News from the South - Florida News Feed
New schools commissioner delivers fiery speech to the state Board of Education
by Christine Sexton, Florida Phoenix
July 16, 2025
Education Commissioner Anastasios Kamoutsas delivered his first speech to the State Board of Education Wednesday, quoting the Book of Psalms and promising to work closely with Florida’s top law enforcement officer to ensure students aren’t being “indoctrinated.”
“The Book of Psalms says the children are a gift from the Lord. They are a reward from him,” said Kamoustas, who started his position July 14.
“On my first day as Commissioner of Education, it was important for me to connect with parents, teachers, and superintendents across the state to ensure that we are working together for the common goal of educating our students to the best of our abilities and prioritizing them as the blessing that they are in our lives.”
To that end, Kamoustas has issued a series of missives to parents and teachers advising them of their statutory rights while cautioning superintendents that he was“putting them on notice that if they violate these rights, I will be knocking on their door. This is not an empty threat.”
Kamousta’s letter to the parents is being mailed out on his behalf by local school superintendents. The commissioner said he hasn’t gotten any pushback from local officials about the letters.
He said a separate memorandum was being sent Wednesday to school districts, charter schools, and private schools advising them to update information in a statewide online parent porta, Myfloridaschools.
“Florida is the education state because we have removed indoctrination from instruction, we have empowered our teachers to create learning environments without repeated disruptions, and we have supported the power of the parent to make important decisions in the education of their child,” he said.
YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE.
Florida’s education commissioner plays a major role shaping education policy in a state that has drawn national attention for its contentious policies on library book removals and diversity, equity, and inclusion, as well as its handling of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Kamoutsas is the former deputy chief of staff for Gov. Ron DeSantis, but the new job puts him in a familiar place. He started at the Department of Education in 2019, serving as general counsel and eventually chief of staff before leaving the DOE to join the governor’s staff in 2023.
He succeeds Manny Diaz, who left the post to serve as interim president at the University of West Florida in Pensacola.
Kamoutsas touted 2024-2025 school grades that show Florida has 6% more A-rated schools (based on its own metrics) with 28 of Florida’s 67 districts earning As. He also pointed to improvements in math and reading on Florida assessment tests, although Florida scores dropped on the National Assessment of Educational Progress.
While it was Kamoutsas’ first state education board meeting it was the last for Ben Gibson, chair of the state board. Gibson’s term on the board expired and the panel agreed to elect Ryan Petty its chair. Petty was serving as vice chair under Gibson. Board member Esther Byrd was elected vice chair.
This story has been updated to reflect the new chair and vice chair of the state Board of Education.
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Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Florida Phoenix maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Michael Moline for questions: info@floridaphoenix.com.
The post New schools commissioner delivers fiery speech to the state Board of Education appeared first on floridaphoenix.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Right
The content reflects a perspective aligned with conservative education policies, emphasizing parental rights, opposition to what is framed as “indoctrination,” and a close alignment with Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, a prominent Republican figure. The mention of quoting religious scripture and the focus on controlling school curriculum and administrative oversight are commonly associated with right-leaning or conservative educational agendas. However, the article remains mostly factual and neutral in tone, providing context without strong editorializing, thus positioning it at a moderate center-right bias rather than far-right.
News from the South - Florida News Feed
Judge limits a small part of a court order blocking Trump’s election overhaul as lawsuits continue
SUMMARY: A federal judge modified part of a preliminary injunction against President Trump’s election overhaul executive order. The adjustment restricts the block on assessing citizenship for voter registration forms to only 19 states that sued, not nationwide. However, this has limited practical impact since another judge blocked the mandate across all 50 states in a separate case. The change follows a Supreme Court ruling limiting nationwide injunctions. Other aspects of the initial injunction, including proof-of-citizenship and mail-in ballot rules, remain blocked. The Department of Justice continues to fight the lawsuits filed by Democratic state attorneys general and civil rights groups.
The post Judge limits a small part of a court order blocking Trump’s election overhaul as lawsuits continue appeared first on www.clickorlando.com
News from the South - Florida News Feed
‘I want to see the video’: Mom wants answers after school employee slaps son with special needs
SUMMARY: A Pasco County mother is demanding answers after a school bus assistant allegedly slapped her 10-year-old son, Ian, who has Down syndrome and autism. A deputy’s report confirmed a video shows the assistant hitting the child after Ian tried to kiss their hand. The district refuses to release the video, citing legal protections and risk management concerns. Ian’s mother, a former special education teacher, says her nonverbal son cannot advocate for himself. The assistant resigned days after the incident, and had a prior similar complaint. The sheriff’s office declined charges, stating there was no criminal intent, calling it self-defense.
ABC Action News’ I-Team reporter Kylie McGivern speaks with a mother seeking the so see the video showing what happened to her child with special needs.
News from the South - Florida News Feed
US Senate spending panel axes provision moving FBI headquarters to Maryland
by Jennifer Shutt, Florida Phoenix
July 18, 2025
WASHINGTON — The U.S. Senate Appropriations Committee removed language from one of its annual government funding bills Thursday that would have prevented the Trump administration from relocating the FBI’s headquarters anywhere other than a previously selected location in a Maryland suburb outside Washington, D.C.
The change of course came one week after the committee voted to adopt an amendment from Maryland Democratic Sen. Chris Van Hollen that would have blocked the FBI from moving to the Ronald Reagan Building, which sits a few blocks away from the agency’s crumbling D.C. headquarters.
Alaska Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski had voted with the committee’s Democrats to approve the amendment citing security concerns, but flipped to oppose it after speaking with FBI Director Kash Patel.
“I came away with a satisfaction that my questions had been answered. I still have reservations about the move. I’ll be frank with you,” Murkowski said. “But I don’t believe that we should lock the FBI into the Greenbelt location, which that amendment would do.”
Murkwoski said the General Services Administration, which manages federal properties and had selected the suburban Maryland location, picked the Reagan Building after finishing an initial assessment. A third party, however, has not yet completed its security review.
Murkowski cautioned the Trump administration against moving quickly to relocate the FBI headquarters, saying she’s “not convinced that we’ve got enough information to know that ultimately the Ronald Reagan Building is going to be the best location.”
Security analysis incomplete
Van Hollen said that he believes the committee should be “preserving decisions” that Congress has already made and raised concerns the Reagan Building hasn’t passed a security analysis.
“This has been a long, bipartisan process,” Van Hollen said. “And so when we got the request for reprogramming from the FBI, I had hoped that we would, on a bipartisan basis, say, ‘No, we’re not going to accept your reprogramming request because it flies in the face of long-standing bipartisan support for this process.’”
Van Hollen reminded members of the committee that the first Trump administration halted efforts to pick a location outside of Washington, D.C., and instead proposed keeping the FBI headquarters at the same site.
The FBI inspector general later published a report concluding “the revised plan contained ambiguous facility security information and did not include certain other facility security information known by the FBI, which created an inadequate and unclear summary of the security posture of the proposed new facility.”
Van Hollen said Thursday he isn’t convinced the Reagan Building can meet the security requirements that Congress has said must go along with a new FBI headquarters.
Van Hollen also expressed frustration that he wasn’t included in the meeting between some Republican senators and the FBI director, preventing him from asking about the decision to move from the prior GSA site in Maryland to the new GSA site within the Reagan Building.
Had Van Hollen’s amendment remained in the annual funding bill for the departments of Commerce and Justice it likely would have stopped the legislation from moving to the floor. Instead, the committee voted 20-9 to approve the measure.
Congress is supposed to complete work on the dozen appropriations bills by the start of the next fiscal year on Oct. 1, but is significantly behind schedule and will need a bipartisan stopgap spending bill to avoid a shutdown.
Fight over relocation
The federal government has been debating the best location for a new FBI headquarters for well over a decade while its current office space in the J. Edgar Hoover Building continues to deteriorate.
The GSA spent years deliberating between three potential locations in Maryland and Virginia before selecting Greenbelt, Maryland, in November 2023.
But the Trump administration announced earlier this month it wanted to use the Reagan Building instead, saying it would save the government money.
“FBI’s existing headquarters at the Hoover building is a perfect example of a government building that has accumulated years of deferred maintenance, suffering from an aging water system to concrete falling off the structure,” GSA Acting Administrator Stephen Ehikian wrote in a statement.
The Reagan Building holds numerous other offices, including the Department of Commerce, Customs and Border Protection, the Environmental Protection Agency, the National Children’s Museum and several private businesses.
The announcement indicated the administration may relocate Customs and Border Protection.
“GSA will continue to support and work with CBP and their agency partners to fulfill their mission while the transition of the FBI to the Reagan Building commences,” the statement read.
It didn’t, however, include a timeline or a price tag.
Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Florida Phoenix maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Michael Moline for questions: info@floridaphoenix.com.
The post US Senate spending panel axes provision moving FBI headquarters to Maryland appeared first on floridaphoenix.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Left
This article primarily reports on the Senate Appropriations Committee’s decision regarding the FBI headquarters relocation, with a clear emphasis on Democratic concerns, particularly those of Sen. Chris Van Hollen. The reporting gives substantial space to his viewpoint and critiques of the Trump administration’s actions, while Republican positions are presented with less elaboration. Although it includes quotes from Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski and official statements, the framing leans toward validating Democratic objections and portrays the administration’s plans with skepticism. The language remains factual, but the selection and presentation of sources subtly favor a center-left perspective.
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