PLANTATION, Fla. — A Florida school board appeared unlikely Tuesday to fire an employee whose transgender daughter played girls' high school volleyball in alleged violation of state law, but postponed their final decision until next week.
The board is in Broward, one of the state's most politically liberal counties, with twice as many Democrats as Republicans, and a large LGBTQ+ community. In recent years, attention on transgender children has spiked as conservative leaders seek to make trans rights a hot-button issue both in Florida and across the country.
Most of the nine members of the Broward County school board appeared ready to reject Superintendent Howard Hepburn's recommendation that Jessica Norton be fired as a computer information specialist at Monarch High School, where her daughter played on the varsity team last year.
But many also said they didn't think Norton should go unpunished for violating the state's Fairness in Women's Sports Act, which Gov. Ron DeSantis and the Republican-led Legislature approved in 2021. The law, which the Broward board lobbied against, bars trans students from participating in girls and women's sports.
A district committee recommended that Norton receive a 10-day suspension, but Hepburn, who was hired in April, called for her firing. He said Tuesday he feels that's the appropriate punishment for violating the law.
During a 90-minute discussion, many board members said that seemed disproportionate. One suggested adopting the 10-day suspension, while another suggested five days. The state athletic commission fined the school $16,500 for violating the law and the principal and three other administrators were temporarily removed from the school after the investigation went public in November.
''I appreciate a mom fighting for the rights of her child, I really appreciate that, but this crossed a lot of different lines,'' member Debbi Hixon said. ''Her protecting her child, her daughter, affected so many other people and children.''
The school district is the nation's fifth largest, with almost 255,000 students at 327 schools.