On March 22, 2000, the U.S. Supreme Court delivered an important
free speech victory for students when they unanimously overturned a 7th
Circuit ruling declaring mandatory student fees unconstitutional. The
Court's ruling in Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin
System v. Southworth (Case #98-1189) reinforces the historic role of
college campuses as a marketplace of ideas. Mandatory student fees
currently fund a diverse array of activities ranging from lecture
series to health services to the student newspaper.
The case was filed by three students at the University of Wisconsin
who argued that it was unconstitutional for portions of their student
fee to fund political or ideological activities with which they
disagreed. The offended students were particularly concerned with
multi-cultural groups, environmental groups, and lesbian, gay, bisexual
and transgendered groups. The University of Wisconsin appealed the case
to the Supreme Court, arguing that the marketplace of ideas created by
student fees is an appropriate and important part of the school's
educational mission.
The Supreme Court's ruling provides the foundation for a legal
framework for a student fee system that engages students on issues
ranging all over the political, social, and activist spectrum.
Summary of the Ruling
The opinion of the Supreme Court, written by Justice Kennedy, made these key points:
1. It is constitutional for campuses to collect and allocate mandatory fees to a wide-variety of student groups.
"We decline to impose a system of that sort as a constitutional
requirement, however. The restriction could be so disruptive and
expensive that the program to support extracurricular speech would be
ineffective."
2. Mandatory student fees can fund student groups that address any issue or activity.
"The speech the University seeks to encourage in the program before us
is distinguished not by discernable limits but by its vast, unexplored
bounds. To insist upon asking what speech is germane would be contrary
to the very goal the University seeks to pursue. It is not for the
Court to say what is or is not germane to the ideas to be pursued in an
institution of higher learning."
3. Student organizations cannot be denied funding based on their viewpoint.
"We conclude that the University of Wisconsin may sustain the
extracurricular dimensions of its programs by using mandatory student
fees with viewpoint neutrality as the operational principle."
4. It makes no difference if the activities supported by the fee are conducted on or off campus.
"We make no distinction between campus activities and the off-campus
expressive activities of objectionable [student groups]. Universities,
like all of society, are finding that traditional conceptions of
territorial boundaries are difficult to insist upon in an age marked by
revolutionary changes in communications, information transfer, and the
means of discourse."
Read
Excerpts from the Southworth Decision
Read
the Court's Decision
Update:
Southworth II
'Viewpoint Neutrality' and the First Amendment
When the Court states that funds must be allocated
in a viewpoint neutral manner, they mean that funding decisions cannot be based
on a particular group or activity's point of view. Thus, the decision to fund
or not to fund an organization cannot be contingent on the content of the
group's message. This method of allocating funds protects students' free speech
rights by ensuring that all viewpoints, including those that are controversial,
have an equal chance to receive student fee funding. Unfortunately, the concept
of viewpoint neutrality has been subject to misinterpretation:
•
Viewpoint neutrality does not mean that all groups should receive the same
amount of money. If this were true, than the chess club would receive the same
amount of funding as the student newspaper, which would result in either
excessively extravagant chess sets or a student paper unable to publish and
distribute its work.
•
Viewpoint neutrality does not mean that by funding one point of view, you must
automatically fund an "opposite" point of view. First, most
organizations and activities do not have an opposite point of view. Second,
even in a situation where a pro-life group and a pro-choice group apply for
funding, it is not necessary to fund both groups at the same level, or even to
fund both at all. Chances are strong that one of the two groups provides a
greater level of services to the student body and thus deserves more funding.
The level of services provided and other objective criteria should direct the
funding decision, not the viewpoint of either group.
The most important thing to remember is that
viewpoint neutral funding pertains to the process, not the outcome. Different
groups will receive greater or less amounts of money based on their needs and
the service they provide to students. What matters is that discrepancies in
funding are not a result of an activity or organization's point of view or
message.
More
on Southworth and Viewpoint Neutrality
Southworth
and Referenda
Southworth and the Marketplace of Ideas
The beauty of the Southworth decision is that it protects the First
Amendment rights of students, while at the same time promotes an
infinitely wide variety of speech on and off-campus - "The speech the
University seeks to encourage in the program before us is distinguished
not by discernable limits but by its vast, unexplored bounds." The
Court makes "no distinction between the on and off-campus activities"
of student organizations and states that "universities possess
significant interests in encouraging students to take advantage of the
social, civic, cultural, and religious opportunities available in
surrounding communities and throughout the country."
What does Southworth mean for you?
University administrators and student government leaders are now
free to fund all student activities that have significant educational
value for the university community. Thus, when the student government
is deciding which organizations to fund, rather than asking, "Are we
allowed to fund this organization?," they will ask, "How should we fund
this organization?" It no longer matters whether or not the
organization or activity in question is considered political,
religious, or ideological in nature - Southworth gives students and
administrators the power to create a diverse and vibrant marketplace of
ideas, thereby facilitating an active culture of debate and a student
body engaged in the civic process.