Florida Gov. Ron Desantis has been one of the leading Republican voices perpetuating the Critical Race Theory myths that have resulted in legislation such as the Stop Woke Act being passed to limit racial discussions in the classroom. So itβs confusing that Florida is paying $700,000 to a consulting firm that teaches the very thing Desantis is rallying against.
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Politico reports the state has been working with Tallahassee-based MGT Consulting, led by former Republican lawmaker Trey Traviesa. The company describes itself as creating a βhigh-profile, racially sensitive studies that address social inequity and lead to recommendations for true social change.β
As described on their website, MGTβs services include βexamining social injustice and disproportionality in community and organizational systems, identifying racial (and other demographic) disparities within a community or institution.β Those principles seem to be the exact opposite of what Desantis is trying to do within the Florida school curriculum, colleges, and the workplace.
Politico also notes that MGT was hired after the 2016 Charlottesville, Va white supremacist clash where one protestor lost their life. The company also states itβs done βextensive work for Florida government entities, including using βrace and genderβ data that was βused to shape policy designed to increase diversity in [state university] institutions.β
βWe have carefully chosen a team that is well-versed in critical race theory, as well as the analysis necessary to develop a racially equitable organizational structure and racial equity plan,β read a proposal written by MGT last year to write a βRacial Equity Planβ for the city of Golden, Colo.
Whatβs even stranger about this is a report from the Miami Herald that a state bid was tailored explicitly for MGT to run struggling, underfunded schools in Jefferson County. MGT was in talks with Floridaβs Department of Education before any other bid could happen. Perhaps Desantisβs administration made a mistake? When Politico asked DeSantis spokesperson Bryan Griffin, he had no answer for it.
Again, from Politico:
βThis attachment has no annotation, and our office couldnβt possibly speculate about each of these contracts, nor assume the intended purpose of each engagement,β said Bryan Griffin, a DeSantis spokesperson. βWe especially arenβt interested in speculating under the assumptions you presented based on work they have done in completely different states.β
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