Table of Contents
UC Riverside Student Government Resolves to Reform Free Speech Policy; FIREto Help
Some good is beginning to come from the fiasco at Modesto Junior College, where administrators stopped student Robert Van Tuinen from distributing copies of the Constitution on Constitution Day because he had not booked the campus鈥 鈥渇ree speech area鈥 five days in advance. As reported by University of California, Riverside students , the Associated FIREof UC Riverside (ASUCR), the school鈥檚 student government, cited the Modesto incident as a motivating force behind the recently introduced 鈥淩esolution to Revise Policies Limiting Student Speech and Assembly.鈥 In a 鈥減re-emptive鈥 move, ASUCR wants to be sure that the administrators at UC Riverside don鈥檛 try to smother speech as their colleagues at Modesto have done.
FIRE has rated UC Riverside鈥檚 existing policy a 鈥測ellow light,鈥 which means that the policy could be implemented in a way that would abridge free speech rights. The passage that concerns FIRErequires university approval for gatherings of more than 25 people:
Any activity that is pre-advertised, requires sound amplification or can reasonably be expected to attract a crowd of 25 or more must be scheduled in advance through the Non-Academic Scheduling Office and is limited to the Bell Tower or Speaker鈥檚 Mound area.
Much to their credit, UC Riverside鈥檚 students want a stronger commitment from the university administration to respect First Amendment rights on campus. FIREis optimistic that improvement will come.
First, the ASUCR resolution passed unanimously, indicating strong student support. Its language does not waffle: 鈥淯CR is intended to be a prominent public venue for the open and free exchange of ideas, where the right of discussion and expression of all views is a basic principle.鈥
Second, the university鈥檚 reaction has been positive. According to the Highlander article, UCR Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs Jim Sandoval agreed that 25 was 鈥渘ot a magical number鈥 for determining when the university鈥檚 legitimate concerns about noise and crowd control would reasonably come into play. He added, 鈥淚 applaud the resolution. I think it鈥檚 a very responsible resolution and it鈥檚 entirely consistent with the values that we have here at UC Riverside and it鈥檚 something that we absolutely embrace and can work with ASUCR on.鈥
FIRE is honored that the students have contacted us to help them implement this resolution. We look forward to working with them and the university administration to make UC Riverside鈥檚 commitment to free expression crystal clear.
Image: UC Riverside Student Government Association -
Recent Articles
FIRE鈥檚 award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.