MEDFORD, Mass. — In a story July 23 about white sympathy for black civil rights issues, The Associated Press erroneously reported the involvement of Ohio mother Lisa Vahey. She is seeking changes at her daughter's high school, not her son's.
In addition, the story should have made clear that the Facebook group to which Vahey belongs was created after real-time discussions, not before.
A corrected version of the story is below:
How sympathetic whites are helping to fuel racial change
After sitting in silence, some whites say they're being spurred to action by recent shootings of black men
By PHILIP MARCELO
Associated Press
MEDFORD, Mass. (AP) — An attorney in Oregon is supporting political candidates who promise to address racial profiling in policing. In suburban Ohio, a mother says she and her friends will push for better racial integration in their children's high school. And in rural Massachusetts, a young father has launched a Facebook group called "White Men for Black Lives."