Burlington High School
Burlington High School students give a presentation to the school board about flying a Black Lives Matter flag on campus. Courtesy photo

[B]URLINGTON — High school student activists notched a victoryย Tuesdayย night: The Burlington School Board voted unanimously to permit a Black Lives Matter flag on the campus.

The flag will fly on the Burlington High School campus for the remainder of the academic year.ย ย In future years, students will be required to petition the school board annually to raise the BLM flag every February during Black History month.

The students read from a resolution from the Social Justice Union, which asked the board to stand in solidarity with Montpelier High School, which was the first Vermont school to raise a BLM flag on campus.

โ€œFlying the BLM flag not only recognizes students of color, but it also creates a welcoming ethos and helps to bridge Burlington communities together,โ€ they said.

Cheers broke out in the Hunt Middle School Library after the resolutionโ€™s passage.

Students wearing Black Lives Matter T-shirts presented school commissioners with a petition bearing more than 450 signatures. School Board member Liz Curry wore a Black Lives Matter sweatshirt and student representative Isaac Jenneman also put on a Black Lives Matter T-shirt during the meeting.

The flag-raising is tentatively set forย Monday.

Board members praised the student-driven initiative. โ€œIt was a special moment,โ€ said board member Jeff Wick on the resolution. โ€œTo just see the joy (on studentsโ€™ faces) when the kids succeed.โ€

Eli Pine, a member of the Social Justice Union, was ecstatic about the School Board vote. โ€œIโ€™m overwhelmed with excitement,โ€ he said.

Burlington High School student and social justice member Zanevia Wilcox said she was thankful that the studentsโ€™ push for equality gained traction. She pointed out that Burlington โ€œprides itself on being a community and we worked together to have our voices heard,โ€ she said. โ€œAt times, it felt like we were voicing our opinion, and it was going in one ear and out the other.โ€

Former School Board Chairman Mark Porter also praised and supported the resolution, but noted that the district should alsoย ย extend similar consideration to other groups in the district, such as Asian-Americans, Latinos andย ย the LGBT community.

Students of color account for 35.4 percent of the Burlington School District population.

Gail Callahan is a New Jersey native. She received her Bachelor of Arts degree in journalism from St. Michael's College. Throughout her career, she worked for weekly newspapers as well as magazines. Her...