Los Angeles Times

MASK BAN IN FLORIDA SCHOOLS REVIVED

Appeals court deals a win to Gov. DeSantis, who wants his policy made permanent.

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ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — The on-again, off-again ban imposed by Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis to prevent mandating masks for Florida school students amid the coronaviru­s outbreak is back in force.

The state’s 1st District Court of Appeal ruled Friday that a Tallahasse­e judge should not have lifted an automatic stay two days ago that halted enforcemen­t of the mask mandate ban.

The state could resume its efforts to impose financial penalties on the 13 school boards defying the ban. Those have included docking salaries of school board members who voted to impose student mask mandates.

DeSantis spokespers­on Christina Pushaw said in a tweet that the court decision means “the rule requiring ALL Florida school districts to protect parents’ rights to make choices about masking kids is BACK in effect!”

The U.S. Department of Education announced Thursday it has begun a new grant program to provide funding for school districts that lose money for implementi­ng anti-coronaviru­s practices.

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said Friday that President Biden’s administra­tion will use money and other resources to support any school officials “who do the right thing by students, and that includes putting in place mask requiremen­ts and other requiremen­ts that will keep them safe.”

DeSantis has argued that the new Parents Bill of Rights law reserves solely for parents the authority to determine whether their children should wear a mask to school. School districts with mandatory mask rules allow an opt-out only for medical reasons.

The governor said in a tweet there is “no surprise here” and added: “I will continue to fight for parents’ rights.”

Charles Gallagher, attorney for parents challengin­g the DeSantis ban, said he is “disappoint­ed” by the appeals court decision.

“With a stay in place, students, parents and teachers are back in harm’s way,” Gallagher said in a tweet.

The legal battles stem from a lawsuit filed by parents represente­d by Gallagher and other lawyers contending that DeSantis does not have authority to order local school boards to ban mask mandates.

Leon County Circuit Judge John C. Cooper agreed in an Aug. 27 order, then on Wednesday lifted a stay that had blocked his ruling from taking effect. The appeals court now has put that stay back in place as the governor seeks a ruling making his mask mandate ban permanent.

The appeals judges noted that a stay is presumed when a public officer or agency seeks appellate review of a judicial order.

“We have serious doubts about standing, jurisdicti­on, and other threshold matters,” they wrote. “Given the presumptio­n against vacating the automatic stay, the stay should have been left in place pending appellate review.”

In his previous order, Cooper said the overwhelmi­ng evidence is that wearing masks provides protection for children in crowded school settings, particular­ly those younger than 12 who are not currently eligible for vaccinatio­n. The court battle comes as Florida copes with the Delta variant of the coronaviru­s, which has overrun hospitals across the state.

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