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Books|Florida at Center of Debate as School Book Bans Surge Nationally

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FLORIDA AT CENTER OF DEBATE AS SCHOOL BOOK BANS SURGE NATIONALLY

Proponents say the laws aim to give parents control over their children’s
education. But many educators say the rules have brought chaos and fear.

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As book bans climb across the United States, Florida has become a hot spot, with
laws that restrict books across the state.Credit...Agnes Lopez for The New York
Times


By Patricia Mazzei, Elizabeth A. Harris and Alexandra Alter

Patricia Mazzei reported from Jacksonville, Fla., and Elizabeth Harris and
Alexandra Alter from New York, where they cover the publishing industry.

Published April 22, 2023Updated April 23, 2023, 6:42 p.m. ET
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JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Two years into a surge of book bans across the United
States, Florida is a hot spot in the clash over what reading material is
appropriate for children, with laws that have greatly expanded the state’s
ability to restrict books.

Historically, books were challenged one at a time. As bans in schools and
libraries began increasing nationally in 2021, efforts were largely local, led
by a parent or a group. But over the past year, access to books, particularly
those touching on race, gender or sexual orientation, became increasingly
politicized. With that came an increase in legislation and regulations in some
states and school districts that affected which books libraries could offer.

The shift is particularly evident in Florida, where Gov. Ron DeSantis, a
Republican-controlled Legislature and a rapidly growing network of conservative
groups aligned to pass three state laws last year aimed, at least in part, at
reading or educational materials. Among the books removed from circulation in
one of the state’s school districts are Toni Morrison’s “Beloved,” and Margaret
Atwood’s “The Handmaid’s Tale.”

The policies have energized Mr. DeSantis’s supporters and are part of the
platform from which he is expected to run for president.



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Proponents of the restrictions say their aims are to protect students from
inappropriate materials and to give parents more control over their children’s
education. In focusing on “parents’ rights,” Mr. DeSantis is trying to build on
the popularity he amassed when he resisted Covid-19 restrictions, particularly
in schools. The push is a signature part of the conservatism he is showcasing in
Florida. His Parental Rights in Education law, for example, constrains
instruction on gender and sexuality, which has led some districts to remove
books with L.G.B.T.Q. characters.

Some teachers and librarians say the policies are vague, with imprecise language
and broad requirements, leading to some confusion. But they are trying to
comply. Violation of the law could be a third-degree felony; in general, such
crimes are punishable by up to five years in prison

In January, when the new guidelines went into effect, some teachers removed or
covered up books that had not been vetted by certified media specialists, whose
approval is now legally required. Others are not ordering titles that could draw
complaints. Some educators emptied shelves or pulled collections until the
titles could be reassessed.

“It is a whole new level of fear,” said Kathleen Daniels, the president of the
Florida Association for Media in Education, a professional organization for
school librarians and media educators. “There are books that are not being
selected because they have been challenged.”


Image

Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida signing the Parental Rights in Education bill,
which constrains instruction on gender and sexuality.Credit...Douglas R.
Clifford/Tampa Bay Times, via Associated Press


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Florida ranks second, behind Texas, as the state with the highest number of book
removals, according to a report released on Thursday from the free-speech
organization PEN America, which tracked book bans in schools from July 1 to Dec.
31 of 2022. But PEN said that Florida’s broad, state-level approach, with
“wholesale bans” that restrict access to “untold numbers of books in classrooms
and school libraries,” made the true extent of book removals in the state
difficult to quantify.




Many of the new restrictions come from a law passed last year that requires
trained media specialists to evaluate each school book to ensure it is
age-appropriate and free of “pornographic” content. The law also requires
schools to keep a searchable online database of the books in their libraries and
classrooms.

Proposed legislation goes further. In March, the Florida House passed a bill
that could require schools to remove a book promptly based on a single complaint
from a parent or county resident that the book depicted sexual conduct. Under
the proposed bill, the book would remain unavailable until the complaint was
resolved.


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Two other laws are contributing to book bans in Florida schools. The Stop WOKE
Act prohibits instruction that could make students feel guilty or responsible
for the past actions of other members of their race. The Parents Rights in
Education law prohibits classroom instruction on sexual orientation and gender
identity in some elementary grades; a state rule is expected to expand the
restrictions through 12th grade.



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Efforts by Florida’s 67 public school districts to put the new regulations into
practice have been uneven and often chaotic. Some districts have taken no major
action. Others enacted blanket removals that essentially gutted libraries.


Image

Brian Covey posted a video of empty library shelves in the middle school where
he was teaching as a substitute. He was later fired from his job.Credit...Anna
Ottum for The New York Times


Earlier this year, soon after the new guidelines for libraries were issued in
January, some districts moved quickly to comply. In Duval County, home to
Jacksonville, the public school district restricted access to more than a
million titles, keeping them out of students’ hands until they were vetted by
specialists. In Manatee County, on Florida’s Gulf Coast, some teachers boxed up
their classroom libraries or covered their shelves. Officials in Martin County,
on the state’s Atlantic Coast, removed around 150 books from school circulation
in January and February, including John Green’s “Looking for Alaska,” and James
Patterson’s “Maximum Ride,” a series of sci-fi adventure books for readers ages
10 and up, which were pulled from elementary schools.



Mr. Patterson, who lives in Palm Beach, Fla., called the removal of his books
“frightening.”

“When you can take a mainstream series like ‘Maximum Ride’ and take it off the
shelves,” he said, “it shows that no one is safe.” A county spreadsheet gave no
specific reason for the series’ removal.

Training material advised media specialists to consider how they would feel
reading passages from the book in question aloud. “If you would not be
comfortable reading the material in a public setting,” said a slide show by the
state’s Department of Education, “then you should lean towards not making the
material available in a school library for children.”



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Jennifer Pippin leads a local chapter of the group Moms for Liberty in Florida
and was on the Department of Education panel that helped design the training
materials. She said books that had been removed from school libraries in the
state should not be considered “banned” because they remained available at
public libraries and in bookstores.

Young people in a school library might happen to pick up a book that contains a
graphic rape scene, she said, because they enjoyed other volumes in the same
series. Or a child interested in penguins might open a book about a penguin
family with two dads. But “it may not be appropriate for them per their parents’
standards,” she said. “With no instruction or parental guidance, some of these
things could indeed be harmful.”

In Duval County, the school district asked the district’s 54 media specialists
in January to begin reviewing the more than 1.6 million titles. Unapproved
books, elementary teachers were told, had to be covered or set aside.

About 25,000 books had cleared the review process as of early this month. The
ongoing process has left Duval County’s more than 129,000 students with access
to only a tiny fraction of available titles, critics said.

“Our books are being shadow-banned,” said Nina Perez, a Jacksonville resident
and a director for MomsRising, an advocacy organization opposing the
restrictions. “They get mired in an administrative process.”



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Tracy Pierce, a Duval school district spokesman, said in an email last month
that the actions had followed guidance from the state’s Department of Education.
At no time should classrooms have been without reading material, he said, since
students still had access to approved books and collections. He acknowledged
that “a small number of principals did close or overly restrict” media centers
briefly and were advised to restore access.

Mr. DeSantis has reacted aggressively to criticism that public schools are
banning books. He dismissed news reports that Duval County schools had removed a
title about the baseball player Roberto Clemente as “a joke,” accusing critics
of “manufacturing” a narrative about book bans.

The book, which addresses the racism that Mr. Clemente faced, was removed and
then restored in February after a review. Last month, the state’s education
commissioner named the title, “Roberto Clemente: Pride of the Pittsburgh
Pirates” by Jonah Winter, a book of the month for third through fifth grades.

At a news conference last month, Mr. DeSantis stood behind a sign that read
“Exposing the Book Ban HOAX” and said that the state was trying to protect
children from pornographic material. The event began with a presentation on
books reported to districts for removal — including “Gender Queer,” by Maia
Kobabe and “Flamer,” by Mike Curato — and highlighted scenes about sexual
contact and masturbation.

“This idea of a book ban in Florida, that somehow they don’t want books in the
library — that’s a hoax,” Mr. DeSantis said. “And that’s really a nasty hoax,
because it’s a hoax in service of trying to pollute and sexualize our children.”



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Critics in the state are pushing back. In March, Democracy Forward, an advocacy
organization, filed a lawsuit with the state on behalf of the Florida Education
Association and other groups challenging the rules, arguing that they censor
educators, limit students’ access to books and harm public education. The
Florida Freedom to Read Project organized a rally in Tallahassee last month with
authors and free speech activists to protest censorship.

After Brian Covey, a substitute teacher in Jacksonville, posted a video in
January of empty library shelves at a Duval County middle school, a reporter
asked Mr. DeSantis about it. The governor called the video a “fake narrative.”
Mr. Covey, who lost his job shortly after, said that he was troubled that Mr.
DeSantis and the school district tried to delegitimize what he had documented.

The fact that they called it a false narrative, Mr. Covey said, “tells me that
they have no intention of saying, ‘We made a mistake.’”







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