As COVID surges, more Florida school districts revolt against governor's
mask ban
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[September 03, 2021]
By Saundra Amrhein and James Oliphant
TAVARES, Fla (Reuters) - In a scene
replayed across the United States, angry parents and activists streamed
into a meeting of the Florida's Lake County school board on Thursday
where it considered whether to mandate mask-wearing for students and
staff due to COVID.
Some opponents of the mask proposal brandished signs that read “Let Our
Children Breathe.” Even with Florida seeing a record number of
coronavirus cases, one attendee called the pandemic "overblown." Another
was escorted out by deputies after yelling at board members.
The proposal would require staff and students to wear masks for 14 days
at schools with COVID positivity rates at or above 5%. But Florida's
Republican governor, Ron DeSantis, effectively banned similar mandates
in July.
Since DeSantis' order, more than a dozen Florida counties have rebelled
and voted to require masks to protect students and teachers as the Delta
variant sweeps across the state. This week, the state's Department of
Education sanctioned two counties that passed school mask requirements.
The battle between DeSantis and the state's school systems echoes larger
fights across the country. Other Republican-run states such as Arizona
and Texas have also banned mask mandates in schools even as COVID cases
have soared in their states, as parents and voters are sharply divided
over safety measures and personal freedoms.
The pushback in Florida against the Republican governor initially was
led by large urban school districts run by Democrats. But this week saw
more conservative counties that backed Republican Donald Trump in the
2020 presidential election also defying DeSantis and instituting their
own mandates.
Earlier this week, populous Brevard County along Florida’s east coast,
which went for Trump over President Joe Biden by more than 16 percentage
points in November, narrowly voted to approve a 30-day school mask
mandate.
A day later, Hernando County, which supported Trump over Biden by almost
30 points, also passed a mandate, but one that allows parents to opt
out.
In Lake County near Orlando, which also strongly backed Trump, a school
official said on Thursday that more than 1,000 students of the 36,000 in
the district had tested positive for the virus.
The board listened to more than three hours of public comment on the
mask proposal then postponed a decision. Some 280 people spoke or sent
emails on the issue, and two-thirds of them supported the idea, the
Orlando Sentinel reported.
Still, proponents of a mask mandate were booed and heckled by the crowd
in attendance.
“This topic has completely polarized communities,” said Andrea Messina,
president of the Florida School Boards Association.
'ABSOLUTE CRISIS'
While the conflict centers on whether state or local governments are
best equipped to make decisions on health and safety, it also has become
a political challenge for DeSantis, whose state has once again become a
COVID-19 hotbed.
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People hold placards as members of the Lake County School Board
conduct an emergency meeting to discuss mask mandates to prevent the
spread of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Tavares, Florida, U.S.,
September 2, 2021. REUTERS/Joe Skipper/File Photo
After being widely praised last year when cases
declined and the state’s economy seemed revived, DeSantis has faced
renewed criticism for his opposition to masks and employer vaccine
mandates. Florida on Aug. 26 saw a single-day record number of new
cases of the virus – almost 28,000 – since the pandemic began.
A spokesperson for DeSantis, Christina Pushaw, defended the ban on
school mandates, saying the governor is "protecting the rights of
families and children from all levels of government overreach."
At the Brevard County meeting on Monday, Misty Bedford, the chair of
the school board who a month earlier had opposed a mask mandate,
switched her vote and gave proponents a 3-2 majority.
Bedford changed her mind, she told Reuters, after watching the
district’s caseload spike, including a 49% increase in student cases
from one week to the next. One school was closed for two days after
most of its students were quarantined.
“We are at an absolute crisis point," Belford said.
But board member Katye Campbell, who voted against the mandate, said
she worries about negative effects on students from requiring masks,
such as asthma flare-ups, suicidal ideation and panic attacks.
“There is nothing easy about this decision because our community is
so divided,” Campbell said.
Belford said she was relying on a decision from a Florida court last
week that declared the DeSantis ban illegal. DeSantis has vowed to
appeal the ruling. On Monday, the Florida Board of Education said it
would penalize two counties that voted for mask mandates, Alachua
and Broward, by withholding funds from the districts for the board
members’ salaries.
Leanetta McNealy, chair of the Alachua County school board, said her
board voted for the mask mandate last month based on scientific
evidence that it would help mitigate the spread of the highly
contagious Delta variant.
“I’d rather have a decrease in my compensation than have a death
under my watch,” she said.
(Reporting by Saundra Amrhein in Tavares, Florida and James Oliphant
in Washington; Editing by Soyoung Kim and Cynthia Osterman)
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