Table of Contents
Longwood University: Our Bias Incident Policy Is Limited to Conduct (It鈥檚 Not) and No Bias Issues Have Been Reported (They Have)
Last week, FIREpublished a nationwide survey of Bias Response Teams (PDF) demonstrating that many of these systems call upon students to report fellow students and faculty for protected speech, including political speech. One of the institutions we criticized for a particularly egregious definition of 鈥渂ias incident鈥 was Longwood University, which expressed its displeasure :
[Virginia Commonwealth University] and [the University of Virginia] were among the universities criticized by 果冻传媒app官方, as were [Virginia] Tech, George Mason, Mary Washington, the University of Richmond and Longwood University, which was singled out for special scrutiny for including the threat of 鈥渆ducation sanctions鈥 in its policy.
鈥淭he FIREreport is extremely misleading,鈥 Longwood spokesman Matthew McWilliams said.
Longwood has a protocol to identify when bias might be a factor in behaviors such as harassment that may violate the law or conduct code, 鈥渂ut we do not under any circumstances punish students simply for their beliefs or opinions.鈥
No bias issues have been reported, he said.
Talk about misleading.
For one, Longwood University produced records of reported bias incidents to my colleague, Alex Morey, in response to a public records request. They wouldn鈥檛 produce those records to me, even though I requested them, because I鈥檓 not a resident of the Commonwealth of Virginia, and Virginia鈥檚 Freedom of Information Act is to 鈥渃itizens of the Commonwealth.鈥 Yes, Longwood insisted that one FIREemployee rather than another physically send the public records request. Some stonewalling is built by amassing pebbles.
There have been relatively few bias incidents reported at Longwood, and most concern criminal conduct. But Longwood鈥檚 policy is not limited, as its spokesman claims, to conduct outside the scope of the First Amendment. And Longwood knows this because .
Let鈥檚 take a look at Longwood鈥檚 policies.
Longwood distinguishes a 鈥渂ias incident鈥 from a hate crime, and the term this way:
- Conduct, speech, or expression that is motivated by bias or prejudice.
- Does not involve a criminal act.
- May, however, violate campus codes or policies.
This definition is also inconsistent with of 鈥渂ias鈥 offered by Longwood on the same website:
Bias is a tendency or inclination; irrational preference or behavior that prevents unprejudiced consideration of people, events, or situations. Bias can manifest itself in a performed negative opinion or attitude toward a person or group of persons based on their actual or perceived:
- Age
- Creed
- (Dis)ability
- 摆鈥
Both definitions are among the broadest definitions of 鈥渂ias incident鈥 we鈥檝e seen. The first involves virtually any speech 鈥渕otivated by bias or prejudice鈥 even if it does not violate 鈥渃ampus codes or policies鈥 or constitute a criminal act. The second is limited to particular categories, but includes bias against 鈥淸p]olitical or social affiliation,鈥 which could encompass virtually any political speech.
But Longwood told the Times-Dispatch that it would punish someone only for a violation of their conduct code that is also a bias incident. Even assuming that鈥檚 true, it鈥檚 the conduct code itself that makes the university鈥檚 bias reporting system constitutionally suspect.
Longwood鈥檚 鈥渂ias鈥 website provides 鈥淸e]xamples of charges鈥 students might face for a bias incident. These charges include 鈥淎buse to Persons.鈥 How is this offense defined? :
According to the 2015-2016 Student Handbook, bias incidents may fall under the 鈥淎buse to Persons鈥 violation. Abuse to Persons includes:
- Harassment, threats, intimidation, coercion or abuse (e.g., physical, verbal, graphic, or electronic) directed toward any person or group of people.
This definition is not limited to speech unprotected by the First Amendment. In particular, prohibitions against verbal 鈥渁buse鈥 have been routinely struck down, including by the Supreme Court, because the word 鈥渁buse鈥 doesn鈥檛 convey what conduct or speech is impermissible. This leaves police or administrators with 鈥渦nconstitutional discretion in鈥 deciding when to enforce the prohibition against 鈥渁buse.鈥 Houston v. Hill (1987). As South Carolina鈥檚 Supreme Court has , 鈥淸o]ne鈥檚 view as to what [鈥榓buse鈥橾 was intended to mean or connote would likely vary considerably, depending upon whether the viewpoint was that of the alleged abuser or that of the person allegedly abused.鈥
And there鈥檚 reason to be concerned that this definition can be applied to protected speech. Immediately after defining the 鈥淎buse to Persons鈥 prohibition, Longwood鈥檚 website provides some including:
- Offensive 鈥 images/drawing
- 摆鈥
- Drawing, creating pictures, or speaking/acting in a way that reinforces stereotypes, or belittles/ridicules someone because of their gender, gender expression, race, ethnicity, national origin, disability, sexual orientation, faith, or political affiliation
That would mean that belittling someone with pictures, drawings, or words because of their political affiliation might qualify as a bias incident鈥攁nd perhaps even 鈥淎buse to Persons.鈥 Even a protest sign ridiculing a presidential candidate could be seen as expression which 鈥渞idicules someone because of their 鈥 political affiliation.鈥
So far, it doesn鈥檛 appear that Longwood鈥檚 bias reporting system has led to abuse or violations of its students鈥 First Amendment rights. But Longwood鈥檚 policies are remarkably susceptible to abuse, leaving administrators with broad discretion to impose 鈥渆ducational sanctions鈥濃攊f not outright punishment for violations.
That Longwood hasn鈥檛 yet been significantly tested by controversial speech isn鈥檛 an indication that its system is well-formed. Creating broad definitions of prohibited speech or conduct and leaving it to government officials to pick and choose when they鈥檒l enforce the regulation is an invitation to censorship.
As our Supreme Court observed :
It would certainly be dangerous if the legislature could set a net large enough to catch all possible offenders and leave it to the courts to step inside and say who could be rightfully detained, and who should be set at large.
If Longwood believes its system is limited to speech or conduct that is unprotected by the First Amendment, it should memorialize its belief by enshrining it in written policy. But it cannot insist that its bias reporting system poses no threat to freedom of speech when its policies, as written, plainly permit punishment for protected speech.
Recent Articles
FIRE鈥檚 award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.