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As âThe Koalaâ Files Lawsuit Against University of California, San Diego, Public Records Reveal Administrationâs Censorship
Last November, a student-run satirical newspaper at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD), The Koala, was one of thirteen student publications whose funding was cut by the UCSD student governmentâjust days after The Koala published an satirizing âsafe spaces.â At the time, Dominick Suvonnasupa, president of the UCSD student government, that âthe vote was not about The Koala, but was only about addressing the most efficient use of student funds.â That claim was dubious at best, and now Suvonnasupaâalong with UCSD Chancellor Pradeep Khoslaâis , asking a court to order UCSD to reinstate The Koalaâs funding.
Worse, documents uncovered by a public records request suggest that UCSD administrators caved in to calls to censor The Koala and were using the student government as a means to pull The Koalaâs funding while securing funding for the publications they preferred.
As I wrote in February, The Koala has had its funding threatened twice as the UCSD student government fumbled about in trying to find a legal way to censor the paper:
[I]n November 2015[,] the [UCSD] student government and condemned a student humor publication, The Koala, shortly after it published an satirizing campus âsafe spaces.â This isnât the first time The Koala has found itself in hot water, having been charged with âdisruptionâ in 2002 until FIREreminded UCSD of its First Amendment obligations. Itâs not even the second time: In 2010, the student government froze funding for all student media until it could try to figure out a way to prevent funding from going to The Koala, later backing down from its position under pressure from ĂÛÖÏăÌÒ.
Five years later, the student government is trying a similar course. After that the First Amendment wouldnât permit it to selectively de-fund The Koala, the student government decided that it would be preferable to instead defund every publication. This action is no more constitutional than targeting The Koala alone, however, and it has been condemned by FIRE, the , and the ACLU of San Diego, among others.
Among the documents filed in connection with the lawsuit are a number of âbias incidentâ reports, filed by students using UCSDâs , calling upon UCSD to ban The Koala. One report noted that The Koala published an article âmocking safe spacesâ:
The article says that a âdangerous spaceâ will be created in front of Geisel to contrast the safe spaces such as the black resource center. The article says in such a space people can yell slurs and do whatever they wish. [...] The university needs to stop funding the Koala, and stop endorsing it.
Another similarly noted that The Koala âmocks safe spacesâ and âpropagates insensitive mindsets [...] masked under cruel humorâ before calling on UCSD to â[s]creen works to make sure that there is no propagation of these attitudes.â Another, classifying the newspaper as âonline harassment,â again stated that The Koala âmocked studentsâ need for safe spaces,â and that it âhas been known for producing hate speech toward student demographics that are extremely triggering[.]â Yet another called on UCSD to â[d]efund and shut down The Koala.â Another expounded on this idea:
I know that it is hard to get around the freedom of speech obstacle. But saying that we cannot take away their funding is incorrect.
And another:
The University needs to immediately take the initiative to end any hate speech, actions, or crimes that offend any groups represented on campus. FIREparticipating in The Koala should not be able to share their newspapers with the UCSD students on Library Walk if it defies on our UCSD's âmain rulesâ as understood from the Integrity Policy. I demand an end to this newspaper.
Still others would go farther:
I would like the University to shut down the koala [sic] newspaper and the creators of the newspaper should be punished by their college deans.
Everyone already knew the University administration does not âapproveâ of it. And we know that the administration itself does not fund the Koala, but rather the students (which is even more troubling.) [The student government] decides where to allocate money. They seemed to have voted to get the funds for the Koala, they can surely take them away. I know you canât take them away based on content (under 1st amendment), but I would say we have a strong argument when considering that this is hate speech. The definition: hate speech is any speech, gesture or conduct, writing, or display which is forbidden because it may INCITE violence or prejudicial action against or by a protected individual or group, or because it disparages or intimidates a protected individual or group. You and I both know this qualifies.
FIRE werenât alone in demanding administrative censorship of The Koalaâs content. At least one employee submitted a bias incident report calling on administrators to âset up a system for administrative approval of the content published in the magazine.â
None of the complaints by students or staff revealed through the records request provide legal justification for censoring The Koala. âHate speechâ is to the First Amendment. isnât an exception to the First Amendment. A website directed to the public isnât online . Satireâagainâis by the First Amendment, even when itâs patently offensive. When public universities distribute funding through student governments, they must do so in a viewpoint-neutral manner. As FIREwrote at the time:
[A] student government empowered by a public university to distribute mandatory student fees must do so consistently with the First Amendment because it acts with the schoolâs authority. Just as UCSD, as a public institution bound by the Constitution, is not allowed to discriminate against a group of student organizations because it doesnât like the viewpoint of one, neither can Associated FIREdo so in dispensing funds drawn from the whole student body. So, in answer to students asking why their fees should go to organizations with messages they do not support, itâs because government actors canât withhold resources from you just because they donât like what you say. It would be pretty scary for everyone if the law said otherwise.
So how did UCSDâs administration respond to the student governmentâs multiple attempts to censor The Koala? It helped.
Beginning in 2010, when the UCSD student government first sought to eliminate The Koalaâs funding, then-vice chancellor Penny Rue cited criticism by the ACLU, ĂÛÖÏăÌÒ, and the Student Press Law Center, and praised then-student body president Utsav Guptaâs attempts to censor The Koala. Rue solicited a âcreative legal solutionâ to the First Amendmentâs prohibition against censorship and encouraged UCSD administrators to assure other student media outlets that, once The Koala was gutted, their own funding would be secure:
Utsav has worked tirelessly to find a way to disestablish the [student governmentâs] relationship with the Koala, but a concerted effort by other media groups and the spotlight of upcoming elections has hampered his efforts. I cannot tell you how bad a black eye it is for the University that we do not seem to have the power to cut our ties to this body. If you have any influence with campus media groups who fear for their continued funding, anything you can do would be valuable to reassure them that if they care about the University, it would be helpful for them to look at the bigger picture, and that their funding will be secure going forward once we have weathered this difficult patch.
That playbook reappeared in 2015.
Lori Chamberlain, a UCSD administrator handling sexual harassment complaints on campus, forwarded one bias incident reportâcalling on UCSD to âStop the Koalaââto several vice chancellors, including Becky Pettit, UCSDâs Vice Chancellor for Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion. The following day, Pettit asked UCSDâs legal counsel to âthink creatively about how we can address this.â Pettit noted:
Iâm likely in the minority here, but I think this crosses the âfree speechâ line and Iâd like to explore ways we can do something about it. I know itâs a delicate undertaking.
Gary Matthews, a UCSD vice chancellor who signed the UCSDâs of The Koala, responded to a studentâs complaint:
Please note [the] Koala gets no University funding[.] The Associated FIREfind [sic] them[.] Pressure should be brought to that organization to end the madness.
Before the student government ultimately voted to cut funding for student media, UCSD Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs appeared before the body to the administrationâs The Koala.
After the student government voted to cut funding for all of the thirteen publications at UCSD, administrators began working to find alternative funding for publications other than The Koala. One assistant vice chancellor for student life noted that academic departments could fund several papers. One vice chancellor emailed Juan Gonzalez:
Letâs not ditch the good ones worthy of this funding and work actively on finding ways to encourage and help them financially. I know you are working on this.
UCSD administrators, faced with a student government acquiescing to calls to censor student media, had a duty to step in and prevent them from de-funding The Koala over its content. Instead, they explored ways to pressure the student government to defund the paper and attempted to provide them a roadmap on how to do exactly that. Meanwhile, Suvonnasupa claimed that this wasnât about The Koalaâs content at all.
Obviously, that wasnât the case. Rather, the student governmentâs defunding of thirteen publications was a pretext to censor The Koalaâa smokescreen supported by UCSD administrators.
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