Orlando Sentinel

Hearing set in key Florida school book-banning lawsuit

- By Jim Saunders

TALLAHASSE­E — A federal judge will hear arguments next month in a high-profile challenge to decisions by the Escambia County School Board to remove or restrict access to school-library books.

U.S. District Judge T. Kent Wetherell has scheduled arguments for Jan. 10 in Pensacola on a request by the school board to dismiss the lawsuit, which was filed in May by seven parents of schoolchil­dren, five authors, the publishing company Penguin Random House and the free-speech group PEN America.

The case is playing out amid wide-ranging debates in Florida and other states about school officials removing or restrictin­g access to books. The plaintiffs in the Escambia County case contend that the school board’s decisions violated First Amendment and constituti­onal equal-protection rights.

But attorneys for the school board argue Wetherell should dismiss the case for a series of reasons, including that the board has the authority to decide which books to purchase and keep on school shelves.

In an Aug. 21 motion to dismiss the case, the attorneys wrote that the board’s “alleged actions constitute government speech, for which plaintiffs enjoy no First Amendment or Equal Protection Clause protection.”

But in a Sept. 18 response, lawyers for the plaintiffs urged Wetherell to reject such arguments. The response said the “restrictio­ns and removals have disproport­ionately targeted books by or about people of color and/or LGBTQ people.”

“Under the position advanced by the board … school officials have unfettered discretion to remove or restrict access to library books for any reason, including to suppress ideas for nakedly political or partisan reasons,” the plaintiffs’ lawyers wrote.

The lawsuit involves the removal of 10 books and restrictio­ns on access to more than 150 others, according to the plaintiffs’ response. Examples include, “The Bluest Eye,” a novel by Nobel Prize-winning author Toni Morrison, and the book “And Tango Makes Three,” which tells the story of two male penguins who raised a penguin chick at New York’s Central Park Zoo.

The Escambia and Lake County school districts and the State Board of Education also face a separate federal lawsuit about access to “And Tango Makes Three.”

U.S. District Judge Allen Winsor, who is based in Tallahasse­e, held a hearing last week on motions to dismiss that case but had yet to rule. The lawsuit’s plaintiffs include the book’s authors, Peter Parnell and Justin Richardson, and an Escambia County thirdgrade student.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States