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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Florida teachers union sues DeSantis and state education commissioner over schools’ ‘reckless, unsafe reopening’

By Colleen Wright Miami Herald

MIAMI – Florida’s top teachers’ union, joined by local educators – including one from Miami-Dade County – sued Gov. Ron DeSantis and the state education commissioner Monday to stop the “reckless and unsafe reopening of schools” this fall amid the state’s surging COVID-19 cases.

The Miami-Dade plaintiff, Mindy Grimes-Festge, is the secretary/treasurer of the United Teachers of Dade. She and her husband, Don, have been educators for 28 years. They have a son, who is a rising high school senior with a compromised immune system and unable to return to school during the pandemic.

The lawsuit has gained traction, with the NAACP joining as a plaintiff in the suit, which names DeSantis and Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran as defendants. Corcoran has ordered the public schools to reopen.

“No one wants to be back in a classroom and reopen our school buildings more than educators,” said FEA president Fedrick Ingram. “We are teachers. That’s what we do. That’s what we live for. … But we want to do it safely. And we don’t want to put people at risk.

“We should be preparing our lesson plans, getting ready for school,” he continued. “But unfortunately, the reopening of the state of Florida has been reckless.”

The FEA hosted a virtual news conference with Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers.

The suit calls for the governor and education commissioner to drop an emergency order issued two weeks ago that called for, according to the lawsuit, “unnecessarily and unconstitutionally forcing millions of public school students and employees to report to unsafe brick and mortar schools that should remain physically closed during the resurgence of COVID-19 in Florida.”

In a statement, Corcoran accused the statewide teachers union of not reading or understanding the Department of Education’s guidance.

“This E.O. did not order any new directives regarding the requirements of schools to be open; it simply created new innovative options for families to have the CHOICE to decide what works best for the health and safety of their student and family,” he said.

“Additionally, the order created guaranteed funding for districts and schools to educate innovatively, as long as they continue to provide all students, especially at-risk students, with a world-class education, no matter what option they choose. The FEA frequently states that schools are underfunded, and if this frivolous, reckless lawsuit succeeds it will eliminate these funding guarantees – completely contradicting their normal outcry.”Superintendent Alberto Carvalho said previously that Miami-Dade County Public Schools was in compliance with the executive order, which allowed flexibility – and funding – for plans such as Miami-Dade’s.

Carvalho recently introduced eight criteria that must be met before schools reopen. United Teachers of Dade president Karla Hernandez-Mats has told teachers to prepare for online instruction.