Florida Board of Education to consider sanctioning 2 mask-mandating school districts

By John Haughey
The Center Square
August 14, 2021


Florida Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran
Mark Wallheiser / AP

The Florida Department of Education has scheduled an emergency meeting of the State Board of Education for Tuesday to consider funding cuts tor two school districts that have rebuffed Gov. Ron DeSantis’ executive order allowing parents to ignore mask mandates.

DeSantis’ order directs Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran to withhold funds from “noncompliant” school boards that impose mask requirements during the school year, which already has begun in most Florida districts.

The order was amended Aug. 6 to “narrowly tailor” penalties – salary suspensions – to offending officials and school board members.

At least 10 Florida school districts have imposed mask mandates; all but three provided opt-outs. Leon, Alachua and Broward county school boards have adopted policies that require a doctor’s note to be excused from the mandate.

The Leon County School Board has since amended its policy. Not so with Alachua, which began school Tuesday, and Broward, which begins Wednesday.

Corcoran gave both until 5 p.m. Friday to explain how they will comply with the executive order.

“Depending on the facts presented,” Corcoran wrote Monday, “I may recommend to the State Board of Education that the department withhold funds in an amount equal to the salaries for the superintendent and all the members of the school board.”

The meeting was scheduled despite the governor’s office acknowledging Thursday the state legally cannot target individual board members and superintendents’ salaries.

What the DOE can do, however, according to the governor’s office interpretation of state law and the Florida Constitution, is withhold state funding that equals the amount of school board member and superintendent salaries.

The board will consider sanctions as an open letter signed by more than 800 Florida physicians circulates, demanding school boards be allowed to install mask mandates as the COVID-19 delta variant continues to spread in the Sunshine State.

“As the virus burns through Florida, health care providers feel we are fighting this fire without any leadership from Gov. Ron DeSantis,” the doctors wrote.

The letter was coordinated by the Committee to Protect Health Care, a national organization originally formed to thwart repeal of the Affordable Care Act.

“Blocking communities from making local decisions to protect themselves with (DeSantis’) top-down, one-size-fits-all edict will only make matters worse,” the letter read. “His executive order prohibiting local school districts from implementing COVID-19 safeguards exposes every child to a virus that is deadlier than the flu, as contagious as smallpox and preventable with two basic mitigation measures: mask use and vaccinations. Gov. DeSantis has effectively outlawed the former, and all but ignored the latter. With schools resuming and children returning to classrooms, Gov. DeSantis’ anti-safety strategy puts people at risk, including children.”

DeSantis has opposed mandatory mask mandates as a violation of parental rights, citing a Brown University study that “analyzed COVID-19 data for schools in Florida and found no correlation with mask mandates.”

That same study, however, supports masks in school.

“We would emphasize that in general this literature suggests in-person school can be operated safely with appropriate mitigation, which typically includes universal masking. It would be premature to draw any alternative conclusions about this question based on this preliminary data,” researchers wrote.

 

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Nancy Dickson
Nancy Dickson(@nancyjackathenshotmail-com)
2 years ago

Threatening to punish people who are trying to save children’s lives ought to be illegal. Putting children in danger – intentionally – is illegal. Why is there still any discussion about the necessity of masks to protect our children?

Mark Tomes
Trusted Member
Mark Tomes(@mtomes)
2 years ago

Parents do not have the right to determine if their child will wear a mask at school; school boards have that right. Parents do not have the right to set school dress codes, determine curricula, or set salaries; school boards (and unions) set those things. Parents have the right to take their children out of schools that have policies they do not like, to vote out school board members, and to speak to school board members about policies. As Nancy opined, why are we even discussing whether to wear a mask? Grow up, anti-vaccers and anti-maskers. You live in a society where we should be taking care if each other. I declare, it is like talking to my 3-year old granddaughter; she, understandably, sees the world all about her. One would think an adult would get it by now.

Joe Blanchard
Joe Blanchard(@jlblan2)
2 years ago
Reply to  Mark Tomes

I’ll bet you never met a government you didn’t like. Our country was founded on personal freedom, liberty and personal property. It was these ideals that has made us the leading country in the world. Masses of people try to come here each year for those opportunities. They are leaving countries where their governments dictate what they must do. It is a poor day in our country when citizens believe it is right for authoritarians, in government, to rule us.

Robert Warner
Robert Warner (@guest_62117)
2 years ago
Reply to  Joe Blanchard

Your comment has no relevance to the critical issues involving student health here. None.

Joseph Kayne
Joseph Kayne(@jay-kayne)
2 years ago
Reply to  Joe Blanchard

Mr. Blanchard, I suggest you read the preamble to the Constitution. If refers to the COMMON defense, the GENERAL welfare and the Blessings of Liberty to OURselves and OUR prosperity. The word PERSONAL does not appear. It exists only in the minds of those who do give a damn about others.