Culture UK Beauty Industry Implement Mandatory Training For Black Hairdressing

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UK Beauty Industry Implement Mandatory Training For Black Hairdressing​

BY NIALL SMITH
JUL 3, 2021
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Across the UK, many Black people have stressed how problematic getting their hair done can be. Many opt for tailored Black hairdressers and stylists, as many high street hair institutions either mishandle or simply refuse to cut or style Black hair.

In a June revision of the National Occupational Standards (NOS), Black hairdressing has been added to the core learning modules for new hairdressers. Before this amendment, there was no requirement for any UK hairdresser to be educated on the cutting and styling of Black hair. This much-needed change was first set in motion two years ago, when the British Beauty Council started a taskforce with the Hair & Beauty Industry Authority (HABIA) to improve beauty treatment and competency.

Helena Grzesk, chief operating officer at the British Beauty Council, said that “the hair and beauty industry can and should be truly inclusive. But until now, tens of thousands of hairdressers have no qualifications in cutting and styling Afro and textured hair. Our aim is to amplify and celebrate the voices of all the communities the industry serves to ensure each and every one of us feels seen, heard, valued and excited to engage with the beauty industry.”

Joan Scott, chairwoman of HABIA, said: “The change to the standards is not just about hair—it is about having the knowledge to treat anybody that walks through the door, be it with life issues, disability or hairstyle.”

This turning point in UK beauty standards runs deeper than just hairstyling for Black people. For many, the segregated nature between Black hair treatment and the rest of the British population furthered the subconscious ideology of “otherness”. The NOS legislation change is a step in the right direction for better representation; however, it’s more alarming it’s taken this long for Black hair to be taken seriously in the beauty world, despite there being more than two million people of African and Caribbean descent living in the UK.
 
Black barbers can't cut white hair for shit, this I know from living in the hood. So this goes both ways. I don't really see it as as issue, a hair stylist is gonna be more proficient with what they see day in and day out (the target audience of the establishment) and why would you wanna go to someone who yes may have learned how to style your type of hair but isn't doing it day in and day out? Profoundly stupid policy but not even a surprising one, Blacks sperging about hair differences is an age old thing.
 
I'm not seeing the outrage in this one. If an employer sees you are qualified in nigger hair, his inner Krab would be seeing pound signs at extra business. You get hired/extra pay whatever, Vs the other bitch who refuses to touch brown people. And honestly, unless you're in a city, the chances of cutting an actual afro are pretty low. There are many more Indians, Pakistanis than there are black people, outside of London anyway.
 
I feel like black hair is its own thing and that there should be one person in each salon who does this just for the scrilla but I also feel like black people are wise to go to their own practitioners.

Powerlevel but I have a white fro and a lot of those white ladies in salons are not to be trusted.

But like I think it was in California that there was some thing a few years ago where black people who do braids and shit were having to get certifications in shit like perms and they were like... all we do is wash it and braid it, we don't need all that.

This shit just creates a situation where nobody is happy.
 
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