Kennesaw State declares pro-life display 'controversial,' exiles it to tiny speech zone
ADF attorneys represent Ratio Christi in new lawsuit
Thursday, Feb 22, 2018
Attorney sound bites: Travis Barham | Tyson Langhofer
ATLANTA – A Christian student organization represented by Alliance Defending Freedom attorneys filed a federal lawsuit against Kennesaw State University officials Tuesday to challenge policies that officials used to relegate its pro-life display to a “speech zone” that makes up less than 0.08 percent of the 405-acre campus.
“Public universities are supposed to be the marketplace of ideas, where all ideas are welcome, not just those that university bureaucrats consider acceptable,” said ADF Legal Counsel Travis Barham. “Kennesaw State allows officials to quarantine any student speech they deem ‘controversial’—including a pro-life display—to a tiny, difficult-to-access part of campus. But the First Amendment prohibits universities from restricting where students can speak, whether that restriction is based on what students intend to say or simply based on sparing the feelings of others who may disagree.”
“In today’s academic environment, Christian students and educators must not only defend our faith, but we must also defend our right to defend our faith,” added Ratio Christi President and CEO Dr. Corey Miller.
Under the policies, the university prohibits individual students from reserving space on campus and requires registered student organizations to submit reservation requests between three and 30 days in advance—depending on the type of event and without clearly indicating which deadline applies.
The policies provide no guidelines for KSU officials to follow, which gives them unrestricted discretion to grant, deny, or modify a student organization’s reservation request even for unconstitutional reasons. Thus, officials relegate any activities they deem “controversial” to the small, less-accessible speech zone. Officials also have free reign to charge security fees in any amount.
On at least one occasion, university officials assigned Ratio Christi to the speech zone because they determined that its message was “controversial,” even though no one was using the location the group originally requested. An official also told Ratio Christi that it could use its requested area of campus if it was willing to remove from its display certain posters expressing a pro-life message; otherwise, it would be relegated to the inferior zone. This year, officials once again moved Ratio Christi’s pro-life display to the speech zone due to its content.
“Kennesaw State’s speech zones are unconstitutional because the First Amendment exists precisely to protect speech that government officials think is controversial,” said ADF Senior Counsel Tyson Langhofer, director of the ADF Center for Academic Freedom. “Because today’s students will be tomorrow’s leaders and voters, universities should live by example in demonstrating the importance of our freedoms protected by the First Amendment instead of communicating to an entire generation that the Constitution doesn’t matter.”
ADF attorneys filed the complaint in Ratio Christi of Kennesaw State University v. Olens with the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia.
“Public universities are supposed to be the marketplace of ideas, where all ideas are welcome, not just those that university bureaucrats consider acceptable,” said ADF Legal Counsel Travis Barham. “Kennesaw State allows officials to quarantine any student speech they deem ‘controversial’—including a pro-life display—to a tiny, difficult-to-access part of campus. But the First Amendment prohibits universities from restricting where students can speak, whether that restriction is based on what students intend to say or simply based on sparing the feelings of others who may disagree.”
“In today’s academic environment, Christian students and educators must not only defend our faith, but we must also defend our right to defend our faith,” added Ratio Christi President and CEO Dr. Corey Miller.
Under the policies, the university prohibits individual students from reserving space on campus and requires registered student organizations to submit reservation requests between three and 30 days in advance—depending on the type of event and without clearly indicating which deadline applies.
The policies provide no guidelines for KSU officials to follow, which gives them unrestricted discretion to grant, deny, or modify a student organization’s reservation request even for unconstitutional reasons. Thus, officials relegate any activities they deem “controversial” to the small, less-accessible speech zone. Officials also have free reign to charge security fees in any amount.
On at least one occasion, university officials assigned Ratio Christi to the speech zone because they determined that its message was “controversial,” even though no one was using the location the group originally requested. An official also told Ratio Christi that it could use its requested area of campus if it was willing to remove from its display certain posters expressing a pro-life message; otherwise, it would be relegated to the inferior zone. This year, officials once again moved Ratio Christi’s pro-life display to the speech zone due to its content.
“Kennesaw State’s speech zones are unconstitutional because the First Amendment exists precisely to protect speech that government officials think is controversial,” said ADF Senior Counsel Tyson Langhofer, director of the ADF Center for Academic Freedom. “Because today’s students will be tomorrow’s leaders and voters, universities should live by example in demonstrating the importance of our freedoms protected by the First Amendment instead of communicating to an entire generation that the Constitution doesn’t matter.”
ADF attorneys filed the complaint in Ratio Christi of Kennesaw State University v. Olens with the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia.
- Pronunciation guide: Barham (BEAR’-um), Langhofer (LANG’-hoff-ur)
Alliance Defending Freedom is an alliance-building, non-profit legal organization that advocates for the right of people to freely live out their faith.
# # # | Ref. 61131