New Jersey Herald SPARTA — The death of George Floyd, a Black man, in the custody of Minneapolis Police in May set off a wave of protests worldwide in support of racial equality. Township school district officials were determined not to let the conversation about equality die down when protests did. "I know a lot of districts, when this George Floyd incident occurred, everybody jumped up and said, 'Yeah, we're going to do this,' and all these protests were happening — and then some of that kind of died down," said Saskia Brown, director of student support services for the district. "It was really important for me, in our district, that we weren't just a part of a moment, that we really wanted to continuously engage in this work."