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Florida school districts face mask free-for-all after judge strikes down DeSantis' ban

School boards across Florida are reconsidering mandatory mask policies since a judge struck down Gov. Ron DeSantis’ order barring local classroom mandates.

  • The ruling paved the way for boards in Brevard, Charlotte, Lee, Lake, Volusia, and Osceola Counties to call meetings to talk about mask policies.
  • At least two of them — Brevard and Lee — instituted mask mandates Monday.

Why it matters: As of Monday, Tampa Bay school districts from Citrus to Sarasota had reported nearly 17,000 confirmed COVID cases among students and staff — a milestone that took months longer to reach last school year.


State of play: Hillsborough and Sarasota are among the 10 boards that openly defied DeSantis' orders and made masks mandatory — but those 10 make up more than half of the state’s public school students.

  • It sets up an interesting situation in Pinellas County, where the swing vote to keep masks optional was a board member who wanted mandatory masks but didn’t want to "break the law."

Between the lines: The ruling, which DeSantis has vowed to appeal, seems to have kept Florida out of the crosshairs of the U.S. Department of Education.

  • The feds announced yesterday that they're investigating five Republican-led states that banned mask requirements because those policies could mean discrimination against students who have disabilities or health issues.
  • The department said — for now — it wasn’t looking at the four states where such bans have been overturned by courts: Florida, Texas, Arkansas and Arizona.

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Exclusive: Inside Snapchat's push to make cameras more inclusive

Snapchat has launched an initiative to redesign its core camera technology to make it better able to capture a wide range of skin tones, the company tells Axios.

Why it matters: Around 5 billion pictures are taken using Snapchat's camera each day. Those images form the starting point for how many people see themselves, their friends and their world.

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The political limits of Biden's climate agenda

Expect Joe Biden to pursue the most aggressive climate-change plan in U.S. presidential history should he win the election.

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An entire sector of America's education workforce faces paycheck jeopardy in the coming weeks that moving to remote teaching can't easily fix.

Why it matters: Half of America’s education workforce isn't teachers, and they support students and school districts in many ways educators cannot — like counseling, feeding students, transportation and mental health.

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