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Rhode Island College: Not a Public School?
Back in early December, I wrote about a federal lawsuit brought by the Rhode Island American Civil Liberties Union (RI ACLU) against Rhode Island College (RIC) alleging a violation of the First Amendment rights of the Women鈥檚 Studies Organization (WSO), a student group at RIC. The suit claims that RIC removed signs communicating support for reproductive rights placed on campus by the WSO, while other student groups were allowed to post signs freely. The suit asks that both the specific removal and RIC鈥檚 sign policy in general be declared unconstitutional.
The trial has started鈥攁nd it鈥檚 shaping up to be a wild one. The that RIC has moved to dismiss the WSO鈥檚 claims by arguing that it is 鈥渘ot a government entity,鈥 and therefore not required to uphold First Amendment protections on campus. Specifically, RIC argues that it is a subunit of the Rhode Island Board of Governors for Higher Education, a 鈥減ublic corporation,鈥 and that 鈥渟ince an independent corporation is regarded as 鈥榩rivate鈥 for [constitutional] purposes even where the entity is a public creation,鈥 RIC is not bound by the United States Constitution.
In somewhat more straightforward terms: RIC is claiming to be a creation not of the state of Rhode Island, but of the Rhode Island Board of Governors for Higher Education. Since the Board of Governors is a public corporation, RIC claims that they are also an independent public corporation. Thus, RIC argues, they are not the government, even though they were created by a public corporation created by the government. Because they are not the government, they do not need to abide by the government鈥檚 rules: namely, the Constitution. Therefore, RIC concludes, the RI ACLU鈥檚 suit is without merit.
Needless to say, this is an incredible argument; if accepted, students and faculty at Rhode Island鈥檚 public colleges will be left without constitutional protection. Steven Brown, Executive Director of the RI ACLU, expressed his concern, telling the Providence Journal: 鈥淩hode Island College鈥檚 position that its campus is a Constitution-free zone is shocking and preposterous, and will no doubt come as a surprise to the thousands of students and faculty members who thought they were attending or working at a public institution鈥e are confident that the court will summarily reject this extraordinary position.鈥
We here at FIREcan鈥檛 imagine the federal district court taking RIC鈥檚 argument seriously. Without delving too heavily into the convoluted intersection of constitutional principle and corporation law, we think it should be fairly obvious that the degrees of separation that exist between RIC and the State of Rhode Island鈥攚hich RIC鈥檚 lawyers claim relieves them of constitutional responsibility鈥攁re slim at best and certainly not intended to render public institutions private for purposes of constitutionally guaranteed civil liberties. Both the Board of Governors for Higher Education鈥檚 and their make clear that the universities under its control are to be thought of as 鈥減ublic institutions.鈥 Indeed, the Board鈥檚 state that 鈥淸t]he Board is responsible for governing the three public institutions of higher education: the University of Rhode Island, Rhode Island College and the Community College of Rhode Island.鈥 (Emphasis added.)
RIC鈥檚 counsel is clearly relying here on a line of legal reasoning most recently affirmed by Rollins v. Board of Governors for Higher Educ., 761 F. Supp. 930 (D.R.I. 1990), a case in which a federal district court held that the Board of Governors was 鈥渘ot an arm of the state for sovereign immunity purposes.鈥 (Emphasis added.) However, the WSO鈥檚 case concerns First Amendment rights, not . (The Eleventh Amendment grants immunity to states from being sued by citizens of another state, without the defendant state鈥檚 consent.) While the 鈥渋ndependent status鈥 of RIC may have been upheld by this line of cases in relation to questions of sovereign immunity, it would be a tremendous leap for the district court to infer here that cases decided with regards to Eleventh Amendment questions were instantly applicable and controlling to First Amendment questions as well.
Of course, FIREwill continue to watch the developments in the case.
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