Miami Herald (Sunday)

‘It’s censorship’: Broward high school told not to sell yearbook because of BLM spread

- BY MADELEINE ROMANCE AND CARLI TEPROFF mromance@miamiheral­d.com cteproff@miamiheral­d.com

When seniors trickled into West Broward High School last week to pick up their caps and gowns, they were told they couldn’t get their yearbooks.

The reason: The assistant principal ordered yearbook teacher David Fleischer to stop selling and distributi­ng the yearbook because the Black Lives Matter spread in it was “too politicall­y one sided,” Fleischer said he was told by the administra­tion.

“It’s censorship,” Elise Twitchell, Edge Yearbook co-editor-in-chief, said Tuesday. Twitchell was one of several editors who released statements sharing their disappoint­ment in school administra­tors. “And the fact that it was over parent complaints about the Black Lives Matter spread is just appalling to me.”

That was Friday. By Monday, the district allowed the Edge staff to

continue to distribute the yearbook, but this time with a letter from the school’s principal inserted.

“Please note that as a government­al agency, the School Board of Broward County must maintain a neutral stance on all political views,” Principal Brad Fatout wrote in the letter. “As such, any political views expressed in the 2021 West Broward yearbook are not sponsored by the District.”

According to a statement from Broward County Public Schools, “the school’s administra­tion paused distributi­on late Friday afternoon while the concerns were carefully reviewed.”

“As the yearbook is intended to highlight notable and newsworthy events from that year, student journalist­s exercised their freedom of speech in documentin­g the movement,” the district said. “As a result of the review, distributi­on of the yearbook resumed Monday morning with an insert noting that, as a government­al entity, the Broward County

School Board must maintain a neutral stance on all political views ... .”

Fleischer, the yearbook teacher, was not happy with the letter, noting “the letter was included without the knowledge of The Edge, or its endorsemen­t.”

“The Edge believes the letter is offensive and dehumanize­s the nonwhite students at West Broward and the entire Broward County School District,” Fleischer wrote in an email to the West Broward community.

ELECTION, COVID

In addition to student photos and other standard yearbook material, the yearbook also included coverage of the 2020 presidenti­al election, COVID-19 and the LGBTQ community. None of the other spreads were deemed “too political” by the district, according to Fleischer.

West Broward is not the only South Florida yearbook that tackled the protests spawned by the death of George Floyd, the Black man killed by a white

Minneapoli­s officer who knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes on May 25, 2020.

Coral Gables High yearbook editors also created a spread, called “Power to the People,’’ focusing on the protests and student reaction to them in their yearbook, Cavaleon.

Howard Wasserman, a law professor at Florida Internatio­nal University College of Law, said while the school can control the content of the student publicatio­ns, he was “glad they picked something that is just sort of silly, but otherwise allows the students to say what they wanted to say in the yearbook.”

CLARIFIED

“I am glad that the school district neither just stopped circulatio­n of the yearbook altogether nor insisted that there be content about Blue Lives Matter,” he said. “What they did was just make explicit, I think what everyone sort of knows, which is this is a student publicatio­n and it’s not the school district speaking.”

Despite the Edge staff efforts — including trying to halt the distributi­on of the yearbook with the note — the administra­tion has not changed its stance, Fleischer said.

“I’m very, very proud of my students, and it’s been a great learning experience for them. They’ve taken the helm,” Fleischer said. “I’m really proud of how much they pushed this and how much they stood up for what they believe in, their publicatio­n and the student body.”

 ?? The Edge ?? The West Broward High School yearbook included a spread on a Black Lives Matter protest. School administra­tion temporaril­y halted sales.
The Edge The West Broward High School yearbook included a spread on a Black Lives Matter protest. School administra­tion temporaril­y halted sales.
 ??  ?? The Coral Gables High yearbook, Cavaleon, featured news events and how they affected students, including the death of George Floyd on May 25, 2020, and the subsequent protests.
The Coral Gables High yearbook, Cavaleon, featured news events and how they affected students, including the death of George Floyd on May 25, 2020, and the subsequent protests.

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