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University of Central Florida Upholds āFree Speech Zoneā Policy
°Õ“ǻ岹²āās press release highlights the University of Central Floridaās refusal to renounce and repeal its āfree speech zoneā policy that quarantines free speech to only four areas of ±«°ä¹óās campus.
±«°ä¹óās Free Assembly Areas Policy states that only āfour areas shall be deemed free assembly areas for the conduct of political activity and other exercises of free speech.ā Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS for a Democratic Society (SDS) got into trouble last spring for holding a series of antiwar protests outside of the school-sanctioned zones. In March, SDS held a protest in cooperation with UCF Campus Peace Action to protest the war in Iraq in front of the student center, which was outside of the free speech zone. Campus police arrived shortly to force the students, who had peacefully assembled, to remove themselves to one of the four āfree speech zones.ā In April, the organization held a protest against a feared invasion of Iran along a main campus walkway; again the protest was broken up by campus police.
SDS member Patrick DeCarlo contacted Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS asking for help in challenging ±«°ä¹óās unconstitutional policy. On November 1, Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS wrote to UCF to object to the free speech zones and to encourage UCF to respect the First Amendment rights of its students, pointing out that the law does not allow public universities to transform their campuses into āplaces where constitutional protections are the exception rather than the rule.ā
On November 17, Youndy Cook, ±«°ä¹óās Associate General Counsel, responded to Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOSās concerns by essentially ignoring them and suggesting that Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS take āall of [±«°ä¹óās] regulations governing expressive activities on campusā into account when considering the constitutionality of the āfree speech zone policy.ā UCF is a public university and therefore is public property governed by the First Amendment; allowing free speech on campus is not optional for UCF, itās mandatory. Policies that state otherwise are unconstitutional, and that goes for these highly restrictive āfree speech zoneā policies.
Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS has had considerable success in fighting āfree speech zonesā at West Virginia University, Texas Tech, Citrus College, the University of Nevada at Reno, the University of North CarolinaāGreensboro, and most recently at Clemson University. UCF would do well to read the handwriting on the wallātiny, out-of-the-way free speech zones are not congruent with the letter or the spirit of the First Amendment or academic freedom and they must go.
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