Table of Contents
VICTORY: Texas State walks back written warnings handed to RAs
Texas State University entered 2022 with a new and interesting dilemma. At a time when colleges were fighting tooth-and-nail for students to combat enrollment, Texas State found itself with an overabundance of bright-eyed freshmen. With that, came a new : Where will all those freshmen live?
Texas State鈥檚 housing requires any student who graduated from high school within the previous 12 months, as well as any student under 20 who has completed less than 30 credit hours, to live in on-campus housing. The influx of students led to a crunch on available housing for everyone.
Texas State attempted to solve this problem in a variety of ways. Most students were placed in three-person rooms, with overflow moved into near campus. Capacity issues also forced resident assistants to share their rooms with roommates.
At Texas State, RAs perform a multitude of in the dorms, including working the phone lines and front desk, walking through the community at night, and supporting their students鈥 transition to the college environment. Recognizing RAs鈥 busy schedules, Texas State does not traditionally assign them roommates. Instead, RAs live in a dorm room alone 鈥 until this year.
FIRE applauds Texas State鈥檚 reinvigorated support for its constitutional duties, and encourages the university to adopt an RA media policy that protects RAs鈥 First Amendment rights
Enter three RAs for two of the university鈥檚 dorms: senior Regina Macias and sophomores Yordanos Kinfe and Ava Melvin. The three RAs spoke with an opinion contributor 鈥 and fellow RA 鈥 for the campus newspaper, the University Star. In an Oct. 7, 2022, , Macias, Kinfe, and Melvin were all quoted discussing their handling of the overfilled dorms, and their opinions on the campus policies that created the issues. Kinfe spoke directly to the impact on RAs, stating: 鈥淸W]e also have to be RAs for our roommate, we鈥檙e on the clock 24/7.鈥
And that鈥檚 where the trouble began. Texas State鈥檚 鈥淩esponding to Media Inquiries鈥 policy statement employees to 鈥淸n]otify their supervisor or the Director of the [Office of Media Relations] or the [assistant vice president] for University Advancement Communications鈥 when responding to media requests. The three RAs, speaking to their fellow RA for the campus newspaper, did not follow that policy. Macias, Kinfe, and Melvin were all summoned to meetings with the residential director of their dorms. At separate, closed-door meetings, the residential director and the assistant director grilled each RA on their knowledge of campus policy statements, and what they should have done when their fellow RA asked them to talk. All three then received letters of warning on their personnel files for their failure to follow policy.
That鈥檚 when FIREstepped in. In a Dec. 28, 2022, letter to the president of Texas State, FIREreminded the university of its obligations under the First Amendment. Student-employees do not relinquish their rights to expression and speech by virtue of their employment. Under the Supreme Court case Pickering v. Board of Education, employees may speak on matters of public concern in their private capacities, even if the subject touches on their employment. While the RAs are employed to oversee the dorms, they are not forbidden from discussing their workplace conditions or the university鈥檚 admissions policies.
On Jan. 13, Texas State backed down. The university removed the written warnings from the files of the student-employees, and affirmed its 鈥渟upport[] of the free exchange of ideas which includes freedom of speech, freedom of inquiry, and freedom of dissent.鈥
FIRE applauds Texas State鈥檚 reinvigorated support for its constitutional duties, and encourages the university to adopt an RA media policy that protects RAs鈥 First Amendment rights, such as the University of Virginia鈥檚, : 鈥淚ndividual Resident Staff members may speak to the media or public in their individual capacities, making clear they are not speaking on behalf of or for the program.鈥
This change to campus policy would place Texas State among the growing list of universities that have revised their policies to affirm their student-employees鈥 expressive rights. FIREstands ready to assist with this revision.
FIRE defends the rights of students and faculty members 鈥 no matter their views 鈥 at public and private universities and colleges in the United States. If you are a student or a faculty member facing investigation or punishment for your speech, . If you鈥檙e faculty member at a public college or university, call the Faculty Legal Defense Fund 24-hour hotline at 254-500-FLDF (3533). If you鈥檙e a college journalist facing censorship or a media law question, call the Student Press Freedom Initiative 24-hour hotline at 717-734-SPFI (7734).
Recent Articles
FIRE鈥檚 award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.