Public Postsecondary Educational Institutions | |
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Florida Legislature | |
Citation | House Bill 999 |
Legislative history | |
Bill title | Public Postsecondary Educational Institutions |
Introduced by | Alex Andrade |
Introduced by | Erin Grall |
Status: Pending |
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US House of Representatives Governor of Florida
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Florida House Bill 999, titled Public Postsecondary Educational Institutions, is pending Florida legislation relating to public universities within the state. Under the legislation, diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs and certain college majors relating to DEI would be eliminated or heavily restricted; the legislation phrases such courses as being based on "unproven, theoretical, or exploratory content". The bill would prohibit state universities from including DEI and political identity filters within higher education hiring processes, and bans the usage of critical race theory in hiring. The bill was filed in the Florida House of Representatives on February 21, 2023, by Republican representative Alex Andrade, while a Florida Senate version, designated as SB 266 and given the title Higher Education, was filed seven days later by Republican state senator Erin Grall. [1] [2] [3] [4]
The bill, which would ban Jewish studies and gender studies, is seen by both supporters and opponents as part of the manifestation of Florida governor Ron DeSantis' wide-reaching educational proposals. The governor is expected to sign the bill if it passes both houses of the Florida legislature. [5] Akin to the Florida Parental Rights in Education Act (or the Don't Say Gay Act as described by opposition and protestors), HB 999 also received a massive amount of backlash from students, with protests beginning to be staged within days of its initial introduction into the Florida legislature. Protests occurred at many of Florida's largest universities.
Under DeSantis, Florida has seen a wide number of bills relating to restricting education in the state. The most notable of these bills was the Parental Rights in Education Act, a law which restricted the instruction of homosexuality, gender identity, and various other LGBT+ issues and content within public elementary schools up to third grade. The law was dubbed by critics and a very large opposition as the Don't Say Gay act (less commonly the Don't Say Gay or Trans act), and was the subject of massive protests (particularly by students) across the country. The law was additionally protested by organizations representing various groups of people, from lawyers [6] to pediatricians, [7] and received scrutiny from the US federal government [8] [9] and a United Nations-affiliated official on LGBT+ discrimination. [10] [11] The entertainment industry also heavily mobilized against the bill, with DeSantis and the Florida legislator retaliating against The Walt Disney Company in particular by repealing the Reedy Creek Improvement District, which houses Walt Disney World. [12] [13]
DeSantis' efforts have also been seen as one of his ways to counter the influence of former president Donald Trump. DeSantis is widely expected to challenge Trump in the 2024 Republican Party presidential primaries, and is seen by many outlets and commentators as the Republican Party nominee who could most likely defeat Trump's re-election bid. The former president has been attempting to counter DeSantis' sudden rise in popularity by making similar campaign promises in the field of education, announcing campaign promises to ban critical race theory and "bring back parental rights into our schools". [14] [15]
HB 999 would prohibit colleges from funding or backing any college programs or campus activities which support or "espouse" DEI. The bill bans courses “based on unproven, theoretical, or exploratory content,” leading critics to ask if that includes the theories explaining evolution, gravity, theoretical physics. Gender studies, critical race theory, and intersectionality would also all be prohibited from being taught as majors. The bill additionally recommends the rewriting of universities' mission statements. [16] [3] Prior to amendments suggested in early April 2023, women's history and women's studies would also be among the affected disciplines. [17]
The bill would empower the Florida public university system's Board of Governors to enforce the law as it sees fit; 14 of the 17 seats on the Board of Governors are appointed directly by Florida's state governor. Each individual university's board of trustees would further gain the ability to review faculty members' tenure at will. [18]
The house version of the bill has advanced the farthest so far in the Florida legislature. Its first reading occurred on March 7, 2023, and was favorably received by the Postsecondary Education and Workforce Subcommittee on March 13, which voted along party lines to advance the bill. [19]
Senate Bill 266 advanced in the Florida state senate's appropriations committee on April 13, 2023. Neither bill has yet to pass either house of the state legislature. [20]
DeSantis' office has backed the bill, saying that it is necessary to prevent colleges and higher education within the state of Florida from leaning too far towards the Democratic Party. A statement released by his office claims that backers to American liberalism "suppress free thought in the name of identity politics and indoctrination", and that a "course correction" is necessary. [3] Florida's education secretary Manny Diaz further backs the bill, claiming the administration he works under wishes that students learn to pursue the truth. Both Diaz and DeSantis alludes that the opposition to HB 999 intends to impose ideology or a whim ideology on students. [3]
The National Review ran articles in support of the passage of the act, claiming that granting the ability for university boards to review faculty is a positive, and that the bill's mandates on civic education and the study of Western civilization are an improvement to the university curriculum. Stanley Kurtz argues that professors are promoting what he sees as an unnecessary fear of educating students on the Bill of Rights, the US Constitution, and the Federalist Papers. Kurtz further argues that stuff would mostly be the same under the faculty tenure review provisions, and that university presidential review would help to further the mission of the university. [21] [22]
Akin to Florida's Parental Rights in Education Act, students have been the most prominent demographic group opposed to the bill. Protests against the bill were noted to start almost immediately after the legislation was first introduced. Protests were first noted at Florida International University (FIU), Florida State University (FSU), the University of Florida (UF), and the University of South Florida (USF). A smaller protest was also staged at the University of Central Florida (UCF), and protests were additionally held at Florida Atlantic University (FAU) and Florida Gulf Coast University (FGCU). [23]
On March 7, 2023, at USF, students rallied and sat in outside a board of trustees meeting, to which the board seemed receptive to. The students outside dropped a banner off of a parking garage which read "stop house bill 999", and both outside and during the sit in, signs reading "Stop Death-Santis" and "Black Lives Matter" were held by students. Inside the board meeting, a letter signed by 30 university student organizations stated that the bill would restrict funding to an untold number of activities and organizations. [24] The immediately previous Monday, the University of South Florida was also the site of a violent protest against the law staged by the Tampa Bay Students for a Democratic Society. Three students and one university employee were arrested during a march from the Marshall Student Center to the Patel Center for Global Solutions for "causing a loud disturbance" and battery of law enforcement. The students demanded to see university president Rhea Law, and police claimed that the protest turned into a physical altercation despite their attempts to deescalate. [25]
In Tallahassee, Florida's state capital and the home of FSU, a protest against the bill was held on March 6 and organized by students, albeit carefully managed to avoid a repeat of the arrests from the USF. While mostly organized by students, FSU's Black Student Union and Women Student Union all supported the protest along with other groups who could potentially be deemed at risk. FSU students' protests were additionally supported by Democratic politicians serving in the Florida legislature. Many of the students at the protest expressed their opposition to the bill was rooted in either FSU's tradition for activism, the danger that the bill would pose to some groups' funding, or to protest the censorship of education. Students from other public Florida universities were noted to have travelled to Tallahassee to join the FSU protest. [26] [1]
Students also opposed the bill outside of Florida. Technician, North Carolina State University's student-run newspaper, blasted the bill and labelling it as white supremacy "at its finest". Technician further condemned the bill for including the board's ability to remove professors at will, which would enable schools to "bully" out professors for holding differing views. [27]
Legislators in the Florida legislature have raised alarm to line 341 of the bill in particular, the provision restricting public universities' use of funds to support DEI efforts. Democratic state representative Yvonne Hinson raises concern that the legislation would potentially impact the ability of black sororities to continue to function, despite the attempt of Andrade to calm her fears. Florida state senator Shevrin Jones, in an op-ed written for MSNBC, also raised the possibility that House Bill 999 could be used in the future by DeSantis and his supporters to censor and cut funding to the Divine Nine historically-Black college fraternities and sororities. Jones, an alumnus of Alpha Phi Alpha, stated that while some language from the bill was removed which could harm the Divine Nine and other Black Greek life organizations, he remains doubtful that he in good faith can still support the legislation due to its attacks on DEI, a set of values he sees as essential to education. [28] [29]
The American Council of Learned Societies raised its own protest against the bill and started an online petition signed by numerous organizations and students. The ACLS not only argues that the censorship presented under HB 999's passage would prevent learning, but that Florida universities would lose accreditation for federal funds and prevent numerous low-income students from attending college. Students from across the United States and the world have signed the petition, as have many organizations, including the American Historical Association, the College Art Association, and the Middle East Studies Association of North America. The American Historical Association further submitted its own protest letter signed by many of the same organizations. [30] [31] [32] [33]
Historians further expressed their opposition by criticizing the bill for effectively threatening academic freedom. Through its ban of critical race theory, the American Historian Association slammed the bill, as it is argued that teaching accurate American History is impossible without covering concepts related to slavery in the United States and America's history with racism. [34]
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