Florida parents are breathing a sigh of relief.
U.S. District Court Judge Wendy Berger dismissed a second challenge to the state's Parental Rights in Education law, commonly referred to as โDon't Say Gayโ by opponents. (RELATED: Federal Judge Tosses Out Lawsuit Against Gov. Ron DeSantis)
The law, signed into effect in March by Gov. Ron DeSantis, prohibits primary school teachers from engaging in classroom instruction related to sexual orientation and identity. High school teachers are barred from addressing either topic in a manner that is not โage appropriate or developmentally appropriateโ for their students, according to The Hill.
Critics of the law have attempted to misrepresent the reality and peddled claims the law is a direct attack on the LGBTQ+ community.
Berger wrote that the case's plaintiffs had not produced facts that would โlead a reasonable person to believeโ the law prevents students from talking to their teachers or peers about their families or LGBTQ parents from attending school functions and openly discussing their family structures.
Berger in her ruling also addressed concerns voiced by the parents of one of the plaintiffs โ a nonbinary middle school student โ that the new state law would encourage more bullying at school, writing that โit is simply a fact of life that many middle school students will face the criticism and harsh judgment of their peers.โ
โIndeed, middle school children bully and belittle their classmates for a whole host of reasons, all of which are unacceptable, and many of which have nothing to do with a classmate's gender identity,โ Berger wrote.
In a statement, Lambda Legal which filed the lawsuit in July along with the Southern Poverty Law Center and the Southern Legal Counsel said it plans to move forward in challenging the law.
โThe court's decision defies decades of precedent establishing schools' constitutional obligations to protect student speech, and to protect students from targeted bullying and harassment based on who they are,โ the statement read.
โWe very much look forward to continuing the fight against this unjust and dangerous law,โ saidย Angela Vigil, Partner and Executive Director of Pro Bono Practice at Baker McKenzie LLP.ย โWe plan to show the court and the state the harm caused to children and families by this law is destructive in so many ways for education, community, families and, most importantly, children.โ
Previously, another Florida judge dismissed a challenge to the Sunshine State's law which claimed it violated the U.S. Constitution and Title IX, which prohibits educational institutions receiving federal funds from discriminating based on sex.
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2 Comments
The trash suing are the ones who need sued.
I was thinking the exact same thing. When are conservatives going to go on offense and sue LGBTQ organizations for their attack on traditional, American parents? We need them to exhaust their coffers on legal fees.