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FIRELetter to Wisconsin Attorney General Peggy A. Lautenschlager, November 18, 2005
November 18, 2005
Peggy A. Lautenschlager
Attorney General of the State of Wisconsin
17 West Main Street
P.O. Box 7857
Madison, Wisconsin 53707-7857
Re: Resident Assistants at the University of Wisconsin at Eau Claire
Sent by U.S. Mail and Facsimile (608-267-2779)
Dear Attorney General Lautenschlager:
As you can see from our Directors and Board of Advisors, the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (果冻传媒app官方) unites leaders in the fields of civil rights and civil liberties, scholars, journalists, and public intellectuals across the political and ideological spectrum on behalf of liberty, legal equality, freedom of religion, academic freedom, due process, and, in this case, freedom of speech and of the press on America鈥檚 college campuses. Our website, thefire.org, will give you a greater sense of our identity and activities.
Responding to a plea for help from undergraduate resident assistant (RA) Lance Steiger, who wished to lead a Bible study in his room on his own time, FIREbrought to public attention the University of Wisconsin at Eau Claire鈥檚 (UWEC鈥檚) admittedly unwritten 鈥減olicy鈥 banning RAs from holding even private, unofficial Bible studies (or studies of the Koran or Torah) in their own dorms or dorm rooms. 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 exposure of UWEC鈥檚 unjustified ban on religious expression has led to significant and sustained public outcry over the situation.
FIRE is aware that both University of Wisconsin System President Kevin Reilly and a group of 25 Wisconsin state legislators have written asking for the Wisconsin attorney general鈥檚 legal opinion as to whether UWEC鈥檚 policy is constitutional. Unfortunately, the university鈥檚 submission of evidence about its own policies was far from complete. As a result, FIREwould like to take this opportunity to furnish the attorney general with more complete information about UWEC鈥檚 policies and practices as they relate to the policies, practices, and duties of RAs on that campus.
When FIREfirst exposed this policy to the public, it contrasted UWEC鈥檚 ban on RAs鈥 holding Bible studies in their own dorms or dorm rooms with the public praise from officials of UWEC鈥檚 Department of Housing and Residence Life for an RA who had hosted for three years an official hall production of the controversial feminist play The Vagina Monologues (a UWEC student newspaper article containing this praise is attached to this letter). FIREalso pointed out that UWEC鈥檚 own job description for RAs gives them the responsibility 鈥淸t]o help organize and promote educational, recreational, social, and cultural activities that the students want and need,鈥 and asks them to 鈥渁ctively assist鈥 in the 鈥減olitical鈥 programs of the dorm. The job description also makes no mention of a prohibition on private Bible study groups led by RAs in their own dorm rooms. As UWEC did not include this job description in its letter to the attorney general鈥檚 office, FIREhas attached it to this letter.
UWEC can point to no written policy that would ban private, RA-led Bible studies. Yet it insists that its unwritten ban is justified out of a concern that 鈥淸o]rganizing and leading student activities from their own rooms and residence halls might well result in residents feeling undue pressure to participate鈥 and, in the words of Associate Director of Housing and Residence Life Deborah Newman, because students who knew that their RAs led Bible studies might 鈥渇eel judged or pushed in a direction that does not work for them.鈥 However, UWEC officially sponsors several programs in which RAs advocate controversial ideological positions through programs such as 鈥淭he V-Day Campaign,鈥 which culminates in a production of The Vagina Monologues; 鈥淭he F-Word,鈥 in which 鈥減articipants [are] introduced to feminism as a non-threatening, productive, socially necessary way of thought鈥; and a 鈥淐an You Recognize Racism?鈥 program in which 鈥淸t]he object is for the participants to understand that racism is a pervasive influence in our society.鈥 These and many more examples of controversial political programs led by RAs are detailed in a UWEC document entitled 鈥淢OSAIC: University of Wisconsin鈥揈au Claire Commitment to Diversity,鈥 which we have attached to this letter.
When UWEC allows some RAs to officially advocate ideologically charged and controversial positions within the residence halls and then prohibits other RAs from holding private Bible studies in their own rooms, it is engaging in unconstitutional viewpoint discrimination. Indeed, if feeling 鈥渦ndue pressure to participate鈥 in activities is truly UWEC鈥檚 concern, it strains credulity for UWEC to contend that hall residents would feel more 鈥減ushed鈥 to attend a private, voluntary Bible study led by their RAs than to attend these well-funded, heavily promoted, and highly ideological programs led by their RAs and supported by the university itself. It also seems unlikely in the extreme that, in accordance with UWEC鈥檚 claim that for years it has banned leading, organizing, or recruiting students for 鈥渁ll activities, regardless of viewpoint,鈥 nothing that could be construed as 鈥渓eading鈥 or 鈥渙rganizing鈥 these controversial and political student programs has taken place in RAs鈥 own dorm rooms or dormitories.
FIRE hopes that the information attached to this letter will be helpful to the attorney general鈥檚 office should it decide to make a determination on the constitutionality of UWEC鈥檚 unwritten policy banning private Bible studies led by RAs in their own dorm rooms or dorms. Please feel free to contact us should you have any questions on this matter.
Sincerely,
David French
President
cc:
Kevin P. Reilly, President, University of Wisconsin System
David Walsh, Regent President, University of Wisconsin
Vicki Lord Larson, Interim Chancellor, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire
State Senator Tom Reynolds
State Representative Scott Suder
Lance Steiger
Encl.