High school pauses yearbook distribution over pages on Black Lives Matter

FAN Editor

Yearbook distribution has since resumed following a review of the pages.

Administrators at West Broward High School in Pembroke Pines, about 18 miles southwest of Fort Lauderdale, paused sales and distribution of “The Edge” last Friday “while the concerns were carefully reviewed,” according to a statement from Broward County Public Schools.

Black Lives Matter gained momentum last year following the killing of George Floyd, an unarmed Black man who died after a white Minneapolis police officer knelt on his neck for several minutes. The two pages in “The Edge” depict the history of the movement and include the names of Black men, women and children who have died at the hands of police.

“Most of it is history,” Twitchell told WPLG, “of why it’s happening.”

Twitchell said school administrators decided to stop selling and distributing the $90 yearbook last week without consulting with the editors after parents complained. She said the yearbook editors were told that the pages were not objective because they didn’t include a conversation about Blue Lives Matter, a pro-police countermovement that emerged after Black Lives Matter amid growing criticism of law enforcement.

“We just didn’t feel that including anything beyond Black Lives Matter was appropriate because we thought that it took away from the purpose of the page,” David Fleischer, the yearbook teacher at West Broward High School, told WPLG.

Fleischer said school administrators had the opportunity to review the Black Lives Matter spread before publication but chose not to, “thereby tacitly approving its inclusion.”

“Indefinitely suspending the yearbook over a spread advocating for education about racism is not what a ‘world class’ school does,” he added.

Yearbook sales and distribution resumed Monday after Broward County Public Schools completed its review of the controversial pages. The school district noted that it “supports and encourages students’ freedom of expression.”

“As the yearbook is intended to highlight notable and newsworthy events from that year, student journalists exercised their freedom of speech in documenting the movement,” Broward County Public Schools said in its statement. “As a result of the review, distribution of the yearbook resumed Monday morning with an insert noting that the views expressed are not sponsored by the District.”

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