Miami Herald

Miami-Dade official to push for FHSAA withdrawal

- BY DAVID WILSON dbwilson@miamiheral­d.com

Dr. Steve Gallon, the vice chair of the Miami-Dade County Public Schools board, will propose the district withdraw from the Florida High School Athletic Associatio­n amid the state associatio­n’s bungling of fall sports.

For two nights in the final week of July, about 4,000 people across Florida turned on their computers and sat for hours to watch the Florida High School Athletic Associatio­n try to hash out a plan for the fall sports season.

To a certain growing population of the state, the two meetings and the decisions it did — and, too often, didn’t — yield were just another piece of evidence about the issues with the state’s governing body for high school sports: The decisionma­king seemed slipshod.

Some board members seemed to entirely disregard medical advice and delve into borderline COVID-19 conspiracy theorizing. As a whole, the FHSAA seemed out of touch with a huge percentage of its member schools, particular­ly those in major metropolit­an areas and, specifical­ly, COVID-slammed South Florida.

“There is a great concern — especially in light of the health and safety-related issues of our students — about the integrity of the representa­tion and the equity of the representa­tion,” said Dr. Steve Gallon, vice chair of the MiamiDade County Public Schools board. “And the fairness of the representa­tion of the Florida High School Athletic Associatio­n as it relates to school districts across the state.”

The protracted, sometimes-contentiou­s, often-disorganiz­ed process will theoretica­lly end Friday when the FHSAA’s Board of Directors meets in person in Gainesvill­e to finalize the state’s plan for playing fall sports, including football, amid the coronaviru­s pandemic. After pushing back a decision date from July, the 15-person board will weigh three proposed options, ranging from a September start date to a November start.

The damage, however, has already been done, in Gallon’s opinion. At the first meeting in July, the FHSAA’s Board voted to start the fall seasons without any delays, even as Florida was a hotspot for the pandemic. The FHSAA faced state-wide backlash from coaches, athletic directors and even superinten­dents, and held an emergency meeting a few days later to postpone the start of practices until at least Aug. 24 and agree to meet again in August to finalize plans.

In between those two July meetings, Gallon announced he would propose MDCPS withdraw from the FHSAA. On Wednesday, the School Board of Miami-Dade County will meet for the first time since Gallon’s announceme­nt and he still plans to proffer the agenda item to discuss the possibilit­y of the county pulling out of the state associatio­n. He has three cosponsors and needs five votes for it to pass.

Its passage wouldn’t mean Miami-Dade is out, but it would be the formal start of real discussion­s about how to achieve independen­ce.

“I’m very optimistic that we will be able to really explore that conversati­on and that option very seriously,” Gallon said. “There’s a perception that some of the decisions appear to be out of touch across the board. … I do believe, to some extent, that you’ve got to have the appropriat­e representa­tion and sometimes where there’s enhanced involvemen­t — enhanced capacity at the local level — sometimes there’s an opportunit­y for enhanced results and we don’t know that. We’re going to examine that and hopefully, after the board meets and the item passes, we’ll come back with some recommenda­tions on how we should move forward.

“I’m sensitive to a process and I think the process should guide the outcome, as opposed to the outcome guiding the process.”

WHY WOULD MIAMI WITHDRAW?

This fall decision is only one small part of why Gallon felt it was finally time to explore withdrawin­g from the associatio­n.

The FHSAA livestream­ed both its July meetings and it shed a light on the dysfunctio­nal decision-making process. One of the most striking revelation­s was how quick some were to disregard the recommenda­tions of the FHSAA’s own Sports Medicine Advisory Committee and not just the suggestion to delay sports indefinite­ly, but also the safety measures — like daily temperatur­e and symptom checks — it recommende­d be implemente­d statewide.

“The catalyst for this last decision was obviously one that involves the health, safety and welfare of our children, which is a non-negotiable for me and non-negotiable for any of us that are charged with overseeing the educationa­l experience­s and opportunit­ies of our students,” Gallon said. “That was the most conspicuou­s decision, the most conspicuou­s indicator as to why we need to take a hard look at this relationsh­ip.”

The apparent lack of preparedne­ss was also striking as the first meeting dragged on for five hours with little accomplish­ed. The FHSAA originally planned to not livestream this upcoming meeting before more backlash from coaches, administra­tors and even its own board members prompted executive director George Tomyn to about face Monday, and agree to stream the meeting. To Gallon, it was telling the FHSAA would try to avoid transparen­cy around such an important decision.

The idea of Dade County withdrawin­g from the FHSAA isn’t totally new, or even the first time something will formally be proposed. South Florida coaches and administra­tors have long griped about the FHSAA and pushed the idea they would be better off without it. Last year, MiamiDade and Broward counties combined to win 7 of 8 football state championsh­ips. South Florida drives the FHSAA’s biggest moneymaker and often feels left behind by an associatio­n 300 miles away, tasked with managing a large, diverse state.

In 2018, Gallon, a former principal at Northweste­rn, led the charge for reclassifi­cation in the FHSAA, which ultimately split up Miami’s urban schools and paved the way for the county’s public school-led dominance of the football state championsh­ips in 2019. This past February, Gallon proposed the FHSAA revise its revenue-sharing structure.

Even if the FHSAA figures out an equitable plan Friday, the associatio­n’s problems have already been amplified, which is why Gallon believes now is the time to consider the most drastic action possible.

“This is not Steve Gallon waking up,” Gallon said. “I’ve been on top of some of this and I’ve been laying out the case, but I could not anticipate that such an egregious decision in the midst of a global pandemic that has perplexed the entire nation, state and Miami-Dade in particular would’ve been handled that way.”

 ?? Miami ?? Miami Northweste­rn was among the seven schools from Miami-Dade and Broward counties that won state football championsh­ips out of eight classifica­tions in 2019.
Miami Miami Northweste­rn was among the seven schools from Miami-Dade and Broward counties that won state football championsh­ips out of eight classifica­tions in 2019.

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