Youngkin rips Fairfax schools for merit scandal, warns of ‘human rights violation’

Glenn Youngkin
Youngkin rips Fairfax schools for merit scandal, warns of ‘human rights violation’
Glenn Youngkin
Youngkin rips Fairfax schools for merit scandal, warns of ‘human rights violation’

Gov.
Glenn Youngkin
(R-VA) has reiterated his criticisms of
Fairfax County
Public Schools,
calling the withholding of National Merit awards from
Virginia
students a possible “human rights violation.”

“This overarching effort for equal outcomes is hurting Virginia’s children and their future,” Youngkin said in a statement to the Washington Examiner. “The failure of numerous Fairfax County schools to inform students of their national merit awards could serve as a Virginia human rights violation. As the attorney general follows through on my request to investigate the matter, we will get to the bottom of this.”


VIRGINIA AG EXPANDS CIVIL RIGHTS INVESTIGATION INTO FAIRFAX COUNTY PUBLIC SCHOOLS

The Virginia governor, who has made education a focal point of his tenure, has been harshly critical of Fairfax County Public Schools after reports emerged over recent weeks that
several high schools in the district
admitted that they failed to notify students who had received commended student awards from the National Merit Scholarship Corporation in a prompt manner.

The school district says it is investigating but has initially chalked up the fiasco to human error. But some reports have indicated the schools did not notify the students out of concern it would have a negative impact on students who did not receive the same commendation.

Virginia Legislature
Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin shakes hands with his cabinet before delivering his State of the Commonwealth to a joint session of the General Assembly inside the House chamber of the State Capitol Building in Richmond, Va. on Wednesday, Jan. 11, 2023.
(AP Photo/John C. Clark)


At Youngkin’s behest, Attorney General Jason Miyares (R-VA)
launched
a state civil rights investigation into the school district. In an
interview
with WJLA over the weekend, Youngkin blasted what he said was “a maniacal focus on equal outcomes for all students at all costs.”

“This overarching effort for equal outcomes is hurting Virginia’s children, and it’s hurting, even worse, the children that they aspire to help — children in the black community and children in the Hispanic community and children who are in the socioeconomically challenged community and Virginia’s kids with disabilities. They have, in fact, suffered even more,” the governor said.


CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

He added: “This is a moment where we have to recognize that educating our children so that they are equipped to take on not just the challenges, but to take on confidently the pursuit of their dreams is at the heart of education and equal outcomes for all students at any cost is a cost too much for Virginia.”

The controversy first centered on
Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology,
a magnet school in Alexandria, Virginia, for not properly notifying students of their awards. In the following days, however, Edison High School, Annandale High School, John R. Lewis High School, Westfield High School, West Potomac High School, and Langley High School all admitted they had done the same.

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