BREVARD COUNTY, Fla. – There were 15 cases of COVID-19 reported at 12 different Brevard County schools in the weeks leading up to the start of the school year, the Brevard Federation of Teachers union said.
In a news release Monday evening, teachers union officials reported the results of a public records request filed with Brevard Public Schools for the numbers of positive cases among district employees and the school sites where they worked.
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Between Aug. 7 and Aug. 20, at least 15 school employees were diagnosed positive for COVID-19 at 12 sites throughout the county, News 6 partner Florida Today reports.
According to the union, cases were reported at:
- Cambridge Elementary
- Clearlake Education Center
- Columbia Elementary
- Creel Elementary
- Endeavour Elementary
- Educational Services Facility (School Board headquarters)
- Heritage High School
- Jackson Middle School
- MILA Elementary
- Satellite High School
- Space Coast Jr/Sr High School
- Suntree Elementary
During that time, an additional 11 employees at six schools (Astronaut High School; Atlantis Elementary; Bayside High School; Quest Elementary; Suntree Elementary; and Space Coast Hr/Sr High School) were required to quarantine due to exposure to a case among a “close familial relationship,” the release said.
FLORIDA TODAY has reached out to the school district for confirmation.
The release came the same day Brevard County students reported for the first day of class.
It also came the same day a circuit judge in Tallahassee ruled a July 6 state order requiring Florida brick-and-mortar schools to be open during the pandemic was unconstitutional.
The outcome handed a victory to the Florida Education Association, which filed suit against the state last month. The state union argued the order ran afoul of a mandate under the Florida Constitution that students are entitled to a “safe” and “secure” learning environment.
In his 17-page decision, Circuit Judge Charles Dodson granted a request for a court order to bar enforcement of the directive from Gov. Ron DeSantis and state Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran, which tied state funding to compliance with the order.
The decision was put on hold Monday evening following an appeal filed by the state.
“Today’s ruling by Judge Dodson means that the School Board of Brevard County can now make decisions to close or open schools based on safety and advice from medical experts, not based on a Tallahassee politician dangling dollar signs above students’ heads,” Brevard Federation of Teachers Vice President Vanessa Skipper said in a statement.
“Nothing can replace the experience of a teacher in front of students in the classroom, but we must not put money before student, faculty, and staff safety.”
If the ruling is upheld, it was not immediately clear what that would mean for Brevard Public Schools, which has already resumed regular operations.