Departments of Education and Justice: National "Blueprint" for Unconstitutional Speech Codes
Cases
Case Overview
The U.S. Departments of Justice and Education have joined together to that virtually every college and university in the United States establish speech codes that violate the First Amendment and decades of legal precedent.
After proclaiming itself to be a 鈥blueprint鈥 for all schools, the Departments鈥 May 9, 2013, letter to the University of Montana states that 鈥渟exual harassment should be more broadly defined as 鈥榓ny unwelcome conduct of a sexual nature鈥欌 including 鈥渧erbal conduct鈥 (that is, speech). It then explicitly states that allegedly harassing expression need not even be to an 鈥渙bjectively person of the same gender in the same situation.鈥 If the listener takes offense to sexually related speech for reason, no matter how irrationally or unreasonably, the speaker may be punished.
In an April 22, 2016 concluding its investigation into the University of New Mexico鈥檚 policies and practices regarding sex discrimination, the Department of Justice doubled down on the unconstitutional blueprint language. DOJ flatly declared in that letter that 鈥淸u]nwelcome conduct of a sexual nature鈥濃攊ncluding 鈥渧erbal conduct鈥濃攊s sexual harassment 鈥渞egardless of whether it causes a hostile environment or is quid pro quo.鈥
The blueprint requires university staff to relay all sexual harassment complaints to a Title IX Coordinator, who must keep records of the complaints indefinitely, even if the alleged speech is obviously protected by the First Amendment. Further, every case must be investigated by the school. In some circumstances, universities may even punish a student before he or she is found guilty of any offense.
With the very real threat that a student could be punished for speech about sex regardless of the context, campus speech will be substantially . Further, at universities that attempt to follow the Departments鈥 鈥渂lueprint,鈥 students might find their educational careers interrupted or even ended because of the school鈥檚 response to speech that is protected by the First Amendment.
ED and DOJ have effectively encouraged the abuse of harassment policies鈥攁buse that has already been taking place for . At the same time, the agencies have imposed a long list of with which it would be nearly impossible for UMT to comply. It is in the best interest of all members of the academic community that colleges and universities fight back against this unconstitutional mandate.