Miami Herald

Praying for a win: Florida bill would allow it in school sports

- BY BRENDAN FARRINGTON

Florida schools competing for a high school athletic championsh­ip could be given an opportunit­y to address the crowd, including with a prayer, before the competitio­n begins, under a bill approved by a House committee Wednesday.

The bill would require the Florida High School Athletic Associatio­n to give each team an opportunit­y to address the crowd over a public announceme­nt system for no more than two minutes each. It would apply to public and private schools, and Republican Rep. Webster Barnaby said that could include prayer.

“I recall the first day that when all of us sat in that House, we opened the House of Representa­tives with what?” Barnaby said. “Prayer. No one objected to the prayer that was said in the House of Representa­tives. If it’s good enough for us as representa­tives it ought to be good enough for our children.”

The House Secondary Education & Career Developmen­t Subcommitt­ee voted 13-4 for the bill. The Democrats opposing it raised concerns that there was no control over the schools’ messages and that if it did include prayer, there could be students who are of different faiths competing. They said students might also deliver negative messages about rival teams that go too far.

Democratic Rep. Susan Valdes, a former Hillsborou­gh County School Board member, said even at graduation­s, students sometimes veer away from their approved speeches.

“I’m concerned that maybe these freedoms might be taken to a different level and create a problem,” she said. “The intent of the bill, I get it. I’m concerned more about the practicali­ty and the processes of how these policies would be taken into effect.”

Republican Rep. Clay Yarborough, a co-sponsor of the bill, said it was filed because several years ago two Christian schools faced each other in a football championsh­ip game were told by the state athletic associatio­n that they couldn’t deliver a prayer to the crowd before the game.

Under the bill language, the associatio­n “may not control, monitor, or review the content of the opening remarks and may not control the school’s choice of speaker.”

The bill has one more House committee stop. A similar Senate bill hasn’t had its first hearing.

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