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DeSantis now backs a House plan to withhold $200M from districts that defied his mask mandate ban

Rep. Randy Fine sits on a dais, with a microphone
File Photo
/
News Service of Florida
Rep. Randy Fine sits on a dais, with a microphone

Twelve of Florida’s public school districts will see reduced budget increases under a plan moving ahead in the Florida House. That proposal now has the backing of Gov. Ron DeSantis, who initially said he did not support reductions to districts that defied his effort to ban mandatory school mask policies.

DeSantis weighed in on Fine’s plan Friday—expressing opposition to it amid a concern that the targeted districts would cut student programs and even perhaps teacher positions. Yet by Tuesday, House Education budget writer, Rep. Randy Fine, announced DeSantis backed his concept.

“What he [DeSantis] as asked, and what we agree with, is that ensuring our proviso says these reductions in growth must cone entirely from central offices…there can be no programmatical cuts in programs facing students. So, the governor is on board, now," Fine said to Democratic Rep. Carlos Guillermo Smith, in response to a question about why Fine was keeping the item when the governor publicly stated his opposition to it.

The dozen districts that defied the governor had mandatory student mask policies and did not allow parents to opt out of them—running contrary to DeSantis’ directive that parents should have a say in whether students wear face coverings. The issue was eventually settled in the courts, and in the legislature during a November special session that sought to curb both local government and school district mask and vaccine mandates.

Fine’s proposal would withhold $200 million from the 12 defiant districts and redistribute that money to the rest. The plan has been branded as a cut—and it’s written that way in the House’s budget proposal. It also comes as the legislature is seeking to increase overall K-12 funding, and Fine, during a debate on the House proposal, argued the $200 million is only about 1% of the overall budget, and what it really means is that some districts won’t get as much of an overall increase as others.

“I think the fact that the corporate media can’t do math is something we should look at," Fine said, pushing back against the money being described as a cut.

"But as I said, in this budget, even with the 'Putting Parents First Adjustment' every school district in the state of Florida will be seeing an increase. What you can say is, it’s not increasing as much as it otherwise would.”

Fine’s proposal continues to target district administrators--the people who oversee areas like the budget, curriculum, safety, and other aspects of running schools. Speaking a day before Fine announced the governor’s newfound support, House co-minority leader Evan Jenne blasted the proposal as extremely punitive.

“The one glaring thing is the House acting as judge, jury and executioner when it comes to the $200 million being taken away from schools if those school districts that had mask mandates. It’s an extremely punitive measure that is only there as punishment," he said.

Jenne had hoped the governor’s opposition would derail Fine’s plan. Now that’s no longer the case, the issue is likely up for negotiation with the Senate, which has no similar proposal. Senate President Wilton Simpson recently told reporters he had not seen it, but added that he believes in holding entities that violate laws and rules accountable.

Fine himself does not deny the proposal is a punishment for the districts that defied the governor. He says passing laws and controlling the purse strings are really the only two ways lawmakers can ensure local governments and schools are adhering to laws.

“It’s an appropriate function of the Florida House…to use that power of the purse to hold accountable those who do not respond to and follow the laws that we have passed and the laws that are out there…it is the only method we have, as the legislature, to hold people accountable and that’s what we’re proposing to do here.” 

The districts targeted by Fine’s “Putting Parents First Adjustment" are Alachua, Brevard, Broward, Duval, Hillsborough, Indian River, Leon, Miami-Dade, Orange, Palm Beach, Sarasota and Volusia.

Follow @HatterLynn

Lynn Hatter is a Florida A&M University graduate with a bachelor’s degree in journalism. Lynn has served as reporter/producer for WFSU since 2007 with education and health care issues as her key coverage areas.  She is an award-winning member of the Capital Press Corps and has participated in the NPR Kaiser Health News Reporting Partnership and NPR Education Initiative. 

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