House Ed Committee hears

Perry Bennett/WV Legislative PhotographyRev. Matthew J. Watts, senior pastor of Grace Bible Church in Charleston and CEO of HOPE Community Development Corporation, addresses the W.Va. House of Delegates’ Education Committee. WEST VIRGINIA LRIC

Charleston — Rev. Matthew J. Watts, the senior pastor of Grace Bible Church in Charleston and CEO of HOPE Community Development Corporation, asked the W.Va. House of Delegates’ Education Committee to require “accountability” regarding the high percentages of low-income white and black student expulsion rates in state schools.

House Education chair Del. Joe Ellington, R-Mercer, greeted the committee and guests at the Jan. 30 meeting by welcoming Watts, noting that it was Watts’ birthday. The room filled with applause for the reverend.

Watts presented a timeline of federal, state and independent educational reports that noted 20,000 students suspended per year, with higher suspension rates for poorer white students and black students. Watts noted that middle- and lower-class black suspension rates remain equal, adding that black male students, regardless of household income, are suspended at higher rates than any other group.

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