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State Board of Education Hints It Could Remove School District Officials Defiant Over Masking Rules

August 18, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 8 Comments

The state Board of Education meeting this morning in Miami. Yesterday's emergency meeting was held through a conference call. (Florida Channel.)
The state Board of Education meeting this morning in Miami. Yesterday’s emergency meeting was held through a conference call. (Florida Channel.)

The State Board of Education on Tuesday ratcheted up pressure on officials in two school districts who want student mask mandates with exceptions only for medical reasons, floating the possibility that district leaders who defy state directives could be removed from office.




The board, during an emergency meeting, voted to direct state Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran to β€œinvestigate” the actions of Alachua County and Broward County school officials.

The result could include withholding funds from the districts, state board Chairman Tom Grady said, adding β€œit may involve withholding salaries, it may involve removing officers, it may involve reviewing district conduct.” The state board, however, did not impose such penalties Tuesday.

Grady, a former state House member, also said the board’s moves could include providing a report to the Republican-controlled Legislature to take action.

The meeting came as Florida continues to see a surge in COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations fueled by the highly contagious delta variant of the coronavirus. School districts in various parts of the state have grappled with the possibility of requiring masks to try to prevent the spread of the virus.

Gov. Ron DeSantis on July 30 issued an executive order aimed at preventing districts from requiring students to wear masks. The Florida Department of Health followed by issuing a rule that requires parents to be able to opt out of student mask requirements.

Tuesday’s meeting put on display a power struggle between the state board and local school districts, with the board asserting that Alachua and Broward officials violated the health department’s rule and a new state law known as the β€œParents’ Bill of Rights.” Alachua and Broward want to require that students have doctors’ notes before they can be exempted from mask requirements.




Corcoran wrote in letters last week to Alachua and Broward officials that the state board would pursue financial penalties if the districts moved forward with requiring doctors’ notes. He threatened withholding β€œfunds in an amount equal to the salaries for the superintendent and all the members of the school board.”

In his letters, Corcoran wrote that requiring doctors’ notes to opt out is β€œinconsistent” with the health department’s rule.

Both of the districts refused to change course last week.

The state board found β€œprobable cause” Tuesday that Alachua and Broward officials β€œacted contrary to the law” by requiring doctors’ notes.

But Alachua County Superintendent Carlee Simon doubled down on an earlier argument that the district is in compliance with the Department of Health rule.

Simon argued to the state board that the Alachua district allows two avenues for parents to opt out: by showing medical reasons or through a voucher program that the state board expanded to allow students to transfer to private schools based on β€œCOVID-19 harassment.”

Simon also said she and Alachua school board members are following their constitutional duties to provide a β€œuniform, efficient, safe, secure and high quality system” of public schools.

β€œWe argue that we are exercising our constitutional responsibilities to protect our students and staff. We believe this is β€˜reasonable and necessary to achieve a compelling state interest,’” Simon told the state board, quoting from a part of Florida law.

Broward County Interim Superintendent Vicki Cartwright contended that the Department of Health’s rule lacked specificity and didn’t β€œprohibit us from requiring medical documentation” from parents wishing to opt out of mask requirements.




β€œStudents may wear masks or facial coverings as a mitigation measure; however, the school must allow for a parent or legal guardian of the student to opt-out the student from wearing a face covering or mask,” the health department’s rule said in part.

The State Board of Education, however, argued that it has broad authority to demand local districts follow regulations it puts forth.

In a memo to the board, Corcoran quoted from a 2017 decision by the 4th District Court of Appeals in a Palm Beach County schools case.

β€œThe Florida Constitution therefore creates a hierarchy under which a school board has local control, but the State Board supervises the system as a whole. This broader supervisory authority may at times infringe on a school board’s local powers, but such infringement is expressly contemplated — and in fact encouraged by the very nature of supervision by the Florida Constitution,” the excerpt from the ruling said.

State Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried, a Democrat running for governor next year, held a news conference just before the Board of Education meeting to object to what she called β€œunconstitutional threats” from DeSantis and Corcoran

Fried has repeatedly said in recent weeks that she intends to work with the federal government to reimburse any school officials for financial penalties imposed by the state board.

β€œSchools need to be able to require masks, at least for now, for the kids who aren’t eligible to get the vaccine yet and those who are at a greater risk of getting sick from COVID,” Fried said.

In a letter to Florida district superintendents Friday, U.S. Department of Education Secretary Miguel Cardona wrote that the department β€œstands with you” in enacting universal student mask policies despite state efforts to prohibit them.

–Ryan Dailey, News Service of Florida

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Joseph Bagadonutz says

    August 18, 2021 at 9:47 am

    GREAT NEWS

  2. G A says

    August 18, 2021 at 11:52 am

    Every time another child is laying dreadfully sick in the hospital, or comes home and ends up with long haulers, or God Forbid, dies….remember that YOU people voted these Republicans in office. YOU have no one else to blame for the hell you will find yourselves in. By the time your remorse kicks in, it will be too late.

  3. David Schaefer says

    August 18, 2021 at 11:59 am

    DeathSantis must be stopped. More school districts need to follow the lines of Broward and Alachua …..

  4. Ted Underhill says

    August 18, 2021 at 6:12 pm

    Hey Ronnie, is it weird that the entire country is laughing at Florida because of you? The idea of you threatening school board officials for trying to keep children safe is epic, epically ignorant. We have a responsibility to protect our students. You are tying the hands of the people we entrust with health and safety of our children. You are condemning a percentage of children to certain death because of your narcissism and partisan politics. If you stop to think about that for a moment….it is such a moronic idea. What’s next, will you be threatening law enforcement agencies for arresting bad guys or cutting the budgets of fire departments that put out fires? I used to take offense when people say we live in Flori-duh. Lately it has been justified, sir please stop putting the duh in Flori-duh!

  5. John M says

    August 19, 2021 at 1:23 pm

    It is truly sad to think that the governor lacks understanding of the severity of this disease. He appears to care more about the political base of his party than the health and safety of the people in this state. The scientists and doctors, who have the utmost concern for the people (adults and children), are giving him pertinent and life-saving information which he disregards completely. We are not free from this virus especially with the variant so rampant and the cases increasing. Florida, under his leadership (?), has not been doing its part to fight this pandemic. Less than 50% of those eligible have been fully vaccinated.

  6. tulip says

    August 19, 2021 at 5:05 pm

    More and more school bus drivers have quit their job because of their fear of getting the virus from a packed bus full of kids that are maskless. Then parents will be really upset because they will have to bring the kids to school and back home themselves. Keep that in mind Flagler County. This is just one of the ripple effects of this whole squabble. Right now there is about 20,000 students and teaching staff in Florida who are quarantined, never mind the ones that are sick.

  7. flatsflyer says

    August 19, 2021 at 5:41 pm

    Better idea is to remove DeathSantis from office and all of his Republican appointees.. Abbot in Texas now has tested positive, locally Mullins daughter has it and the American Talibans continue to push the lies and false information. I wonder who DeathSantis has put incharge is of ordering all the required plywood coffins.

  8. Monica says

    August 19, 2021 at 7:24 pm

    The only person who needs to be removed in Floriduh is Deathsantis.

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