Houston Chronicle

Florida judge blocks DeSantis from banning mask mandates

- By Terry Spencer and Curt Anderson

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Florida school districts can legally require their students to wear masks to prevent the spread of COVID-19, a judge ruled Friday, saying Gov. Ron DeSantis oversteppe­d his authority when he issued an executive order banning such mandates.

Leon County Circuit Judge John Cooper agreed with a group of parents who claimed in a lawsuit that DeSantis’ order is unconstitu­tional and can’t be enforced. The governor’s order gave parents the sole right to decide if their child wears a mask at school.

Cooper said DeSantis’ order “is without legal authority.”

His decision came after a threeday virtual hearing, and after 10 Florida school boards voted to defy DeSantis and impose mask requiremen­ts with no parental opt-out. Districts that have done so include Miami, Fort Lauderdale, Orlando, Tampa, Jacksonvil­le, West Palm Beach and others. Cooper’s ruling won’t go into effect until it’s put into writing, which the judge asked the parents’ lawyers to complete by Monday.

Cooper said that while the governor and others have argued that a new Florida law gives parents the ultimate authority to oversee health issues for their children, it also exempts government actions that are needed to protect public health and are reasonable and limited in scope. He said a school district’s decision to require student masking to prevent the spread of the virus falls within that exemption.

The law “doesn’t ban mask mandates at all,” Cooper said during a two-hour hearing that was conducted online because of the resurgent pandemic. “It doesn’t require that a mask mandate must include a parental opt-out at all.”

The judge also noted that Florida Supreme Court decisions from 1914 and 1939 found that individual rights are limited by their impact on the rights of others. For example, he said, adults have the right to drink alcohol but not to drive drunk, because that endangers others. There’s a right to free speech, but not to harass or threaten others or yell “fire” in a crowded theater, he said.

In that same vein, he said, school boards can reasonably argue that maskless students endanger the health of other students and teachers.

DeSantis has dismissed the recommenda­tion from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that people wear masks, questionin­g its legitimacy and saying it’s not applicable to Florida. But Cooper said the state’s medical experts who testified during the trial that masking is ineffectiv­e in preventing COVID-19’s spread are in a distinct minority among doctors and scientists. He also said that while DeSantis frequently states that a Brown University study concluded masks are ineffectiv­e, the study’s authors wrote that no such conclusion should be drawn.

“I don’t say that the governor has time enough to read a report that

thick, but his advisers do … and that statement is incorrect,” Cooper said.

The governor’s office said Friday that Cooper’s decision wasn’t based on the law and the state will appeal it.

“It’s not surprising that Judge Cooper would rule against parents’ rights and their ability to make the best educationa­l and medical decisions for their family, but instead rule in favor of elected politician­s,” spokeswoma­n Taryn Fenske said in a statement. “This ruling was made with incoherent justificat­ions, not based in science and facts — frankly not even remotely focused on the merits of the case presented.”

Craig Whisenhunt, one of the attorneys representi­ng the parents, called DeSantis’ actions in the case “atrocious” and called him “a bully in the room that is beating up children.”

“The path that he took showed evidence of some cowardice,” he said. If DeSantis really believed the parental rights law barred districts from imposing mask mandates, he wouldn’t have issued an executive order — he would have taken the districts to court and gotten a judge to block them, Whisenhunt said.

One of the parents who sued the state, Amy Nell of the Tampa area, said that when Cooper ruled, “I really felt heard for the first time in a while.”

“Since the beginning of the school year it has felt like bizarro world,” Nell said. “We are being told that science — what we think it is and everything we know about viruses — may be not true.”

 ?? Lynne Sladky / Associated Press ?? Winston Wallace, 9, raises his hand in class at iPrep Academy on the first day of school in Miami. A judge has ruled that Florida school districts may impose mask mandates.
Lynne Sladky / Associated Press Winston Wallace, 9, raises his hand in class at iPrep Academy on the first day of school in Miami. A judge has ruled that Florida school districts may impose mask mandates.

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