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The school board of White County, Georgia, votes unanimously to begin new desegregated bus routes.
1989 (Oct 10)
The school board of White County, Georgia, voted unanimously to begin new desegregated bus routes, thus ending nine years of segregated busing in the area. The school board members claimed that they had only recently been made aware of the segregated routes. The board's chairman, Bob Owens, said in a public apology, "Our community has taken pride as a leader in public integration. For a Black bus route to be scheduled into two predominantly Black communities and to be operated for an extended period of time is... unacceptable." The dual busing system came to the board's attention after Jimmy Bolinger, the school system's new director of transportation, reported that nine of the twenty-three school routes were overcrowded with white students; meanwhile Andy Allen, the county's only Black school bus driver, complained that she crossed the county to pick up Black children, yet her bus was only half full.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.