                               
discrimination.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
8:47:14 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  PRAX  expressed  the opinion  that  his  question                                                               
would be  impossible to answer,  as it is impossible  to describe                                                               
the different situations in which  someone might find a hairstyle                                                               
natural and  acceptable.  He continued  that it also goes  to the                                                               
demeanor of  the person  and the  context of  the situation.   He                                                               
said  that it  would be  very difficult  to define  by law,  as a                                                               
style may be  natural to one person, while another  might find it                                                               
"aggressive and a threat."   In example, he described a situation                                                               
in Fairbanks where  he and his son were walking  along the street                                                               
when they  "encountered a gentleman  that had  geometric patterns                                                               
tattooed on  his face and  dreadlocks that mimicked  Bob Marley."                                                               
He stated  that the man  looked "scary" and  that he and  his son                                                               
went around  him.  He  said, "We did  not want to  associate with                                                               
him."  He stated that he explained  to his son that he would come                                                               
across different situations not found  at home, and that he would                                                               
have to  "learn to tolerate  and accept  this."  He  stated that,                                                               
within a month, the same man  with the tattoos and hairstyle came                                                               
into the  store he was  managing to  purchase a pair  of Carhartt                                                               
trousers.   He  stated that  in this  context "of  me wanting  to                                                               
serve him and develop that  relationship enough to meet his needs                                                               
... his hairstyle, his manner,  and everything else was perfectly                                                               
acceptable to me."   He stated that seeing him  on the street and                                                               
not knowing him, "I felt threatened  by his presence.  That's the                                                               
problem we run into."                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS.  GREENE stated  that HB  312  is important  because it  would                                                               
address stereotypes  affixed to  people due to  their hairstyles.                                                               
She expressed  hope that the  legislation would diminish,  if not                                                               
eliminate, this stereotyping; therefore,  the hairstyle would not                                                               
serve as a barrier for any  exchange or relationship.  She stated                                                               
that the  crux of  the issue  is not  what constitutes  a natural                                                               
hairstyle,  but that  the natural  hairstyle  is associated  with                                                               
social  identity.   To clarify,  she posed  the question:  "Under                                                               
what circumstances do you have to  accommodate ... or do you have                                                               
to  ... accept  an  individual's expression  of  their racial  or                                                               
ethnic  identity that  may  be  shaped ...  by  certain types  of                                                               
biases that are conscious or unconscious in nature?"                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
8:51:42 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. QUINTYNE  stated that Representative  Prax's example  is very                                                               
similar to  her experiences.   She stated  that the issue  is not                                                               
necessarily what  people think about [African  Americans], but it                                                               
is  when a  person  in  a position  of  authority  has a  certain                                                               
perspective  about  [African  Americans] and  could  dictate  the                                                               
outcome of  a situation, such as  a job interview or  class.  She                                                               
expressed the  belief that people's  right to discern  her, their                                                               
opinion  and perspective,  would be  more legally  protected than                                                               
her actual right  to exist, the way that she  exists.  She argued                                                               
that  this  is not  just  about  hairstyles, but  about  [African                                                               
Americans'] ability to keep their  hair neat and healthy, as this                                                               
often requires  braids, locs, and other  styles.  If the  hair of                                                               
[African Americans] is  not styled, she stated that  it could mat                                                               
and retain  dirt more  easily, so  it becomes  a matter  of Black                                                               
hygiene.   She expressed the  confidence that most people  in the                                                               
community can wash, condition, and  detangle their hair and "call                                                               
it good,"  but Black people have  to do things differently.   She                                                               
said that  they may have  a certain hairstyle,  not as a  part of                                                               
their  spirituality and  culture,  but to  help  keep their  body                                                               
neat.   She  argued what  would  be more  important -  somebody's                                                               
right to discern, or somebody's right to exist?                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
8:54:22 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR STORY opened public testimony on HB 312.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
8:54:48 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MORGAN  LIM,   Lobbyist,  Government  Affairs   Manager,  Planned                                                               
Parenthood Alliance  Advocates, testified  in support of  HB 312.                                                               
He  stated that  Planned Parenthood  is committed  to creating  a                                                               
world in  which all  people have autonomy  over their  own bodies                                                               
and is in strong  support of HB 312.  He  stated that dress codes                                                               
that ban certain hairstyles perpetuate  racist stereotypes.  This                                                               
could lead  to over  policing and  disciplining people  of color,                                                               
effecting educational, professional,  and physiological outcomes.                                                               
He  stated   that  Afrocentric  and  Indigenous   hairstyles  are                                                               
expressions  of  identity  that hold  historical,  cultural,  and                                                               
spiritual significance,  and this  serves to link  historical and                                                               
contemporary  identities.   The  expression  of identity  through                                                               
hairstyle also  represents a rejection of  Eurocentric ideas that                                                               
the  texture of  White European  hair is  inherently professional                                                               
and beautiful,  while the texture  and style of nonwhite  hair is                                                               
inherently  unprofessional and  undesirable.   He continued  that                                                               
dress codes that imbed racial  stereotypes into policy perpetuate                                                               
a White  supremacist's belief system  and result  in disciplinary                                                               
discrimination  against  students and  employees  of  color.   He                                                               
stated  that  research shows  schools  that  enforce dress  codes                                                               
against Black students by policing  hairstyles leads educators to                                                               
discipline students of color more  often than White students.  He                                                               
stated that  this discipline results  in the loss of  class time,                                                               
which impacts  graduation rates and  access to  higher education.                                                               
He  stated   that  Planned   Parenthood  strongly   supports  the                                                               
legislation and urges the committee to move it forward.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
8:57:10 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE PRAX stated that he would  like to show a photo to                                                               
the committee.   He made  a comparison  of the individual  in the                                                               
photo with  Mr. Lim,  stating that they  both have  a shaved-head                                                               
hairstyle.  He pointed out the  person in the photo was wearing a                                                               
different  style of  jacket and  had  a scowl  on his  face.   He                                                               
referenced the article attached to  the photo that identified the                                                               
man  with the  skinhead  movement.   He  suggested  that Mr.  Lim                                                               
dressed so  as to make "an  attempt to conform to  what you would                                                               
expect to find  in this room."   He questioned Mr. Lim  on how to                                                               
"tell the difference between him ... and you."                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. LIM  responded that  the purpose  of the  bill would  be that                                                               
people are not judged by  their hairstyles, but by their actions.                                                               
If  a person  is a  part  of a  certain movement,  they would  be                                                               
judged on that.  He stated  that many people in the building have                                                               
hairstyles similar to his, and they  all seek to not be judged by                                                               
that style.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
8:59:28 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
LISA RUSH, Alaska  Black Caucus, testified in support  of HB 312.                                                               
She  shared that  the Alaska  Black Caucus  advocates for  Black,                                                               
Indigenous,  and  other  people  of  color  in  their  lives  and                                                               
livelihoods across Alaska.   She stated that  the organization is                                                               
committed to  eliminating all forms of  racial prejudice, keeping                                                               
the public aware  of the adverse effects  of racial, educational,                                                               
political,  and economic  discrimination, and  resolving to  take                                                               
all  necessary action  to secure  and assure  elimination of  all                                                               
forms of prejudices.  She  stated that history has shown implicit                                                               
and  explicit prejudices  against natural  hair deeply  rooted in                                                               
schools and  workplaces.  She  asserted that the focus  should be                                                               
on the  quality of  the student  or the  employee, who  should be                                                               
able to  wear his/her hair  with pride  and dignity.   She stated                                                               
that the Alaska Black Caucus  supports legislation that prohibits                                                               
policies  that  have a  disparate  impact  on natural  hairstyles                                                               
closely related to race.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
9:01:21 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
JACQUELINE  RAY, representing  self, testified  in support  of HB
312.                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
9:02:02 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
PHIL MOSER,  representing self, testified  in support of  HB 312.                                                               
Referencing  [Native Alaskan]  boarding schools,  he stated  that                                                               
there has  been a long history  of discrimination in Alaska.   He                                                               
maintained that  schools have often  functioned as a  place where                                                               
Black  and Indigenous  children are  disciplined, suspended,  and                                                               
expelled at  much higher rates  than the general population.   He                                                               
stated that these  children may have a harder time  later in life                                                               
due to  their treatment in  school.   He expressed the  hope that                                                               
the legislation would help prevent this.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
9:04:31 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MARKITA  WYCHE, representing  self,  testified in  support of  HB
312.  She  shared that she is an African-American  woman and grew                                                               
up   in  Alaska.      She  stated   that   she  has   experienced                                                               
discrimination  in  school  and  at work.    She  explained  that                                                               
judgements are made  about her character based  on her hairstyle,                                                               
and  she expressed  hope that  children in  the future  would not                                                               
have to experience this.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
9:06:03 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DANYELLE KIMP,  President, Alaska  Coalition of  BIPOC Educators,                                                               
testified in support of  HB 312.  He shared that  he is a retired                                                               
military combat officer, a parent,  and an African American male.                                                               
He  stated  that  he  is  a  co-founding  member  of  the  Alaska                                                               
Coalition  of BIPOC  Educators, and  its mission  is to  champion                                                               
equity in education for communities  of color in order to achieve                                                               
equality.  He stated that HB 312  would be a remedy to a century-                                                               
long  problem of  discrimination against  Black people  for their                                                               
hair.   He cited the incident  when a local student  had to fight                                                               
to keep his  hairstyle.  He said in this  fight, the student lost                                                               
his  heritage  and  his  history.     He  referenced  the  unfair                                                               
treatment that forces Black women  to use relaxers on their hair.                                                               
He  said  that natural,  healthy  hairstyles  are expressions  of                                                               
Black  heritage and  history.   He  stated that  microaggressions                                                               
come in  the form of the  comment made earlier in  the hearing by                                                               
the legislator  who expressed that  "a man with locs  was scary."                                                               
He expressed  the belief that  people cannot change  each other's                                                               
perspective,   but    the   legislation   could    help   prevent                                                               
discriminatory actions  toward individuals.   He shared  that his                                                               
son wears locs, so HB 312  would help protect him and other Black                                                               
students.  He stated that a  few years ago the U.S. Military made                                                               
necessary  changes   to  its   regulations  to   protect  natural                                                               
hairstyles.   He asserted that  "if they  can do it,  then Alaska                                                               
could  do it  too."    He stated  that  the  BIPOC educators  and                                                               
community need the bill, but  most importantly the BIPOC students                                                               
do.                                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
9:10:32 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  PRAX expressed  the  need to  understand when  it                                                               
would  be  acceptable  for  someone  to  feel  threatened  [by  a                                                               
person's  hairstyle].   He  requested that,  for  the benefit  of                                                               
understanding,  those  testifying  consider sending  pictures  of                                                               
acceptable, natural hairstyles.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. KIMP  responded that if  someone is interested  in something,                                                               
he/she should do the research.   He stated that the burden should                                                               
not  always  be on  people  of  color  or  people who  have  been                                                               
historically oppressed.   He stated that if a  person is curious,                                                               
he/she  should  meet  some  Black   people  to  attain  a  better                                                               
understanding of the issue.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE PRAX  expressed interest in learning  [about Black                                                               
culture]  but  believed  that   there  is  miscommunication,  and                                                               
discussion is the best way to  sort out the issue.  He reasserted                                                               
that there needs to be some sort of recognizable standards.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
9:13:50 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR   STORY  stated   that  she   appreciated  the   honesty                                                               
throughout  the  discussion.   She  opined  that people  grow  by                                                               
reflecting  on   thoughts  they  hold  against   others  who  are                                                               
considered  different.   She stated  that serving  on the  school                                                               
board helped her be in touch with unconscious biases.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
9:14:44 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
NORIA  CLARK, representing  self, testified  in opposition  to HB
312.   She stated that  there are  larger issues with  youth that                                                               
are familial  and systematic.   She shared  that her  heritage is                                                               
Algerian  and  African  American,  and she  is  considered  light                                                               
complected.   She  stated  that her  mother taught  her  to be  a                                                               
strong woman  and have  confidence in  life, but  she experiences                                                               
reverse  racism.   She  stated  that people  speak  to  her in  a                                                               
different  way  and  are  mean   to  her  because  of  her  light                                                               
complexion  and White  haircut.   She is  a helicopter  pilot and                                                               
because of this  she had to cut  her long, curly hair  and wear a                                                               
White hairstyle.   She  added that  when her  hair was  curly and                                                               
messy, she would get compliments.   She expressed the belief that                                                               
the  issue is  [parents]  should teach  confidence and  encourage                                                               
their  children  to accept  who  they  are  and  be happy.    She                                                               
asserted that it  comes down to people being kind  to each other.                                                               
She  stated  she is  happy  with  herself  and everyone  [in  the                                                               
discussion].    She  thanked  the committee  for  its  hard  work                                                               
against "any kind  of racism."  She stressed that  people need to                                                               
unite, love, and  take care of each other,  otherwise humans will                                                               
not be  moving forward in  the world.   She stated that  she does                                                               
not  support the  bill because  legislation does  not need  to be                                                               
about hair  products or sending  pictures of  hairstyles, because                                                               
this will not make a difference.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:20:10 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DAVID  NEES, representing  self,  testified in  opposition to  HB
312.  He  shared that he has  been an educator for  over 30 years                                                               
and  was a  member of  the  2014 House  Taskforce on  Sustainable                                                               
Education.  He argued that  the committee is about education, and                                                               
the  bill,  even   though  it  is  noble,  does   not  serve  any                                                               
educational purpose.   He stated  that the failure rate  of Black                                                               
males  in the  Anchorage School  District is  the highest  of any                                                               
school  district  in the  state.    He  said,  "I don't  see  how                                                               
allowing  them to  wear afros  is going  to increase  that."   He                                                               
expressed concern  that the bill  would not allow  exemptions for                                                               
occupations where  long hair would  be dangerous, citing  this as                                                               
the  reason  firefighters and  policemen  have  short hair.    He                                                               
argued  that  the  legislation  would  not  increase  educational                                                               
output but  promote tribalism.   He stated  the opinion  that the                                                               
legislation is  looking for  a problem.   He maintained  that the                                                               
problem in  front of  the committee is  the failure  of education                                                               
for minority children  in Alaska, concluding that  this bill does                                                               
nothing to resolve that problem.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:22:11 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ROSALYN CAROL  WYCHE, representing self, testified  in support of                                                               
HB  312.   She  stated  that  she is  the  mother  of a  previous                                                               
testifier.   She  shared that  she has  been a  hairdresser since                                                               
1982 in  Alaska and a  third-generation salon owner.   She stated                                                               
that she  has seen many different  ethnic people in her  shop and                                                               
many  White  people  with  adopted  Black  children  who  do  not                                                               
understand Black hair.  She  stated that the difference is, while                                                               
White  people have  to clean  the oil  out of  their hair,  Black                                                               
people need to add oil.   She expressed the opinion that the bill                                                               
is necessary,  as people  are still being  told they  must change                                                               
their hair  to keep their  job.  She  related the story  that her                                                               
granddaughter  was recently  told at  school that  she could  not                                                               
wear  a scarf  on her  head because  it was  not affiliated  with                                                               
religion.    She stated  that  hairstyles  are part  of  African-                                                               
American culture.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MS. WYCHE offered her understanding  of the frightening aspect of                                                               
appearance.  She  stated that she would be frightened  if a White                                                               
male that  looked like  "a caveman" approached  her.   She stated                                                               
that if  hair is  maintained and presentable  there should  be no                                                               
problem.   She  stated she  has always  told her  girls they  are                                                               
beautiful,  but they  still had  negative  encounters at  school.                                                               
She  shared that  she  considers  herself to  be  a strong  Black                                                               
woman, but she has a  daughter, who was self-conscious at school.                                                               
She  acknowledged that  not all  people are  strong.   She stated                                                               
that,  as a  strong Black  woman, she  reinforced her  daughter's                                                               
identity  as precious  and  beautiful.   She  said that,  through                                                               
history, Black  people have  been stripped  of their  culture and                                                               
their traditions.  She explained  that Black people only have the                                                               
traditions taught  in America, so  it should  not be a  bad thing                                                               
for them to express a little culture through hairstyles.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
9:30:00 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  STORY, after  ascertaining there  was no  one else  who                                                               
wished to testify, closed public testimony on HB 312.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
9:30:12 AM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR STORY announced that HB 312 was held over.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
SB 36 Bill Packet.pdf HEDC 3/14/2022 8:00:00 AM
SB 36
SB0036B.PDF HEDC 3/14/2022 8:00:00 AM
SB 36
SB036_UA_Accred_Reporting_SponsorStatement.pdf HEDC 3/14/2022 8:00:00 AM
SB 36
SB036_UA-Accreditation_Sectional_Version B.pdf HEDC 3/14/2022 8:00:00 AM
SB 36
SB036_UnivAK_Accreditation_Research_UA Accred Report_25August2020.pdf HEDC 3/14/2022 8:00:00 AM
SB 36
HB 108 Invited Testimony 030422.pdf HEDC 3/14/2022 8:00:00 AM
HB 108
HB 48 Support 031022.pdf HEDC 3/14/2022 8:00:00 AM
HB 48
HB 350 Oppose 031022.pdf HEDC 3/14/2022 8:00:00 AM
HB 350