© 2024 All Rights reserved WUSF
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
Get the latest coverage of the 2023 Florida legislative session in Tallahassee from our coverage partners and WUSF.

Higher ed DEI limits and expanded E-Verify for employers get approval in Florida

Landis Hall on the campus of Florida State University
Alejandro Santiago
/
WFSU Public Media
Landis Hall on the campus of Florida State University

Florida lawmakers limit DEI programs in higher ed but stop short of eliminating in-state tuition for undocumented immigrants.

Florida’s higher education landscape will be under even more scrutiny as measures further limit discussions on aspects of race, culture, and history get through the legislature. Yet lawmakers stopped short of denying undocumented immigrants in-state tuition rates, which Gov. Ron DeSantis had pushed them to do.

To be certain, the state’s higher education structure is significantly changed. There will be more frequent reviews of tenure, the total revamp of the New College of Florida into a more ideologically conservative institution, and less say by faculty on hiring decisions. But broad opposition to a complete ban on Diversity, Equity and Inclusion spending led lawmakers to water down that language, somewhat. Now, only certain kinds of DEI spending are banned says bill sponsor and Republican Senator Erin Grall.

"The bill doesn’t prohibit speech, the concepts the bill discusses can be talked about as part of a larger conversation. The bill refers to entities that advocate for a certain type of DEI and institutionalize a particular worldview and use it to suppress anyone with a dissenting worldview.”

Still, the damage has already been done, says House Minority Leader Fentrice Driskell.

"The extremist, partisan assault on higher education puts our colleges and universities at risk of going from world-class, to class clown," Driskell said.

Florida lawmakers have also advanced a measure addressing immigration. DeSantis made national headlines by having the state pay to send undocumented immigrants from Texas to Martha’s Vineyard. This year, the state has put millions more into the migrant flight program, and will soon require private employers with a minimum of 25 employees to use E-Verify to check their workers' immigration status.

“The bottom line is that the federal government needs to fix it, and I don’t know why they don’t," said Senate President Kathleen Passidomo in a response to reporter questions about the immigration bill.

"We talk about it and talk about it and talk about it, but they don’t do anything about it. If they would fix it, we wouldn’t be doing this.”

Yet the same measure does not include a DeSantis-backed plan to strip in-state tuition from undocumented immigrants. It does, however, require hospitals to ask whether patients are in the county legally. The facilities would have to report that information to the state.

Updated: May 3, 2023 at 5:44 PM EDT
Updated to include the
statement from the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, FIRE.
Follow @HatterLynn

Lynn Hatter is a Florida A&M University graduate with a bachelor’s degree in journalism. Lynn has served as reporter/producer for WFSU since 2007 with education and health care issues as her key coverage areas.  She is an award-winning member of the Capital Press Corps and has participated in the NPR Kaiser Health News Reporting Partnership and NPR Education Initiative. 

Find complete bio, contact info, and more stories here.
WUSF 89.7 depends on donors for the funding it takes to provide you the most trusted source of news and information here in town, across our state, and around the world. Support WUSF now by giving monthly, or make a one-time donation online.