New training for the state's public schoolteachers comes with the caution that choosing the wrong books could result in third-degree felony charges, a House subcommittee heard on Wednesday.
The new training is the result of a law (HB 1467) passed last regular Session that revised the rules governing the selection of library and classroom materials. The Education Quality Subcommittee was briefed Wednesday on the new training that 2,300 educators have so far received because of the new law that Gov. Ron DeSantis hailed as a victory for parental rights.
Paul Burns, chancellor of public schools for the state Department of Education, said including the "felony" mentioned in the training does not necessarily mean teachers are being targeted.
"That was just the spirit of making sure that we had a comprehensive and thorough training so that all of our educators understood the requirements," Burns said. "Parental rights are very important in Florida."
The mention of a crime in the training has sparked concern, however, particularly among elementary school teachers who, in the spirit of trying to encourage reading, have classroom libraries that are not usually officially reviewed.
Photos of Manatee County classroom libraries have gone viral on social media after a report of the school district asking teachers to remove all unapproved books because of the law, the Bradenton Herald reported.
"They can be charged with a third-degree felony," Patricia Barber, the president of the county's teachers union, told the newspaper. "They've criminalized providing a book when there really is just a vague definition of what books are not appropriate."
The situation stirred some concern among Democrats on the subcommittee. Rep. Christopher Benjamin of Miami Gardens asked Burns to explain what is meant by "inflammatory" as prohibited for school materials.
"The definition for inflammatory is not in our state Board of Education rules," Burns said. "What we did here (in the training) was to capture what the laws say and all the state Board (of Education) rules. We put all of those in one place so that educators can have a one-stop shop thorough training."
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