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Massachusetts bill would ban Native American school mascots
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By: Steve Leblanc And Bob Salsberg The Associated Press, Published on Tu.se Jun 06 2017
BOSTON — Massachusetts lawmakers are weighing whether to ban the use of Native
American mascots in public schools — a proposal that drew strong opinions at a public hearing
Tuesday.
The push comes after the town of Tewksbury rebuffed efforts to change the name of its high
school mascot, the Redmen.
Linda Thomas has children in the first and fourth grades in Tewksbury and said she doesn't
want to signal that "it's OK to use these images and memes and logos."
"The name has becomes so integrated and repeated that the meaning is lost," she said.
"People using it don't intend to cause harm, but the impact is harmful and Native Americans
have been saying this now for decades."
Thomas added it's hard to imagine any other racial group being used as a mascot.
State Rep. James Miceli, a Democrat who represents Tewksbury, said opinion in the town was
overwhelmingly against changing the Redmen mascot. He urged fellow lawmakers to reject the
bill outright or exempt communities that already have voted, as Tewksbury did at a town
meeting.
"The Indians have been to that community many times," Miceli said after testifying. "We held
powwows in that town. Never once when I have seen this did they mention anything in
opposition" to the mascot.
There are even divisions among Native Americans.
Gloria Colon, outreach co-ordinator for the North American Indian Center of Boston, said she is
troubled about the way some mascots are portrayed.
"Some of them depict large noses and some of them seem to be angry, so that's very offensive
to me," said Colon, of Micmac heritage.
But Gene Weeden Williams, a Narragansett Indian who lives in Amesbury, saw nothing to be
gained by going after Native American mascots.
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Massachusetts bill would ban Native American school mascots
"My people need help, but that's not the kind of help we need," said Williams, adding he does
not take offence to sports teams using the names. "It could get worse for us by causing a
division between my people and other people."
The bill defines a Native American mascot as a "name, symbol, or image that depicts or refers
to an American Indian tribe, individual, custom, or tradition that is used by a public school as a
mascot, nickname, logo, letterhead, or team name."
The bill gives specific examples, including "Redskins," "Savages," "Indians," "Indianettes,"
"Chiefs," "Chieftains," "Braves," or "Redmen."
Republican Gov. Charlie Baker said Monday he's waiting to see what action the Legislature
takes, if any, but added, "I don't think anybody should use anything as a mascot in a
derogatory sense."
Democratic Senate President Stan Rosenberg said he's heard mixed messages from
residents.
In 2015, California Gov. Jerry Brown signed legislation making the state the first to bar public
schools from using the Redskins name for sports teams.
In Oregon, school districts with tribal mascots must do away with them by July 1. The state
makes exceptions for districts that get the approval of one of Oregon's nine tribes. In
Wisconsin, opponents of Native American mascots can file a complaint.
In 1993, the Washington State Board of Education passed a resolution encouraging schools to
drop Native American mascots.
Some Massachusetts school districts have taken similar action. In 1988 Wellesley High
dropped the word "red" from its Red Raiders nickname and adopted a pirate mascot.
Since then, Frontier Regional School in Deefield changed its name from Redskins to Red
Hawks. Natick switched from "Redmen" to Red Hawks. And the Gill -Montague Regional School
Committee dropped Indians as the mascot for Turners Falls High School.
The controversy has also embroiled professional sports teams, notably the NFL's Washington
Redskins and the Cleveland Indians of Major League Baseball.
In 2014, the U.S. Patent and Trademark office declined to register several trademarks for the
Redskins, a franchise that was founded in Boston in the 1930s, citing federal regulations
against protecting words and images that are disparaging or offensive. The team argued the
rule violates the First Amendment.
This story has been corrected to show opponents of Native American mascots in Wisconsin
can file a complaint, not that the state bans such mascots, and to delete an incorrect reference
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to a Minnesota ban.
Massachusetts bill would ban Native American school mascots
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