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New president, same old student press struggles at L.A. City College

Student journalists at LACC have been fighting a pattern of administrative overreach for more than a decade.
Student holding notebooks standing in front of newspaper background. A stripe of text covers her mouth.

Los Angeles City College may have recently ushered in a new , but one thing remains unchanged: its disregard for the rights of the student press. 

Between kicking student journalists out of public spaces and events and breaking from the usual practice of hosting issues of The Collegian student newspaper on its website, LACC administrators continue to perpetuate mistreatment that dates back over a decade.

Last spring, LACC  by the Los Angeles Times after administrators kicked student journalists out of college events and facilities while they were taking pictures for the paper. One administrator forced a student to leave a college concert because the administrator incorrectly dubbed it a 鈥減rivate event.鈥 Campus sheriff鈥檚 deputies confronted another student because his taking pictures supposedly made building staff feel 鈥渦nsafe.鈥 Of course, the First Amendment fully protects these routine newsgathering practices.

贵滨搁贰鈥檚&苍产蝉辫;Student Press Freedom Initiative first wrote LACC on June 1, urging it to stand up for its student journalists and ensure their right to access campus spaces and events in order to gather news. SPFI received no response. 

In the wake of these incidents and at the start of the fall semester, college administrators drafted a policy attempting to address the access issues. But rather than correct LACC鈥檚 practice of violating the First Amendment, the draft policy placed the burden to address the problem on the students, requiring them to seek and receive advance permission to photograph or film virtually anywhere on campus. 

So SPFI wrote LACC a second time on Sept. 18, urging it not to move forward with the policy and to respect students鈥 rights. LACC Public Relations Manager Shaena Engle responded that day, emphasizing that the policy was still a draft and that she was considering feedback from Collegian students and their adviser, Rhonda Guess. 

Unfortunately, hope for resolution of our LACC concerns was short-lived, extending only about two weeks. 

On Oct. 1, we learned that, breaking with a history of publishing The Collegian on , LACC and the Los Angeles Community College District IT department refused to publish the paper鈥檚 first issue of the semester 鈥 which, quite notably, contained criticisms of the college administration. Administrators claimed this was due to asserted 鈥渁ccessibility concerns鈥 with the paper鈥檚 digital file 鈥 though they had never raised such concerns before 鈥 referring to errors with image tagging and reading order, but offering no elaboration. Collegian adviser Guess, and other staffers at the paper, feared the decision stemmed from the issue鈥檚 content. 

LACC has now refused to publish three issues of The Collegian thus far this semester. However, the college has no problem hosting other materials on its website that appear to present similar 鈥渁ccessibility issues.鈥 For example, when SPFI conducted an accessibility check using Adobe Acrobat on the live file of the college鈥檚 , the program detected 20 such problems. The schedule remains on the , while LACC refuses to post The Collegian. 

Now, SPFI, joined by the , have written LACC a third time, criticizing its continued disregard for student press rights and asserting that the college cannot justify withholding the paper from its website because of the content of its reporting. As we wrote:

Student journalists at The Collegian must be free to write about what they please鈥攊ncluding describing their frustrations with the college鈥檚 administrators,  providing an unedited transcript of an interview with its new president, or discussing the state of free speech at campus鈥攚ithout fear the college will refuse to recognize the paper鈥檚 rights at any sign of bad publicity.

And if you鈥檙e as hopeful as we were that reporting access issues may have improved for Collegian journalists in the meantime, you鈥檒l be disappointed, too. Collegian staff report to SPFI that LACC leadership continues to suppress student news gathering, with administrators forcing a student reporter to stop photographing a food bank outside the college鈥檚 student union because she was allegedly making others uncomfortable. 

Despite these roadblocks, student reporters at The Collegian continue to deliver the on-the-ground reporting about campus and local issues on which the LACC community relies. Fortunately for The Collegian, SPFI is always looking for unique ways to support student journalists 鈥 so if LACC won鈥檛 put The Collegian on its website, we鈥檒l host it on ours. 

Read the latest three issues of the paper herehere, and here. Be sure to keep an eye out for those criticisms the LACC admins apparently don鈥檛 want you to see.

Of course, we always hold out hope that, even after a decade of student press censorship, the college can turn a new page. LACC鈥檚 new president, Amanuel Gebru, has the opportunity to start off his tenure by making up for the college鈥檚 past wrongdoings and standing up for the rights of the student press.

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