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VICTORY: Black Hills State amends speech-restrictive policy after censoring student group
Amid criticism from FIREand its student chapter of Young Americans for Liberty, Black Hills State University has its free speech policy to ensure speakers with controversial views won鈥檛 be censored.
On Jan. 24, as BHSU YAL members took to the campus sidewalks to recruit students and survey them about the Second Amendment, BHSU Director of Public Safety Phil Pesheck the group to stop speaking because they hadn鈥檛 filled out a form three days in advance. Pesheck did not mention, however, that the form is not required for student and student organizations to speak on campus. Regardless, he required the YAL members to stop engaging in free speech in the open outdoor areas of the public university campus.
The YAL members, knowing BHSU violated their rights, went directly to the university president鈥檚 office to tell her what happened. Within hours, YAL鈥檚 president got a call from Pesheck, who apologized.
FIRE commends BHSU for bringing its policy in line with its First Amendment obligations.
But that wasn鈥檛 enough. In demanding that the YAL members stop speaking to students, Pesheck cited a problematic line of the expressive activity form that raised First Amendment concerns for YAL and 果冻传媒app官方:
鈥淏HSU reserves the right to eject any objectionable person or persons from the premises upon the exercise of authority through any agent or police personnel.鈥
FIRE wrote BHSU Jan. 31 urging it to remove that line 鈥 ripe for viewpoint discriminatory abuse 鈥 from its request form and to ensure that university staff and police are educated on students鈥 First Amendment rights. As we said at the time:
The form鈥檚 broad and open-ended carve-out, purporting to give the university the right to silence anyone with views they dislike, flies in the face of the constitutional rights of students and faculty on a public university campus where citizens have broad free speech rights.
Now, BHSU has the language stating it will eject 鈥渙bjectionable鈥 individuals from campus.
FIRE commends BHSU for bringing its policy in line with its First Amendment obligations and ensuring university staff and police cannot in the future remove students who are peaceably expressing their views.
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