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DeSantis, Allies Discuss Opposition To Masks In Schools

Gov. Ron DeSantis
Gov. Ron DeSantis’ office did not giving prior public notice and excluded reporters. The discussion was recorded by the governor’s staff and posted to Rumble.

DeSantis reiterated that he would support holding a special legislative session to address the issue if the federal government were to require masks for students.

Gov. Ron DeSantis held a roundtable discussion Monday at the state Capitol that focused on opposition to mask mandates in schools during the COVID-19 pandemic.

DeSantis’ office did not giving prior public notice and excluded reporters. The discussion was recorded by the governor’s staff and posted to Rumble.

The event was held as hospitals across the state are seeing sharp increases in COVID-19 patients because of the delta variant and lagging vaccination rates.

A day later, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued new guidelines advising that all people, including those who are fully vaccinated, wear masks in schools and areas of “substantial or high” transmission.

“We in Florida, to this point, our school districts have proposed mask-optional (policies),” DeSantis said in a video of the Monday. “But I think our fear is that, seeing some of those rumblings, that there’d be an attempt from the federal level or even some of these organizations to try to push for mandatory masking of school children.”

On Tuesday, CDC Director Rochelle Walensky told reporters that “new science related to the delta variant” of the coronavirus prompted the change in guidance. Previous guidelines said children younger than 12 should wear masks in schools because they remain ineligible for vaccination.

“With regard to schools, when we released our school guidance on July 9, we had less delta variant in this country, we had fewer cases in this country,” Walensky said.

Walensky said she doesn’t expect children younger than 12 to be approved for vaccinations before the start of the school year. She added that 30 percent of children between ages 12 to 17 have been vaccinated nationwide.

The federal government has not mandated masks in schools. White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said last week the Biden administration is following CDC guidance.

DeSantis reiterated Monday that he would support holding a special legislative session to address the issue if the federal government were to require masks for students. The governor invited participants in the roundtable discussion to voice opposition to mask-wearing in schools.

One of the participants was Jay Bhattacharya, a professor of medicine at Stanford University whom the governor called on last year to support his position on keeping schools open for in-person instruction during the pandemic.

“I don’t think the delta variant changes the calculus or the evidence in any fundamental way, governor,” Bhattacharya said when asked by DeSantis if the highly transmissible variant should change the state’s approach to masks in schools.

Cody Meissner, chief of Tufts University’s Division of Pediatric Infectious Disease, also participated in the event and argued that wearing a mask is “not a very effective way of preventing disease.”

Los Angeles-based clinical psychiatrist Mark McDonald argued during the event that “masking children is child abuse.”

DeSantis also invited an incoming senior from a Tallahassee private school, the mother of two students at a Tallahassee charter school and head of a Jacksonville charter school to participate.

Similar events in the past have been open to the media and broadcast by The Florida Channel, a state-funded service.

Christina Pushaw, a spokeswoman for the governor, said the DeSantis administration is increasingly using Rumble as its platform of choice after a previous roundtable discussion event, featuring Bhattacharya, was removed from YouTube.

“We recorded the entire roundtable discussion to post on Rumble so it’s accessible to media and the general public. We generally use Rumble for public videos these days, after experiencing censorship from YouTube several months ago,” Pushaw said in an email to The News Service of Florida on Tuesday.

Pushaw said DeSantis “is always seeking out perspectives from experts, like Dr. Bhattacharya, on COVID-19 and other pressing issues.”

The Tallahassee-based First Amendment Foundation said Tuesday that DeSantis’ exclusion of reporters from Monday’s event didn’t violate Florida’s Sunshine Law on open-government. (Disclosure: The News Service of Florida is a member of the First Amendment Foundation.)

“The constitutional right of access requires meetings of any public body of the executive branch of state government to be open and noticed to the public. If the meeting was just Gov. Ron DeSantis and health experts, this would not necessarily violate the constitutional right of access or Sunshine Law. That said, the Sunshine Law is meant to frustrate all evasive devices,” Virginia Hamrick, a staff attorney with the organization, said in an email to the News Service.

But Hamrick said DeSantis impeded the public’s ability to be informed of government actions by excluding the media from attending.

“By being present at meetings, journalists can inform the public of the government’s agenda and decisions. Holding a meeting without notice and without the press makes it more difficult for the public to be informed of and oversee the actions of their government. This is true all of the time, but especially when COVID-19 cases are rising and school districts, teachers and parents must make decisions affecting the health of students and staff,” Hamrick said.

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