This case involves Florida's Pledge of Allegiance statute, section 1003.44(1), Florida Statutes (“Pledge Statute”), which applies to students at all grade levels from kindergarten to twelfth grade. The statute states, in pertinent part:
The pledge of allegiance to the flag ... shall be rendered by students.... The pledge of allegiance to the flag shall be recited at the beginning of the day in each public elementary, middle, and high school in the state. Each student shall be informed by posting a notice in a conspicuous place that the student has the right not to participate in reciting the pledge. Upon urritten request by his or her parent, the student must be excused from reciting the pledge. When the pledge is given, civilians must show full respect to the flag by standing at attention, men removing the headdress, except when such headdress is worn for religious purposes....
Fla. Stat. § 1003.44(1) (emphasis added).
Plaintiff (a minor), through his mother, filed a complaint challenging the constitutionality of the Pledge Statute, both facially and as applied to him as a then-eleventh grade student in a Palm Beach County public high school. 1 Plaintiff contended that section 1003.44(1) is facially invalid because it requires that a student obtain a parent’s permission before being excused from reciting the Pledge of Allegiance and stand during the Pledge of Allegiance even if excused. Plaintiff sought declaratory and injunctive relief.
Accepting that the statute requires students to recite the Pledge unless a student has parental permission not to recite, the State defended the facial constitutionality of the statute. The State stressed the fundamental constitutional right of parents to control the upbringing of their minor children and to decide whether a child should participate in the Pledge. The State also argued that the statute’s language requiring that “civilians” stand does not apply to “students” excused from the Pledge. The State moved to dismiss Plaintiffs claims on these grounds.
The district court issued an order denying the State’s Motion to Dismiss and granting Plaintiffs Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings, which was treated by the district court as a Motion for Summary Judgment. The district court concluded *1282 that the Pledge Statute’s requirement of parental consent was a facially unconstitutional restriction that “robs the student of the right to make an independent decision whether to say the pledge.” The district court also construed the Pledge Statute to require that students excused from the Pledge must stand and concluded that this requirement was facially unconstitutional. The district court’s ruling was made a final judgment. The State appealed. We affirm the district court’s judgment in part and reverse it in part. 2
We address the two requirements imposed by the Pledge Statute that Plaintiff alleges are facially unconstitutional. First, we address whether the statute’s requirement that “civilians” stand at attention during the Pledge is facially unconstitutional. We then address the facial constitutionality of the statute’s requirement that a student provide a written request by a parent to be excused from reciting the Pledge.
1. Requirement that Students Stand
[1] The Pledge Statute states, in part, that ‘When the pledge is given, civilians must show full respect to the flag by standing at attention_” Fla. Stat. § 1003.44(1). Plaintiff contends that this requirement is a violation of the First Amendment because it requires all students, even those excused from reciting the Pledge, to stand while the Pledge is given. We agree with Plaintiff. The “standing at attention” provision should not be enforced. 3 But we conclude that this portion of the statute may be severed, leaving the statute otherwise enforceable.
That students have a constitutional right to remain seated during the Pledge is well established.
See, e.g., Holloman ex rel. Holloman v. Harland,
The State is correct that, when deciding between two plausible statutory constructions, courts should adopt the construction that avoids constitutional problems.
See Clark v. Martinez,
*1283
We agree with the district court on the construction of the statute. The most probable, accurate interpretation of the statute is that the term “civilians” distinguishes most people from “persons in uniform” — persons who are required by the rules pertaining to the use of the United States flag to render a military salute when the Pledge is recited.
See Elk Grove Unified Sch. Dist. v. Newdow,
Having determined that the Pledge Statute’s requirement that “civilians” stand during the recitation of the Pledge in schools is a violation of the Constitution, we must consider whether this requirement is severable from the rest of the statute. We owe the work of the elected representatives of the people of Florida respect; and we will invalidate no more of the statute than we must. “The standard for determining the severability of an unconstitutional provision is well established: Unless it is evident that the Legislature would not have enacted those provisions which are within its power, independently of that which is not, the invalid part may be dropped if what is left is fully operative as a law.”
New York v. United States,
As we noted in
Hershey,
“The fact that an invalid portion of a statute is not self-contained in separate sections does not prohibit the court from applying the sever-ability rule to strike the invalid portion and to preserve the rest of the enactment.”
Because nothing indicates that the Florida legislature would have declined to enact the Pledge Statute absent the provision which we see as unconstitutional, we conclude that the'invalid “standing at attention” provision may be severed. In this way, the statute can survive the “standing at attention” challenge. But to the degree the district court’s judgment determines that a student — who is excused from pledging — cannot be required by the Pledge Statute to stand, the judgment is affirmed.
II. Parental Consent Requirement
The Pledge Statute states that “The pledge ... shall be rendered by students .The pledge of allegiance to the flag shall be recited at the beginning of the day in each public elementary, middle, and high school in the state.” Fla. Stat. § 1003.44(1). The statute permits students an exception to this requirement, however. The exception is triggered when a student has presented a signed, written statement from his parent excusing him (the student) from participating: “Upon written request by his or her parent, the student must be excused from reciting the pledge.” Id. Plaintiff challenges the statute, alleging that the statute’s parental-permission requirement too broadly deters free speech and is facially unconstitutional: an overbreadth challenge.
An overbreadth challenge to a state statute “is based on a statute’s possi
*1284
ble direct and indirect burdens on speech. The overbreadth doctrine permits the facial invalidation of laws that inhibit the exercise of First Amendment rights if the impermissible applications of the law are substantial.... ”
Weaver v. Bonner,
For a federal court to invalidate a state statute on overbreadth grounds is— as the Supreme Court has said—“strong medicine.”
Virginia v. Hicks,
[12] Within the framework of the facial challenge, we measure the Pledge Statute against the appropriate First Amendment standard. As the Supreme Court in
West Virginia State Bd. of Educ. v. Barnette
wrote, “freedoms of speech ... are susceptible of restriction only to prevent grave and immediate danger to interests which the state may lawfully protect.”
We see the statute before us now as largely a parental-rights statute. As such, this case is different from Barnette. Although the statute here generally requires students to recite the Pledge, the statute also requires students to be notified that they might be excused from reciting the Pledge. The statute then spells out how a student may be excused, that is, by getting his parent’s consent. Most important, the statute ultimately leaves it to the parent whether a schoolchild will pledge or not.
Here, unlike in
Barnette
and in the cases cited by Plaintiff, the refusal of students to participate in the Pledge—unless their parents consent—hinders their parents’ fundamental right to control their children’s upbringing.
5
The rights of students and the rights of parents—two different sets of persons whose opinions can often clash—are the subject of a legislative balance in the statute before us. The State, in restricting the student’s freedom of speech, advances the protection of the constitutional rights of parents: an interest which the State may lawfully protect.
See, e.g., Washington v. Glucksberg,
*1285 As the State pointed out before the district court and before us, the statute is neutral on the Pledge in the statute’s deference to a parent’s expressed wishes. 6 Should a parent request that his child not recite the Pledge — even where the child wishes to recite — the statute provides that the school must excuse the student. Fla. Stat. § 1003.44(1) (“Upon written request by his or her parent, the student must be excused from reciting the pledge.”). Likewise, the school will protect the interests of a parent who refuses to send in a written request that his child be excused.
Although we accept that the government ordinarily may not compel students to participate in the Pledge,
e.g., Barnette,
We conclude that the State’s interest in recognizing and protecting the rights of parents on some educational issues is sufficient to justify the restriction of some students’ freedom of speech.
7
Even if the balance of parental, student, and school rights might favor the rights of a mature high school student in a specific instance, Plaintiff has not persuaded us that the balance favors students in a
substantial
number of instances — particularly those instances involving elementary and middle school students — relative to the total number of students covered by the statute.
See, e.g., Muller by Muller v. Jefferson Lighthouse Sch.,
We therefore decline to validate Plaintiffs facial challenge. To the degree that *1286 the district court’s judgment invalidates the “written request by ... parent” requirement of the Pledge Statute, the judgment is reversed. We stress that we decide and hint at nothing about the Pledge Statute’s constitutionality as applied to a specific student or a specific division of students.
AFFIRMED IN PART and REVERSED IN PART.
Notes
. The as-applied claims did not involve the State and were resolved by consent order.
. Whether the Pledge Statute is unconstitutional as applied to Plaintiff is not before us. We say nothing on that issue and decide nothing about the district court’s judgment, except on the issue of whether the statute is facially unconstitutional.
. The statute requires students who pledge to stand when reciting the Pledge. See Fla. Stat. § 1003.44(1) ("The pledge of allegiance to the flag ... shall be rendered by students standing with the right hand over the heart."). This requirement applies independently of the "standing at attention” provision at issue here.
. As we have noted, the First Amendment’s prohibition on laws abridging the freedom of speech applies to state governments through the Fourteenth Amendment.
Weaver,
. None of the decisions relied upon by Plaintiff and the district court decide the rights of custodial parents in opposition to the rights of their children because, in those cases, the custodial parent was not opposing the child's choice in exercising the child's speech.
See Barnette,
. We suppose that the statute is not entirely neutral; the statute seems to start with the proposition that parents generally do not object to their student children reciting the Pledge. We accept (and no one in this case has contended otherwise) that the elected Florida legislature probably does know about what parents in the state of Florida generally would prefer. The structure of the statute does not, however, negate the State's legitimate interest in protecting the rights of all parents on the question of the Pledge and minor children; parents who express their intent either by sending in a written request or by declining to do so will have their views honored.
. In addition, courts have limited the constitutional rights of minors and upheld stale support of parental involvement in other contexts.
See Ayotte v. Planned Parenthood of N. New Eng.,
