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Bigotry somes lurks in woods and on trials but people of color are relaiming the outdoors
Outdoor enthusiasts want people of color to embrace activities like hiking, biking, kayaking, camping and birding -- and feel safe while enjoying it all.
Why it matters: A national reckoning has drawn attention to the discrimination some people of color face during a run in the mountains or a walk on a trail. The outdoors can be deadly due to bigotry, not just wildlife, lurking in the woods.
- Before the death of George Floyd, video footage of two white men who shot and killed Ahmaud Arbery, a 25-year-old Black jogger in Georgia, went viral and started conversations about people of color and the outdoors.
- The pandemic shut down malls, bars, stadiums, and restaurants. Outdoor activities became the only option for most people to escape lockdowns and introduced more people to trails, state parks and green spaces.
Details: Since then,outdoor groups and businesses across the U.S. have launched campaigns and initiatives to transform how Black Americans, Latinos, Asian Americans, and Native Americans engage with the outdoors.
- Kampgrounds of America banned the Confederate flag from campgrounds, put people of color in marketing materials and started diversity training for staff, President and CEO, Toby O’Rourke told Axios.
- Retail company REI said in April it's begun a six-month retail pilot to increase Black representation in its workforce and has developed a long-term racial equity working plan.
- The American Ornithological Society announced in May its commitment to changing “exclusionary or harmful bird names” as a way to make birding more welcoming for people of color.
The intrigue: Around 32% of campers are now people of color, a stark 17-point increase over the past five years, according to Kampgrounds of America, which is owned by Asian Americans.
- Outdoor Afro, one of the largest networks of outdoor recreation for Black Americans, has grown in 12 years to more than 100 leaders in 56 cities.
- Latino Outdoors, a similar network for U.S. Latinos, reports a similar uptick in interest, with chapters opening up in Las Vegas, Arkansas and Connecticut.
- Native American running groups are popping up, too, and some are using outdoor running as a way to connect with ancestors who experienced trauma.
Yes, but: Some mountaintops and rivers still hold racist names and some popular outdoor areas and National Parks are connected to horrific lynchings or removal of Indigenous people.
- "As much as I love the outdoors, the history of National Parks is rooted in a lot of ugliness," Christian La Mont, program manager for Latino Outdoors, told Axios.
- Katina Grays, the New York City leader of the national group Outdoor Afro, said people of color reclaim those spaces and reframe history when they visit and go outside. "I always come with Black history to share."
Flashback: Putnam County, N.Y., faced calls last year to create a human rights commission after a resident called sheriff's deputies on a group of Black teenagers from a foster home seeking to go hiking.
- In 2018, sheriff's deputies in Colorado were called after a trail user said a Black women's hiking group was taking up too much space and referred to them as a "mob."
- Writer Rahawa Haile detailed in Outside Magazine her 2016 thru-hike of the Appalachian Trail as a Black Queer woman and the racism she faced along with new friendships she found.
What they're saying: "Going out for a jog, sleeping in our own beds, or going fishing on a lake...all of this is our right, and in some ways, our obligation," Baratunde Thurston, the host of the upcoming six-part PBS series, America Outdoors with Baratunde Thurston and author of How to Be Black, told Axios.
- "I think for me, it's very restorative. The outdoors has always been for us. Look historically, we've always known how to find our way in the outdoors, from the south to the north," Grays said
One fun thing: Outdoor Afro and Backroads have partnered to create in October a biking, biking and kayaking experience from Savannah, Ga., to Charleston, S.C. while visiting sites connected to the Underground Railroad.
Don't forget: President Biden announced Thursday he would nominate Charles F. Sams III to be the next director of the National Park Service -- an agency that for decades has struggled with diversity.
- Sams is a member of the Cayuse, Walla Walla, Cocopah, and Yankton Sioux tribal nations.
School board recalls in 2021 skyrocket amid organized campaigns for critical race theory bans
Efforts to recall school board members are surging around the U.S. — and especially in California — amid Republican efforts to quash teaching about institutional racism.
Why it matters: Coordinated efforts by conservative groups are shaping public education, fueled by controversies over race as as well as backlash to COVID-19 closures.
The big picture: Just halfway through 2021, at least 51 local recall efforts involving K-12 school boards have been initiated this year, targeting at least 130 elected members of those boards.
- That's more than twice the annual average, according to Ballotpedia, a website that follows election trends.
- It's accompanying the surge of new school board candidates that Axios' Stef Kight has been tracking.
By the numbers: California alone is home to 22 of the current recall efforts. Arizona and Idaho follow with six and four recall efforts respectively.
- By comparison, Ballotpedia counted a yearly average of 23 recall efforts against 52 school board members between 2006 and 2020.
The intrigue: Historically, school board recalls tended to stem from disputes over mismanagement, open meeting violations or allegations of corruption. But this year's campaigns focus on efforts to snuff out teachings on critical race theory and displeasure about mask requirements.
- A political action committee led by former Trump Justice Department official Ian Prior is sponsoring a recall of school board members in Loudoun County, Virginia who belonged to a private Facebook group focused on anti-racism.
- Four of the seven members of the Mequon-Thiensville School District Board of Education in Wisconsin are being targeted over the district's response to the COVID-19 pandemic and introducing critical race theory lessons.
- Two of the five members of the Litchfield Elementary School District Governing Board in Arizona face a recall effort tied to objections about critical race theory.
Reality check: Critical race theory — which holds that racism is baked into the formation of the nation and ingrained in our legal, financial and education systems — was developed in law schools in the 1970s and isn't really taught in grade school.
- But some teachers have endured criticism for merely mentioning systemic racism in class or bringing up Black Lives Matter protests following the death of George Floyd last year.
- Melissa Statz, a fourth-grade teacher in Wisconsin, last year was accused by some parents of "indoctrinating children" because she introduced lessons on racism. Her school was later hit with racist graffiti.
Don't forget: Elementary school teachers, administrators, and college professors are facing fines, physical threats, and fear of firing as states pass bans to restrict critical race theory in public schools.
- Citizens for Renewing America, a group led by a White House budget director under former President Trump, offers activists model legislation to craft bans in their states.
- The proposed legislation says that equity, intersectionality, social justice, and "woke" terms are racist ideas and falsely claims that critical race theory teaches that "one race or sex is superior to another race or sex."
- Meanwhile, "Patriots for Delaware" in May endorsed five pro-school-reopening candidates for the state's elections, highlighting a local push to limit social justice discussions and defy mask mandates.
- And parents in Pennsylvania formed their own political action committee to support school board candidates running to keep kids in school in person.
California bans state-funded travel to 5 states with anti-LGBTQ laws
California has banned state-funded travel to five more states because of laws that discriminate against the LGBTQ community, Attorney General Rob Bonta announced Monday, bringing the total number of banned states to 17.
Why it matters: The move comes as Republicans in at least 25 states have introduced legislation targeting trans people this year.
State of play: California employees are now unable to pursue state-funded travel to Florida, North Dakota, Montana, West Virginia and Arkansas, Bonta said.
- Florida, Arkansas, Montana, and West Virginia passed laws this year barring trans women and girls from participating in school sports that affirm their gender identity.
- North Dakota signed into law legislation that would allow some publicly funded student organizations to prohibit LGBTQ students from joining without consequence.
- Arkansas also passed the first law in the nation to bar physicians from providing gender-affirming health care to trans minors.
- California's ban does have some exemptions, such as travel related to enforcement of California law or contracts.
What they're saying: "Make no mistake: We’re in the midst of an unprecedented wave of bigotry and discrimination in this country — and the State of California is not going to support it," Bonta said.
The big picture: Lawmakers first banned non-essential state employee travel to states with anti-LGBTQ laws in 2016, AP reports.
- The 12 other states on the list are: Texas, Alabama, Idaho, Iowa, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Kentucky, North Carolina, Kansas, Mississippi and Tennessee.



