Florida public colleges barred from using state and federal funds for DEI programs

The new rule — a byproduct of legislation spearheaded by Gov. Ron DeSantis — applies to the 28 schools within the Florida College System.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis participates in a Fox News town hall in Des Moines, Iowa, on Jan. 9.Alex Wong / Getty Images file
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Florida’s Board of Education announced a new rule Wednesday that bars public colleges from using state and federal funds for diversity, equity and inclusion programs, activities and policies. 

The rule, which applies to the 28 schools within the Florida College System, “will ensure that taxpayer funds can no longer be used to promote DEI on Florida’s 28 state college campuses,” the board wrote in a statement.

The schools include Seminole State College of Florida, Valencia College, Florida State College at Jacksonville and others that serve sizable populations of Black and Latino students. 

State Education Commissioner Manny Diaz Jr. said in a statement that higher education must reject being “corrupted by destructive ideologies. These actions today ensure that we will not spend taxpayers’ money supporting DEI and radical indoctrination that promotes division in our society.”

Civil rights advocate and attorney Ben Crump immediately denounced the move. “We continue to go down a misguided path of censorship in Florida!” he wrote on X.

The board also announced that colleges will replace the course “Principles of Sociology” with a general education American history course, claiming the former curriculum exposed students to “radical woke ideologies.”

In May, Gov. Ron DeSantis signed legislation to create related restrictions in higher education. The bills barred state colleges and universities from using public funds to promote activism or advocacy for DEI efforts. The legislation also dictates the ways race and gender can be taught in classrooms while emphasizing the study of Western civilization. 

A request for comment from the governor’s office was directed to DeSantis' remarks at the Education Department at the signing ceremony in May. “DEI is better viewed as standing for ‘discrimination, exclusion and indoctrination,’ and that has no place in our public institutions,” he said.  

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