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School mascot bans stall in Illinois Senate but could be revived

The Illinois State Capitol on Wednesday, Feb. 21, 2024, in Springfield, Ill.
Brian Munoz
/
漏 2024 外网天堂
Illinois lawmakers did not meet Friday鈥檚 deadline to pass the bills that bar Native American and references to disabilities in mascots, logos and names out of committee and onto the Senate floor.

Two bills in the Illinois General Assembly that would require some school districts to change their mascots, logos and team names have stalled in the Senate 鈥 but still have paths forward.

One, , would prohibit the use of Native American mascots across the state. The other, , would bar references to those with disabilities. Both passed the House earlier this year, but lawmakers did not meet Friday鈥檚 deadline to pass the bills out of committee and onto the Senate floor.

If the first bill passed, at least 11 schools in the Metro East 鈥 including the Collinsville Kahoks, Granite City Warriors, Mascoutah Indians and Cahokia Comanches 鈥 may be required to phase out their mascots. The Freeburg Midgets would be forced to change by the second bill.

The development that both did not make it out of committee on time has led opponents to . Collinsville and Granite City鈥檚 superintendents said the communities鈥 voices were heard.

鈥淲e deeply appreciate everyone who took the time to reach out, share their perspectives and make their voices heard,鈥 Granite City Superintendent Don Harris said. 鈥淲e remain hopeful that the decision regarding our school mascot will continue to be made at the local level.鈥

But, to claim a complete win would be premature because the bills aren鈥檛 officially dead yet.

That leaves hope for Robin Deguzman, a supporter of the Indigenous mascots bill from O鈥橣allon. He said he feels the bill is a way for communities to recognize the longstanding injustice inflicted on Indigenous people in America.

鈥(These) mascots are an attempt to override history with a rendition that gives no respect or honor to what it was further back,鈥 Deguzman said.

Andrew Johnson, executive director of the Native American Chamber of Commerce of Illinois and citizen of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma, said phasing out Indigenous mascots is a public health issue because those images can have on students.

鈥淲hy do we want to hold on to something if the science and research shows it鈥檚 harmful?鈥 Johnson said.

The Senate sponsor of the bill centered around Freeburg High, Karina Villa, D-West Chicago, has already requested an extension on the bill in hopes of getting a committee hearing later this month, according to her office.

As of Monday afternoon, the offices of Sen. Erica Harriss, R-Glen Carbon, and Rep. Kevin Schmidt, R-Millstadt, said they hadn鈥檛 seen an extension request for the bill about Native American mascots, logos and names. The Senate sponsor, Sen. Suzy Glowiak Hilton, D-Western Springs, declined to comment.

鈥淚f it follows the traditional process, it should be dead,鈥 Harriss said.

Even if the bills are not passed before adjournment of the Illinois General Assembly on May 31, state lawmakers will have opportunities to work on the legislation. Both bills could be addressed during the fall veto session, attached as an amendment to another bill or put into an omnibus bill.

If the bills don鈥檛 pass this year, lawmakers would need to hold new committee hearings next year.

What do the bills say?

Proponents of the bill argue that Native American mascots, imagery and names can be harmful, racist and offensive. The school districts contend their mascots are a way to honor their area鈥檚 Indigenous history. If signed into law, schools would be required to change:

  • Names of federally recognized tribes and historical Native American people.
  • Mascots depicting Native Americans.
  • Imagery associated with Native American people, such as feathered headdresses, tomahawks and arrowheads.
  • Terms like Braves, Chiefs, Tribe, Indians 鈥渙r any synonymous term, logo or mascot depicting Native Americans.鈥

Schools can continue using uniforms or other materials purchased before the legislation鈥檚 effective date that feature the name, logo or mascot until September 2030 as long as they don鈥檛 acquire any more. They must also have chosen a new name, logo or mascot by July 1, 2026.

There is an exception under which schools that use the name of a federally recognized tribe can continue to do so with permission of the tribe.

The other bill would prohibit public schools from using references to disabilities as name, logo or mascots and require them to change by Sept. 1, 2028. Currently, Freeburg High鈥檚 Midgets is the only applicable mascot in the state.

People with dwarfism equate the mascot to a slur and find it offensive, but those who support the mascot say it's not mean to be offensive. The mascot goes back 90 years when an undersized Freeburg basketball team defeated a favored opponent.

Will Bauer is the Metro East reporter at 漏 2024 外网天堂.
Madison Lammert reports on education for the Belleville News-Democrat.