A near-unanimous vote has parents at St John's College supporting the school's "new hair rule" following the Lucan Battison case, but the long-haired student's lawyer says it could be challenged in court.
On June 27 Justice David Collins ruled the suspension that kept the Year 12 student and 1st XV rugby player out of school for five weeks, was unlawful, and conditions imposed on the pupil's return to school were unreasonable.
The ruling followed a hearing in Wellington, based on an application by the teenager's father, Troy Battison, for a judicial review of the decision by the Hastings school's principal, Paul Melloy, and the board of trustees to suspend Lucan for breaching the school hair rules.
After "deliberately" waiting for "things to settle down in the papers", the ruling said, Mr Melloy had held a parental questionnaire on Thursday that gave parents an opportunity to vote on the proposed new hair rule. Two hundred and ten parents had gone to the evening, including Lucan's parents. "93.84 per cent were in full support for the school and the new hair rule ... I was guessing that we would have about 80 per cent support and I would have been delighted with that," Mr Melloy told Hawke's Bay Today yesterday.
The new hair rule reads: "Hair that is short, tidy and of natural colour. Short - means hair has to be 1cm off the collar at the back, not further than half way down the ear at the side and off the eyebrows at the front. Sideburns must not extend beyond the ear lobe. Tidy - means hair has to be combed and groomed. Extremes, including plaits, dreads and mohawks are not acceptable. Hair cannot be tied back in any manner."