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Texas A&M spins hostile takeover of student paper as part of journalism program reboot

果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 Student Press Freedom Initiative wrote to TAMU today, is filing open records requests to learn more鈥
Entrance to Texas A&M University in College Station, Texas on April 3rd, 2015. Texas A&M University is a public research university located in College Station, Texas.

FIRE鈥檚 Student Press Freedom Initiative is filing open records requests after Texas A&M unilaterally cancelled the print edition of The Battalion student newspaper. (Katherine Welles / Shutterstock.com)

Texas A&M University wants a feel-good story about changes to its journalism program. 

But the reality for journalists at TAMU鈥檚 129-year-old, independent student paper 鈥 鈥 is nothing but bad news.

On Thursday, TAMU administrators Battalion leadership they鈥檇 need to stop their weekly print editions and move fully online, effective immediately. The directive came at the behest of herself, The Battalion said.

After an initial , Banks backtracked in Friday, touting the move as part of her personal vision for 鈥渁 state-of-the-art journalism degree program鈥 that includes bringing The Battalion under the journalism department鈥檚 purview. 

Because we鈥檙e awfully curious about the motives behind TAMU鈥檚 stunning move, we鈥檙e filing public records requests to find out more.

As a gesture, Banks said The Battalion can keep printing through the spring. And yesterday, she to add two student representatives to a working group overseeing Battalion-related decisions. 

Those decisions 鈥 or any pertaining to The Battalion鈥檚 operations 鈥 are not Banks鈥 to make, but fall solely to the discretion of the paper鈥檚 editorial staff. That directive comes at the behest of the U.S. Constitution鈥檚 First Amendment.

As 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 Student Press Freedom Initiative explains in a letter to TAMU today, The Battalion鈥檚 status as an independent, registered student organization means the paper鈥檚 student journalists 鈥 not university administrators 鈥 have full control over their fate:

The university lacks the authority to make decisions about the future of The Battalion without consent of its editorial board. 

While both the demand that The Battalion stop producing print editions and that it come under the journalism department are problematic, the most significant aspect of the demands to the newspaper鈥攚hich has published in print for 129 years, with only a brief break during World War I鈥 is the intrusion on the newspaper鈥檚 independence. While you have stated your intention is not to control the content of The Battalion, these demands represent a significant overreach and unconstitutionally restrain the independence of the newspaper. 

We additionally note that 鈥淸t]he First Amendment sharply circumscribes the authority available to the university鈥檚 administration in how it may regulate an independent student publication,鈥 and that 鈥淸t]reating a student media outlet differently from other student organizations鈥攖hat is, imposing 鈥榙ifferential treatment鈥 that 鈥榮ingles out the press鈥欌攙iolates the First Amendment.鈥

In addition to our letter, FIREsigned onto a statement of support for the newspaper by the . And, because we鈥檙e awfully curious about the motives behind TAMU鈥檚 stunning move, we鈥檙e filing public records requests to find out more.

How does university leadership discuss The Battalion in emails? Do they object to the paper鈥檚 content? Did donors unduly influence the university鈥檚 attempt to take over the paper? Anything TAMU has in writing, we鈥檒l be asking for and reviewing.

TAMU鈥檚 Faculty Senate met yesterday and expressed support for The Battalion.

Perhaps Banks truly believes wresting editorial control of a student paper from the students is in the best interest of TAMU journalism.

But according to 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 Student Press Counsel, Lindsie Rank, that鈥檚 misguided.

鈥淎ny imposition on the independence of a student paper raises serious red flags for the freedom of press,鈥 Lindsie said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 true even if administrators claim their motives are well-meaning.鈥

Encouragingly, TAMU鈥檚 Faculty Senate met yesterday and support for The Battalion.

鈥淚 have heard from many of our faculty colleagues in the past four days and the emotions range from outrage to fear,鈥 said speaker of the Faculty Senate, communications professor Dale Rice, at the meeting. 

鈥淚t鈥檚 also easy to see why many faculty fear the[ir] academic freedom and their own free speech rights could be next on the hit list,鈥 Rice said. 

While all public university administrators should know their obligations to uphold First Amendment-protected expressive rights like free speech, academic freedom, and a campus free press, TAMU especially should know better. They earn 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 highest, green light rating for maintaining speech-protective policies. 

Of course, if people don鈥檛 put them into practice, good policies are just words on paper.

Banks, it seems, doesn鈥檛 think too highly of those either.

After struggling to contact her on Thursday, Battalion journalists finally heard back on Friday. Banks the fact that she is 鈥渘ot a professor of journalism鈥 and wondered aloud why university leadership felt strongly that students need a print journalism education.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 understand,鈥 she reportedly said, 鈥渆xactly why [print media] is important to the field.鈥

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 a new era for The Battalion,鈥 Banks concluded. 鈥淚t won鈥檛 be in print.鈥

But as President Banks will soon learn, real journalism requires not wonderment or visions, but facts. And once those come to light in this case, we think The Battalion will indeed enter a new era 鈥 whichever one they create for themselves.

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