House votes to impose term limits on all school boards

By A.G. Gancarski
FloridaPolitics.com
February 11, 2022

Term limits would begin in 2030, however.

Along party lines, the Florida House voted 78-40 Thursday to impose term limits on all school boards in the state.

CS/HB 1467, introduced originally by Rep. Sam Garrison, would cut salaries for school board members newly elected or re-elected after August 2022.

That term limit would start with time served this year, so veteran members of boards would have eight years from the date of their 2022 elections, in an amendment adopted Wednesday in the House. That amendment replaced a provision that would have cut school board salaries.

The bill was passed over strong Democratic opposition.

“It’s complicated work. You have to have dedication,” explained Rep. Susan Valdes of Tampa, a former School Board Member arguing against term limits.

Those who want to run again, Garrison advised Wednesday when the House was discussing the legislation, can “take a cycle off and come back.” However, they have eight years ahead before that becomes a real concern.

Despite the change of one major section of the bill, other parts remain the same as they did in committees.

The bill will retain its focus on “K-12 transparency” and content “guardrails” for school districts as they deal with potentially problematic materials, another sticking point for Democrats in structured debate.

The bill will still require school districts to list all library and instructional materials in use in an online inventory, with a multistep review process before adoption, including a mandatory public hearing.

Boards, said Garrison Wednesday, “would have to use their best judgment” in assessing complaints and determining action. Action that is taken would have to be reported to the state Department of Education, Garrison noted.

“This superstructure, I think it’s top-heavy,” asserted Rep. Joe Geller, bemoaning it as another layer of the same “bureaucracy” Republicans complain about.

Geller suggested the law could be a “nightmare for school districts,” if so-called “flat earthers” mobilized in favor of driving book bans.

Rep. Anna Eskamani blasted the proposal as an attempt to ban books and silence the narratives of marginalized populations, saying these issues should be kept local and that the House should not “co-opt” it with a “Parents’ Bill of Rights” style solution.

“LGBTQ students need to be able to see themselves in books,” asserted Rep. Carlos Guillermo Smith, who described his own struggle to “see himself” in any books available during his childhood in the 1990s.

Eskamani, Smith and others warned that national pressure groups could use this database and bill as a cudgel to erase the very identities and existences of groups traditionally underrepresented.

“Book banning does not happen in free states or free societies,” Smith warned.

Garrison, in his close, invoked Lewis Carroll’s 19th century “Through the Looking Glass,” saying Democrats were distorting the intent of the bill.

Companion legislation is not currently moving in the Senate.

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Mark Tomes
Mark Tomes(@mtomes)
2 years ago

Garrison is being disingenuous; he knows full well that he would love to see right wing activist Republicans rally to ban books that don’t promote the standard historical narrative. There are already robust processes and policies in place to allow members of the public, parents, etc., review and comment on curriculum materials. This bill is political grandstanding, and it likely could backfire if activist progressives want to see incomplete historical narratives banned from schools.

Thomas Smith
Thomas Smith(@high-n-dry)
2 years ago
Reply to  Mark Tomes

Don’t know where to start with that comment. Sounds like an ad-homine attack from a mythomane.
Majority of the time, term limits are a good thing.

Christine Harmon
Christine Harmon (@guest_63899)
2 years ago
Reply to  Thomas Smith

Thomas, stating “Majority of the time, terms limits are a good thing.” is a sweeping generalization which you have not supported with facts.

Dan Waggoner
Dan Waggoner(@islander)
2 years ago

Once again the Florida Legislature is passing a bill that will be an unfunded mandate. The staff and gathering of information required in this bill will be staggering for smaller school districts. It also provides, as stated in the article, a path for every group that has an axe to grind to have books removed from the shelves and other forms of media, that the group does not agree with. Of course parents should have input, but to open Pandora’s Box for every crackpot to complain about every issue is a bit much. I thought Republicans were the party of limited government? I suspect they no longer cling to limited government by passing a bill such as this one. No wonder Florida is losing teachers and facing the probability of accepting teachers in the classroom with fewer and limited qualifications.