Description
A Hillsborough County math teacher can use her preferred pronouns in school, a federal judge ruled.
Chief U.S. District Judge Mark Walker blocked state education officials from enforcing a law requiring Katie Wood, a teacher at Lennard High School, to use pronouns that align with her sex assigned at birth.
“Once again, the state of Florida has a First Amendment problem,” Walker wrote. “Of late, it has happened so frequently, some might say you can set your clock by it.”
Wood sued the Florida Department of Education over a 2023 law that doesn’t allow educators to use their preferred pronouns and titles in schools. If they do, they can be stripped of certifications and the school districts can be fined.
The judge said the law violated Woods’ First Amendment rights. He cited a 2022 decision by the U.S. Supreme Court that ruled in favor of a public school football coach who was fired for praying on the field.
“Like Coach Kennedy’s professed faith, Ms. Wood’s preferred pronouns and title are uniquely personal to her,” Walker wrote. “In the same sense that Coach Kennedy’s public prayers identify him as a man of faith, Ms. Wood’s expression of her preferred title and pronouns identify her as a woman.”
Walker’s injunction only applied to Wood, though. He denied an injunction requested by AV Schwandes, a nonbinary teacher fired last year by Florida Virtual School.
MORE: https://www.wtsp.com/article/news/politics/transgender-hillsborough-teacher-referred-pronouns-lawsuit/67-66c9a150-9152-41ab-b6b9-95c629dee338
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