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FIREasks Supreme Court to uphold free speech on public sidewalks
Last week, FIREfiled an amicus curiae 鈥 鈥渇riend of the court鈥 鈥 brief, asking the Supreme Court of the United States to hear a case concerning whether a public university can restrict access to a public sidewalk on its campus. If the Court takes the case, the result will have big implications for campus speech everywhere, not just on public city sidewalks.
Public sidewalks occupy a unique place in the American free speech tradition. Historically, under the First Amendment, public sidewalks, streets, and parks have always been open to free expression. As a result, the Supreme Court has repeatedly held that governments usually cannot limit free speech on public sidewalks.
Unfortunately, administrators at state-sponsored colleges and universities too often decide to ignore this history and the clear commands of the First Amendment. That鈥檚 exactly what happened in this case, .
In Tuscaloosa, Alabama, administrators at the University of Alabama 鈥 a state-run school bound by the First Amendment 鈥 told Rodney Keister, a traveling Christian evangelist, that he couldn鈥檛 speak to students or hand out religious pamphlets on a public city sidewalk. Even though the sidewalk was owned by the city, ran along a public road, and passed in front of several private, non-university buildings, the school argued that the sidewalk was part of the school鈥檚 campus because a single university building is located on that block. In the university鈥檚 view, this enables it to limit the public鈥檚 right to engage in free speech on that sidewalk.
Amazingly, despite holding that universities cannot restrict speech under similar circumstances, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit sided with the university. The court held that not only can public universities limit free speech on campus sidewalks, but they can also limit free speech on public city sidewalks so long as they pass in front of a single campus building.
The Eleventh Circuit鈥檚 holding is doubly wrong.
Today, many administrators treat their campuses as fiefdoms, their students as peons, and non-students like Mr. Keister as invading ants.
Not only can government actors, including public institutions like the University of Alabama, not restrict speech on city sidewalks, but they also cannot restrict free speech on campus sidewalks 鈥 or campus green areas and public spaces, for that matter. As the Supreme Court held in the 1972 case of Healy v. James, 鈥渟tate colleges and universities are not enclaves immune from the sweep of the First Amendment.鈥 FIREhas worked for decades to remind students, administrators, courts, legislators, and the general public of this long-established law.
For example, 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 Legislative Policy team has for years encouraged states to pass campus free speech statutes that clarify that sidewalks, lawns, and other public spaces on state-run campuses are First Amendment-protected areas. Similarly, 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 campus Policy Reform team works with both public and private colleges and universities, encouraging them to adopt speech-friendly policies, and publishes an annual report spotlighting good and bad speech policies at campuses across the country.
But oftentimes, as was the case with Mr. Keister and the University of Alabama, these legislative and policy efforts are not enough. As FIREremarked in its amicus brief, 鈥淭oday, many administrators treat their campuses as fiefdoms, their students as peons, and non-students like Mr. Keister as invading ants.鈥 When that happens, 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 Campus Rights Advocacy and Litigation teams often have to send letters or even take legal action against public universities to force them to comply with the First Amendment.
It鈥檚 clear that when left alone, public colleges and universities often choose to ignore the First Amendment.
Sometimes a letter is enough. For example, in 2019, FIRE wrote to Western Illinois University, calling on the school to finally abolish its 鈥渇ree speech zone鈥 policy that it had promised to get rid of 16 years earlier. Literal speech police resurrected the supposedly eliminated policy to shut down a student event advocating for marijuana legalization. After 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 letter, the university finally removed the policy in 2020.
Too often, legal action is required. That was true in the case of FIREclient Kevin Shaw, a student at Los Angeles Pierce College. Administrators at his public community college threatened to remove him from campus for distributing Spanish-language copies of the Constitution outside the school鈥檚 designated 鈥淔ree Speech Area,鈥 a tiny area that occupied only 0.007% of campus, or the ratio of an iPhone to a tennis court. The school settled and fixed its unconstitutional policies only after losing in court.
UPDATE: Court rejects Jones County Junior College鈥檚 attempt to dismiss lawsuit by former student Mike Brown
In another FIREcourt victory, campus police repeatedly threatened Jones County Junior College student Mike Brown for rolling a 鈥渇ree speech ball鈥 (a beach ball with words written in sharpie) around campus without advance permission, and for advocating for marijuana legalization in the campus plaza. The school finally agreed to modify its policies, and adopt the 鈥Chicago Statement鈥 after a judge refused to dismiss Brown鈥檚 lawsuit.
It鈥檚 clear that when left alone, public colleges and universities often choose to ignore the First Amendment. As 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 amicus brief notes, that is especially true 鈥渨hen speech is inconvenient, unpopular, or critical of the school鈥 鈥 exactly the type of speech the First Amendment was designed to protect. The Supreme Court should step in and make clear once and for all to public university bureaucrats that the First Amendment applies to them, too, especially on public sidewalks.
You can read more about the case and 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 full brief .
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