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FIREAwaits Supreme Court Ruling on Content Neutrality

About five years ago, when I was a graduate student at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI), I tried to start a student group for nontheistic students (atheists, agnostics, humanists, freethinkers, and so forth) called the Secular Student Alliance (SSA). I quickly discovered that RPI had a policy of denying funding to political and religious student groups (of which they considered SSA one), despite funding all kinds of other student groups.

While RPI is a private institution and thus not legally bound by the First Amendment, RPI鈥檚 written policies state that freedom of speech is 鈥渆ssential鈥 to the university and that 鈥渢he Institute shall not impede or obstruct students in the exercise of their fundamental rights as citizens.鈥 I knew that this promise to respect students鈥 fundamental rights meant that we could not be discriminated against for our (non-)religion. Thus began my ultimately successful campaign to have SSA funded.

My story is not unique. Other universities, both public and private, maintain similar policies of treating less favorably student groups classified as political or religious, and a case currently before the Supreme Court may determine the fate of such policies. The case is , and it revolves around the town鈥檚 regulation of signs. The town allows signs that it classifies as 鈥減olitical鈥 or 鈥渋deological鈥 to be larger, remain up longer, and be placed more densely than signs that it classifies as 鈥淭emporary Directional Signs Relating to a Qualifying Event.鈥 Per the town, the signs at issue in the case, put up by members of a small church to invite and direct people to its weekly worship services, fall into the latter category.

The basic legal dispute in Reed is over whether the town鈥檚 regulations are content-based (and therefore subject to greater First Amendment scrutiny), and, by extension, what it means for a regulation to be content-based. The town contends that a regulation is only content-based if it differentiates between speech based on the particular viewpoints or ideas expressed. Clyde Reed (the pastor of the church in question, and the petitioner in the case) contends that a regulation is content-based if the speech鈥檚 鈥渄ifferential treatment is determined based on what the sign says.鈥 I agree.

The problem with the town鈥檚 argument is that it would allow all kinds of governmental entities, including public universities, to decide which categories of speech are more or less valuable, and make resources available accordingly. This would allow public universities to disfavor categories of speech that are likely to be controversial or speakers who are likely to offend others鈥攁rguably the most important speech on a college campus. As Justice Scalia put it at :

So we鈥檙e鈥攚e鈥檙e supposed to sit here and say, oh, political speech is the most valuable and you can allow that, but ideological speech comes in a close second, and then what? Then directional speech or whatever else? I don鈥檛 want to do that. I don鈥檛 think you should want any governmental official, even鈥攅ven a judge, to do stuff like that.

Whatever ruling the Supreme Court hands down will have significant implications for a range of campus free speech issues. For example, lower courts are divided on whether outdoor spaces on public university campuses amount to traditional or designated public forums. If they do, any content-based restriction on their use is subject to strict scrutiny and would very likely be struck down. But if the Court holds that classifications such as 鈥減olitical,鈥 鈥渋deological,鈥 and 鈥渞eligious鈥 are not content-based, administrators may use the ruling to justify excluding speech in those categories.

In , the Supreme Court addressed a rule like the one I fought at RPI, which excluded otherwise eligible religious student organizations from receiving student activity fee funds. The Supreme Court held that the university鈥檚 rule violated the free speech clause because it was content-based in a particularly egregious way, called viewpoint discrimination. But if the Court rules in Reed that labelling expression 鈥渞eligious鈥 is not a content-based classification, such rules may become the norm on university campuses. A number of universities, most prominently the California State University System, are already using 鈥渁ll-comers鈥 policies to exclude religious student organizations from campus; surely they will jump on an opportunity to target religious student groups directly.

Whatever the Supreme Court decides in Reed, it has the potential to significantly impact the scope of freedom of speech both on and off campus. FIREwill be watching closely.

Frank Bellamy is working with FIREthrough the University of Virginia School of Law鈥檚 Robert F. Kennedy 鈥51 Public Service Fellowship.

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