The levels to this story are justâwow. A Florida high school teacher has sued the school district after being told to take down a Black Lives Matter flag.
In case you were wondering what the name of the school she teaches at, itâs Robert E. Lee High School. Fucking Florida, yâall.
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According to NPR, Amy Donofrio, an English teacher at the school, hung the flag up outside her classroom after one of her students, Reginald Boston, was shot and killed by Jacksonville Sheriffâs Office last year. Donofrio helped co-found the schoolâs EVAC program, which aims to help at risk Black students in Jacksonville. Boston was a member of the program, so his death struck close to home. She hung the flag so that students would know that her classroom was a safe space for students to process their classmateâs death.
âHis life mattered. Period,â Donofrio told NPR. âWalking beside his family, his mom, and seeing what it looks like in real life, thereâs no possible way that you canât stand by the belief that Black lives matter.â
Donofrio was told by district officials to take the flag down in March as it violated the districtâs policy on political speech. So to be clear: Having a school named after a Confederate general who fought to defend slavery? Thatâs chill. A flag letting the schoolâs 70 percent Black population know that theyâre seen? Well dammit, thatâs where we have to draw the line.
Donofrio refused to remove the flag and the district re-assigned her to non-teaching duties. The Southern Poverty Law Center has filed a lawsuit on Donofrioâs behalf against the district in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida, which claims that the school district violated her First Amendment rights by forcing her to remove the flag.
From NPR:
Donofrio alleges that the school district consistently undermined the EVAC program by demoting it from a class to a club to an informal group, turning down private funding and blocking her from using non-teaching days to take students on field trips. It felt like the school didnât support its Black students. The conflict over the flag was just the final straw.
âItâs a question of whether or not this is a matter of great public significance, whether or not this speech is protected,â said Cathleen Scott, a civil rights attorney who is representing Donofrio alongside the Southern Poverty Law Center. âMs. Donofrio was speaking out against racism. And thatâs a very important value.â
That argument might face an uphill battle in court, said Rachel Arnow-Richman, a professor of labor and employment law at the University of Florida.
âWe think of the First Amendment as a foundational principle of our democracy, and it is, but itâs subject to many limitations,â Arnow-Richman said.
Donofrio has the support of the schoolâs predominately Black student population, 16,000 of whom have signed a petition requesting the teacher be brought back into the classroom. âSince we are a Title I school, not everybody has access to the right resources. So she helps out with kids who need hygiene or food or even help applying to college,â Amiyah Jacobs, a senior at the school told NPR. âShe was just very sweet. And she cared for the students. It wasnât always just about âDo your work.â â
Jacobs added that seeing the Black Lives Matter flag provided her with comfort and she thought it was disrespectful that the district took it down. I donât understand how the district canât even see the message theyâre sending. In effect, theyâre telling the students of Robert E. Lee High School that no, their lives donât matter. If thatâs really how they feel, then why the fuck are they even in the education business to begin with?
âThere are educators all over this country that want to stand with our children, that are advocating for our children, and are being retaliated against and pushed back against as a result.â Donofrio told NPR. âMy goal, my hope, is that by doing this, we can empower more educators to stand beside our kids.â
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