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RI Board of Governors to RIC Lawyers: Knock It Off!
Yesterday, Rhode Island Collegeâs (RICâs) lawyers made the shocking argument that a First Amendment challenge to the schoolâs sign policy should be dismissed because the school was not a state actor and therefore not bound by the Constitution. As I discussed yesterday, this incredible argument relied on a narrow line of reasoning imported from a string of Eleventh Amendment decisions dealing not with First Amendment protections, but rather with whether or not Rhode Islandâs public colleges enjoyed sovereign immunity from lawsuits as an âarm of the state.â Had the federal district court hearing the present case accepted this slick gambit, students and faculty at Rhode Islandâs public institutions would have been instantly stripped of constitutional protections. Steven Brown, executive director of the Rhode Island American Civil Liberties Union (RI ACLU), the group bringing the lawsuit against RIC, couldnât have said it better when he called the schoolâs argument âshocking and preposterous.â
It turns out the Rhode Island Board of Governors of Higher Education completely agreed with Mr. Brownâs assessment.
In a stunning turn of events, the that the Rhode Island Board of Governors of Higher Education has ordered the immediate withdrawal of the schoolâs motion to dismiss. Frank Caprio, chairman of the Board of Governors, told the Providence Journal he was âsomewhat surprisedâ to learn of RICâs claim that it was not bound by the First Amendment. Caprioâwho knows a little something about the law, seeing as how heâs Chief Judge of the Providence Municipal Courtâtold the paper in no uncertain terms that he rejected the schoolâs reasoning. âWithout judging the merits of the legal argument, that narrow legal definition does not reflect my view, the view of the board or the view of Commissioner Warner. We are a public institution of higher education subject to all the constitutional prohibitions and laws that apply to other public entities,â Caprio said.
The Board did the right thing in telling RICâs lawyers to quit the shenanigans before they did any further damage to the schoolâs reputation. It is simply unconscionable to argue that a public school âin this yearâs state budget, the Board of Governors, which oversees RIC along with all of Rhode Islandâs public colleges and universities, will receive âis somehow above the Constitution of the United States. As I argued yesterday, it would have been absolutely astounding for the court to accept RICâs argument, and I highly doubt the court would have seriously considered it. That said, itâs even better to know that the Board of Governors thinks the argument should never have been made at all.
FIRE and faculty at Rhode Islandâs public institutions of higher learning can breathe a little easier today knowing that the Constitution still applies on campus.
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