The Oklahoman

Fla. ties hands of health directors

State restricts their advice to school districts

- Andrew Marra

PALM BEACH, Fla. – As Gov. Ron DeSantis pushed this summer for schools to reopen, state leaders told school boards they would need Health Department approval if they wanted to keep classrooms closed. Then they instructed health directors not to give it.

Following a directive from DeSantis’ administra­tion, county health directors across Florida refused to give school boards advice about one of the most wrenching public health decisions in modern history: whether to reopen schools in a worsening pandemic, a USA TODAY Network review found.

In county after county, the health directors’ refrain to school leaders was the same: Their role was to provide informatio­n, not recommenda­tions. They could not tell school boards whether they believed the risks of opening campuses were too great, they said.

They could only provide suggestion­s on how to reopen safely.

“I don’t think any of us are in a position to balk the governor,” one director said. For frustrated school board members, it was a puzzling turnabout.

Florida’s public schools have long depended on local health directors for recommenda­tions on everything from reducing encephalit­is risks at football games to how to test students during tuberculos­is outbreaks.

But the directors’ new reticence aligned perfectly with DeSantis’ stated goal of pressuring Florida public schools to offer in-person classes. Lacking clear guidance from their local health directors, school board members in many counties said they felt compelled to reopen classrooms despite serious misgivings about exposing teachers and students to COVID-19.

Keeping campuses closed, they

said, risked violating an edict last month from state Education Commission Richard Corcoran, which decreed public schools “must open brick and mortar schools at least five days per week.”

“When we voted to reopen schools, I’ll be honest and tell you I did it because we are under an executive order to do so,” Marc Dodd, a school board member in Lake County, said last week. “Do I think they’re safe? Absolutely not.”

‘ The orders that we have’

Public schools across Florida will continue to let students learn from home if they choose, but many health experts worry opening classrooms will nonetheles­s cause COVID-19 infections to spike.

Corcoran’s emergency order pointed to one way around the state’s opencampus mandate: a waiver from state or county health officials. The provision made school boards more dependent than ever on health directors’ recommenda­tions.

But at the same time that Corcoran, a DeSantis appointee, was requiring Health Department approval to keep classrooms closed, health directors were being told not to make a recommenda­tion at all.

The directors’ refusal to guide educators through the roiling school-reopening debate stemmed directly from a directive by Surgeon General Dr. Scott Rivkees, DeSantis’ appointee to oversee the Department of Health and its county offices, The Palm Beach Post found.

Health directors in Volusia and Brevard counties both said last month that they were instructed by state supervisor­s not to offer opinions on whether schools could safely open.

In Volusia County, health director Patricia Boswell said Rivkees’ office told her and her colleagues across Florida to instead limit their input to how to reopen campuses safely.

“We’ve been advised that our role here is to just advise as to what can we do to make the environmen­t in schools as safe as possible with COVID-19,” Boswell said during a school board meeting. “It is not to make a decision on whether or not to open the school.”

Echoing those comments, Brevard health director Maria Stahl said health directors can’t give direct advice because they “have to follow the orders that we have.”

“What I can say is, (DeSantis) has ordered for the schools to be open,” Stahl said. “The education commission­er has ordered schools to be open. So all I can do is give them statistics.”

“I don’t think any of us are in a position to balk the governor,” Stahl added. In Palm Beach County, health director Dr. Alina Alonso told school district officials she, too, was instructed not to give formal recommenda­tions about whether to reopen, the school board’s chairman said.

In a statement, Alonso acknowledg­ed she declined to provide a written recommenda­tion after consulting with Health Department attorneys.

She said her role was not to make reopening decisions but to “give accurate, up-to-date data to my community partners.”

State health officials acknowledg­ed Rivkees instructed county directors to focus their advice to school boards on how best to reopen campuses. They did not dispute the directors’ accounts of being told not to opine on whether schools should remain online-only.

Rivkees “advised all county Health Department administra­tors to engage with their local school districts to serve as a resource to the school districts on how to open schools in the safest manner,” the department said in a statement to The Palm Beach Post.

A DeSantis spokesman referred questions about the state’s directive back to the Department of Health.

The refusal to give reopening guidance was not uniform across Florida. In some counties, health directors did urge school districts to keep classes online.

When COVID-19 cases started to surge last month in the Florida Keys, Monroe County’s health director shut down summer school and recommende­d schools remain closed for at least the first four weeks of the school year.

The director and his second-in-command, who have been in office for decades, have a long collaborat­ive history with the school district, School Board member Sue Woltanski said. They are also toward the end of their careers, which she said may have insulated them from political pressure.

“I don’t think they worry about losing their jobs,” Woltanski said.

In Palm Beach, Alonso declined to give a formal recommenda­tion but did tell school district officials during a small advisory committee meeting that she believed the numbers of COVID-19 cases were too high to reopen classes.

Based in part on her recommenda­tion, Palm Beach County’s school board voted to keep campuses closed. Because South Florida is still in Phase 1 of DeSantis’ state reopening plan, they expect their online-only plan to be approved.

Classrooms reopen

But the dynamic has been different in other parts of Florida that have moved into the second phase of the state’s reopening plan.

DeSantis and Corcoran have given conflicting explanatio­ns of how much leeway school boards have to keep classrooms closed without Health Department approval, arguing at some points that school boards have total autonomy to stay online-only if they choose and that schools must offer inperson classes at others.

School leaders in many counties concluded the order left them little choice.

In Leon County – where the county health director insisted her only role was to “to provide current data and to educate the school administra­tion on how to provide a safe school environmen­t” – school board members pleaded last month for parents to keep their children home even as they moved to open campuses.

“Persons in high places have made a decision that makes it impossible for us to be flexible,” school board member Darryl Jones said. “Wickedness in high places, that’s what this is.”

Although Corcorcan’s order explicitly empowered “local department­s of health” to give reopening directives, Orange County’s health director claimed it was not his place to weigh in.

“So the interestin­g thing about the orders is that I work for the Florida Department of Health, but I am not the Florida Department of Health,” the director, Dr. Raul Pino, told the Orlando Sentinel. Orange County School Board member Pam Gould complained that “we did not get a direct answer” from Pino, and the school district moved ahead with reopening campuses.

The county’s schools superinten­dent later lamented in a national radio interview that “the determinat­ion of when to open face to face was actually made at the state level.”

In Brevard County – where the health director last month claimed “it has never been our role to tell any municipali­ty or any school or anything what to do” – board members complained the lack of guidance placed them in “a really bad position.”

“Our local DOH has been told they cannot advise us on the safety of reopening schools,” School Board Chairwoman Misty Belford said, “and our hands have been tied” by the state’s reopening order.

Volusia County School Board member Ruben Colón reacted with alarm to Boswell’s revelation that she had been told not to opine on whether to reopen schools, saying it was ” unfair that the governor has put your office in a very uncomforta­ble position.”

“I understand that you have been given this directive,” he told Boswell. “However, in not having the advice of the Florida Department of Health, I personally do not believe the schools are safe to open.”

Even so, Volusia County’s School Board moved forward last month with plans to reopen campuses.

Sarasota County is planning in-person classes, and there a health official did feel empowered this week to make a public recommenda­tion.

It was one likely to be pleasing to DeSantis’ ears.

Faced with new concerns from school board members about a lack of guidelines for reopening decisions, Michael Drennon, the Health Department’s disease interventi­on services manager, urged them not to reconsider their decision to open up classrooms.

“Continue on with the existing plan,” Drennon said. “That would be our recommenda­tion at this time.”

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY/AP FILE ?? Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis pushed this summer for schools to reopen for in-person instructio­n.
LYNNE SLADKY/AP FILE Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis pushed this summer for schools to reopen for in-person instructio­n.

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