Back to Florida

SB1006 • 2026

Freedom of Speech and Religious Expression in Public Schools

Freedom of Speech and Religious Expression in Public Schools

Education
Passed Legislature

This bill passed both chambers and reached final enrollment, even if later executive action is not shown here.

Sponsor
Yarborough
Last action
2026-03-13
Official status
Senate - Died in Education Pre-K - 12
Effective date
2026-07-01

Plain English Breakdown

The bill's status is 'Passed Legislature' but it died in committee, so its actual implementation is uncertain.

Freedom of Speech and Religious Expression in Public Schools

This bill prevents schools from punishing students or staff for expressing political, religious, or ideological views and allows them to wear clothing with messages related to these beliefs.

What This Bill Does

  • Prevents school districts from discriminating against students or staff based on their political, religious, or ideological viewpoints.
  • Allows students to express their beliefs in coursework, artwork, and other assignments without facing penalties or rewards for the content of their work.
  • Permits students to wear clothing with messages related to their beliefs as long as it follows school rules about dress code.

Who It Names or Affects

  • Students in public schools
  • Teachers and staff at public schools
  • School districts

Terms To Know

Limited Public Forum
A place or event where the government allows certain types of speech but can limit it based on specific criteria.

Limits and Unknowns

  • The bill does not cover expression that the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution does not protect.
  • School districts can still limit speech if it disrupts operations or makes students feel unsafe.

Bill History

  1. 2026-03-13 Senate

    • Died in Education Pre-K - 12

  2. 2026-01-13 Senate

    • Introduced

  3. 2026-01-07 Senate

    • Referred to Education Pre-K - 12; Appropriations Committee on Pre-K - 12 Education; Rules

  4. 2025-12-23 Senate

    • Filed

Official Summary Text

Freedom of Speech and Religious Expression in Public Schools; Prohibiting a school district from discriminating against students or school personnel on the basis of political or ideological viewpoints or expression; authorizing students to express political or ideological beliefs in coursework, artwork, and other specified assignments; authorizing a student to wear clothing, accessories, and jewelry displaying political or ideological messages or symbols; authorizing political or ideological groups to advertise or announce meetings in the same manner and to the same extent as other groups; creating a private cause of action for persons and student clubs or groups harmed by specified violations, etc.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
Florida Senate
-
2026

SB 1006

By
Senator Yarborough

4-01149B-26 20261006__
1 A bill to be entitled
2 An act relating to freedom of speech and religious
3 expression in public schools; amending s. 1002.206,
4 F.S.; revising a short title; prohibiting a school
5 district from discriminating against students or
6 school personnel on the basis of political or
7 ideological viewpoints or expression; requiring a
8 school district to treat a student’s voluntary
9 expression of political or ideological viewpoints on
10 permissible subjects in the same manner as any other
11 viewpoint; authorizing students to express political
12 or ideological beliefs in coursework, artwork, and
13 other specified assignments; prohibiting penalty or
14 reward for such expression in coursework, artwork, or
15 other specified assignments; authorizing a student to
16 wear clothing, accessories, and jewelry displaying
17 political or ideological messages or symbols;
18 authorizing a student to engage in or organize
19 political or ideological activities or expression;
20 authorizing a student to organize political or
21 ideological groups, clubs, and other gatherings;
22 prohibiting a school district from discriminating
23 against a student club or group for specified reasons;
24 requiring that a school district provide political or
25 ideological groups with equal access to school
26 facilities; authorizing political or ideological
27 groups to advertise or announce meetings in the same
28 manner and to the same extent as other groups;
29 requiring that the Department of Education develop and
30 publish a model policy regarding a limited public
31 forum and political or ideological expression;
32 providing construction; creating a private cause of
33 action for persons and student clubs or groups harmed
34 by specified violations; providing for specified
35 awards to such persons and clubs or groups;
36 authorizing such persons and clubs or groups to use
37 specified violations as a defense or counterclaim
38 under certain circumstances; providing applicability;
39 requiring that such actions be brought within a
40 specified period of time; providing that the state
41 waives specified immunity; providing that school
42 district has liability under certain circumstances;
43 providing severability; providing an effective date.
44
45 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
46
47 Section 1. Section 1002.206, Florida Statutes, is amended
48 to read:
49 1002.206
Freedom of speech and
religious expression in
50 public schools.—
51 (1) This section may be cited as the “Florida Student and
52 School Personnel
First Amendment and
Religious Liberties Act.”
53 (2) A school district may not discriminate against a
54 student, parent, or school personnel on the basis of a religious
55 viewpoint or religious expression.
A school district may not

56
discriminate against or penalize a student on the basis of

57
expressing a religious, political, or ideological viewpoint or

58
for engaging in religious, political, or ideological expression

59
in the same time, place, and manner and to the same extent that

60
other similarly situated students may engage in speech or

61
express views at a public school.
A school district shall treat
62 a student’s voluntary expression of a religious
, political, or

63
ideological
viewpoint on an otherwise permissible subject in the
64 same manner that the school district treats a student’s
65 voluntary expression of
any other

a secular
viewpoint.
66 (3)(a) A student may express his or her religious
,

67
political, or ideological
beliefs in coursework, artwork, and
68 other written and oral assignments free from discrimination
or

69
academic penalty
. A student’s homework and classroom assignments
70
must

shall
be evaluated, regardless of their religious
,

71
political, or ideological
content, based on expected academic
72 standards relating to the course curriculum and requirements. A
73 student may not be penalized or rewarded based on the religious
,

74
political, or ideological
content of his or her work if the
75 coursework, artwork, or other written or oral assignments
76 require a student’s viewpoint to be expressed.
77 (b) A student may wear clothing, accessories, and jewelry
78 that display a religious
, political, or ideological
message or
79 symbol in the same manner and to the same extent that
other

80
secular
types of clothing, accessories, and jewelry that display
81 messages or symbols are permitted to be worn.
82 (4)(a) A student may pray or engage in
or organize

83 religious
, political, or ideological
activities or religious
,

84
political, or ideological
expression before, during, and after
85 the school day in the same manner and to the same extent that a
86 student may engage in
other

secular
activities or expression. A
87 student may organize prayer groups
or
,
religious
, political, or

88
ideological
clubs, and other religious
, political, or

89
ideological
gatherings before, during, and after the school day
90 in the same manner and to the same extent that a student is
91 permitted to organize
other

secular
activities
, clubs,

92
gatherings,
and groups.
A school district may not discriminate

93
against a student club or group based on:

94
1.

The religious, political, or ideological viewpoints

95
expressed by the students or the club; or

96
2.

Any requirement that the leaders or members of the club

97
affirm and adhere to the club’s sincerely held beliefs, comply

98
with the club’s standards of conduct, or further the club’s

99
mission or purpose, as defined by the student club.

100 (b)1. A school district may not prevent school personnel
101 from participating in religious activities on school grounds
102 that are initiated by students at reasonable times before or
103 after the school day if such activities are voluntary and do not
104 conflict with the responsibilities or assignments of such
105 personnel.
106 2. A school district shall comply with the federal
107 requirements in Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which
108 prohibits an employer from discriminating against an employee on
109 the basis of religion.
110 (c) A school district shall give a religious
, political, or

111
ideological
group access to the same school facilities for
112 assembling as given to
other

secular
groups without
113 discrimination based on the religious
, political, or ideological

114 content of the group’s expression. A group that meets for prayer
115 or
other
religious
, political, or ideological
speech may
116 advertise or announce its meetings in the same manner and to the
117 same extent that
another

a secular
group may advertise or
118 announce its meetings.
119 (5)(a) A school district shall adopt a policy that
120 establishes a limited public forum for student speakers at any
121 school event at which a student is to speak publicly. The
122 limited public forum policy shall require the school district
123 to:
124 1. Provide the forum in a manner that does not discriminate
125 against a student’s voluntary expression of a religious
,

126
political, or ideological
viewpoint on an otherwise permissible
127 subject;
128 2. Provide a method based on neutral criteria for the
129 selection of student speakers at school events, activities, and
130 graduation ceremonies;
131 3. Ensure that a student speaker does not engage in
132 obscene, vulgar, offensively lewd, or indecent speech; and
133 4. State in written or oral form that the student’s speech
134 does not reflect the endorsement, sponsorship, position, or
135 expression of the school district.
136 (b) The school district shall deliver the disclaimer
137 required in subparagraph (a)4. at all graduation events and any
138 other event at which a student speaks publicly.
139 (c) Student expression of a religious
, political, or

140
ideological
viewpoint on an otherwise permissible subject may
141 not be excluded from the limited public forum.
142 (6) The Department of Education shall develop a model
143 policy regarding a limited public forum and voluntary expression
144 of religious
, political, or ideological
viewpoints by students
145 and school personnel in public schools pursuant to this section.
146 The department shall publish the model policy on its website.
147 Each district school board shall adopt and implement the
148 department’s model policy.
149
(7)

This section does not prevent a school district from

150
prohibiting, limiting, or restricting:

151
(a)

Expression that the First Amendment of the United

152
States Constitution does not protect.

153
(b)

Expression that is unwelcome, and so severe, pervasive,

154
and subjectively and objectively offensive, that a student is

155
effectively denied equal access to educational opportunities or

156
benefits provided by the school.

157
(c)

Conduct that intentionally, materially, and

158
substantially disrupts:

159
1.

The operations of the school; or

160
2.

The expressive activities of another person if that

161
activity is occurring on campus in a space reserved for that

162
activity under the exclusive use or control of a particular

163
student, group of students, or group or club.

164
(8)(a)

Any person or student club or group that is harmed

165
by a violation of this section, or whose rights under this

166
section are violated, shall have a private cause of action

167
against the school district for declaratory and injunctive

168
relief, statutory punitive damages, reasonable attorney fees and

169
costs, and any other appropriate relief.

170
(b)

If a person or student club or group prevails in any

171
such action, the person or student club or group must be awarded

172
statutory punitive damages in an amount of at least $15,000, not

173
to exceed $25,000.

174
(c)

Any person or student club or group aggrieved by a

175
violation of this section may assert such violation as a defense

176
or counterclaim in any disciplinary action or in any civil or

177
administrative proceedings brought against such person or

178
student club or group.

179
(d)

Nothing in this section may be interpreted to limit any

180
other remedies available to any student or student club or

181
group.

182
(e)

A person or student club or group must bring suit for

183
violation of this section not later than 2 years after the day

184
the cause of action accrues. For purposes of calculating the 2

185
year limitation period, each day that the violation persists,

186
and each day that a policy in violation of this section remains

187
in effect, constitutes a new day that the cause of action has

188
accrued.

189
(9)(a)

A school district that violates this section is not

190
immune from suit or liability for such violation and is not

191
immune from civil suit in federal court.

192
(b)

The state waives immunity under the Eleventh Amendment

193
of the United States Constitution and consents to suit in a

194
federal court for lawsuits arising out of this section. A school

195
that violates this section is not immune from suit or liability

196
for the violation.

197
(10)

If any provision of this section or its application to

198
any person or circumstance is held invalid, the invalidity does

199
not affect other provisions or applications of this section

200
which can be given effect without the invalid provision or

201
application, and to this end the provisions of this act are

202
severable.

203 Section 2. This act shall take effect July 1, 2026.