Thursday, October 31, 2013

2013-10-31 NBU News

Northbay Uprising radio news
Thursdays, between 4 to 5pm, with headlines and interviews with people behind the news!
Journalist's Notebook  [link], George Seldes had it right: "Tell the Truth, Then Run Like Hell!"

Join our Community Journalist program! Covering "707 to 818, the Bay Valley". Send us news & info to [northbayuprising@gmail.com]

Headlines!
Halloween, 2013, feel the tragedy and terror of politics in Vallejo! [link]

"California Students Pledge Support as Workers Prepare for Strike Vote" [link]

Justice for Andy Lopez Cruz! (Santa Rosa, d. 2013-10-22) [link]
Anita Wills writes: The Family of Andy Lopez (The 13 year old killed in Stockton), will be appearing in Federal Court this Monday. I would like to have a contingent there to support them. They have filed Federal Charges against that Wing Nut who killed Andy. Can we get folks to go and support them?

"No Justice No Peace: California's Battle Against Police Brutality & Racist Violence" video documentary [link]


Wednesday, November 6, 2013 - 7:30pm
 Public Enemy: Confessions of a American Dissident:
An Evening with Bill Ayers
 The Hillside Club, 2286 Cedar Street, Berkeley
Hosted by Max Pringle, a veteran KPFA Public Affairs Producer
 In this sequel to Fugitive Days, Ayers charts his life after the Weather Underground, when he becomes the GOP's favorite "domestic terrorist" and "public enemy".
Labeled a "domestic terrorist" by the McCain campaign in 2008 and used by the Radical Right to castigate Barack Obama for "pallin' around with terrorists," Bill Ayers is in fact a dedicated teacher, father, and social justice advocate with a sharp memory and even sharper wit. Public Enemy tells his story from the moment he and his wife, Bernardine Dohrn, emerged from years on the run and rebuilt their lives as public figures, often celebrated for their community work and much hated by the Radical Right. In the face of defamation by conservative media, including a multimillion-dollar campaign aimed solely at demonizing Ayers, and in spite of frequent death threats,
Bill and Bernardine stay true to their core beliefs in the power of protest, demonstration, and deep commitment. Ayers reveals how he has navigated the challenges and triumphs of this public life with commitment and good humor- from the red carpet at the Oscars to prison vigils and airports (where he is often detained and where he finally "confesses" that he actually did write Dreams from My Father.
 Bill Ayers is the author of the acclaimed and controversial memoir Fugitive Days and many books on education, including To Teach, Teaching Toward Freedom, and A Kind and Just Parent. He is the founder of the Small Schools Workshop and was, until his retirement, Distinguished Professor of Education and Senior University Scholar at the University of Illinois at Chicago. He lives in Hyde Park, Chicago.
$12 advance tickets: brownpapertickets.com :: 800-838-3006 or Pegasus (3 locations), Marcus Books, Mrs. Dalloway's Books, Moe's, Walden Pond, DIESEL a Bookstore, and Modern Times ($15 door)
                                                  

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Community Union

"Pittsburghers Try a Community Union"
2013-10-30 by Margot Nikitas from "Labor Notes" [http://www.labornotes.org/2013/10/pittsburghers-try-community-union]:
In the face of an awful economic climate and labor laws that too often favor employers, Pittsburghers are trying out a new organizing model: a rank-and-file community union. The fledgling group brings union and non-union workers together to fight side by side on social justice issues and to seed workplace organizing committees through a Pittsburgh-flavored campaign called “Is Your Boss a Jagoff?” Fight Back Pittsburgh, formed in January 2013, is an associate membership program of Steelworkers Local 3657, which represents staff at the international union. Already it has more than 250 dues-paying members. Some come from various other unions and community groups; some are otherwise unaffiliated with the labor movement. Fight Back Pittsburgh operates similarly to a local union, with bylaws and an elected executive board. Members are active in six committees: communications, civil and human rights, fight back at work, membership, neighborhood action, and rapid response. Dues are calculated as one quarter of one percent of each member’s self-reported monthly income, or members may do one hour of phonebanking per month instead. No expenditures can be made without membership approval.

WORKER JUSTICE HOTLINE -
Some of the most exciting and innovative work is taking place in the Fight Back at Work Committee. The committee operates a Worker Justice Hotline, which it promotes through face-to-face conversations, its web and social media pages, and the “Is Your Boss a Jagoff?” campaign (playing off the popular Pittsburgh slang term). Any worker who is running into problems at his or her workplace can call the hotline and speak with a committee member. Often, this turns into an opportunity for the worker to organize with co-workers to try to resolve—or at least improve—the situation. For example, the hotline received several calls from workers at museums and libraries who are having their hours cut so their employers won’t have to offer health insurance. The workers decided to form an organizing committee called “Info Desk” and Fight Back at Work has been providing assistance. Meanwhile, the membership committee is focusing on neighborhood canvassing to build and diversify the membership. The civil and human rights committee is planning teach-ins with the goal of broadening what “civil and human rights” means within the labor movement—not just race or gender issues but also sexual orientation and immigration status. In monthly membership meetings at USW headquarters, Fight Back Pittsburgh’s committees report on their work. Special guests from area unions and community groups make presentations about local struggles the organization—or individual members—may want to get involved in. Workers from the Service Employees’ organizing drive at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center were recent guests, for example. The group has helped Pittsburghers for Public Transit, which is fighting for transit funding in partnership with Amalgamated Transit Union Local 85. Members have turned out for PPT rallies and assisted with outreach. Members participated in the Summer of Solidarity Tour, a coast-to-coast tour of grassroots union activists that stopped in Pittsburgh. They discussed and adopted resolutions condemning the Trayvon Martin shooting and opposing intervention in Syria. And recently, Fight Back Pittsburgh hosted a Labor Notes Troublemakers School [http://www.labornotes.org/blogs/2013/10/pittsburgh-troublemakers-go-school].

NEW WAYS IN -
The Steelworkers aren’t alone in experimenting. Organizations across the labor movement are looking for new methods of organizing the unorganized, trying out nonprofit worker centers and “non-majority” or “pre-majority” unions. The AFL-CIO devoted much discussion to nontraditional organizing at its recent convention. The United Electrical Workers (UE) have done nontraditional organizing, notably in the South, for more than a decade. Fight Back Pittsburgh is different from other nontraditional models in that it is totally member-run and has no paid staff, being wholly funded by dues and other donations. Although it has a tie to USW, members come from many different unions, community groups, and neighborhoods. It’s a challenge to make the labor movement relevant to workers who have never been in a union, or who do not see workers’ rights as significant to their lives. Among Fight Back Pittsburgh’s goals is to spark some conversations about class struggle. In this vein, the group is conducting workshops on knowing your rights at work, geared toward non-union workers, and on Obamacare. While they inform participants on civil rights and labor laws, trainers emphasize that organizing is a better way to improve workplace conditions. “Fight Back Pittsburgh is a way to meld the new worker center models of organizing with traditional industrial unionism,” said Patrick Young, president of USW Local 3657 and a founder of the new group. As its members try out new approaches, “the fact that Fight Back Pittsburgh is partnered with a Steelworkers local union gives us a strong and direct connection to the work of the international union.”

RADICAL RAP, 2013-10-30 on KMUD radio, with Verbena & Ayr

Homeless Bill of Rights, CA Prisoner Hunger Strike & Struggle to End Long Term Solitary Confinement, live music, and more...! Here is a link to the show: [https://app.box.com/s/zgj6abjdio1azu52egfk]
Please tell KMUD if you want more shows like this, or on the topics discussed here.
KMUD's website is [http://kmud.org]

Friday, October 25, 2013

California Students Pledge Support as Workers Prepare for Strike Vote

2013-10-25 from "United Students Against Sweatshops"
 WASHINGTON -
As University of California students gear up for a Hallo-Week of Action, they released the following open letter pledging to stand with campus workers with AFSCME 3299 who are taking a strike vote next week.
---
Dear President Napolitano and the entire UC Community,
We write to you on behalf of students from across the University of California who share a deep concern about the UC’s decision to implement drastic cuts on 8,000 of our lowest paid campus workers, as well as more than 12,000 UC patient care workers.
We represent a wide variety of student organizations that benefit every day from the hard work of our custodians, gardeners, food service workers, facilities maintenance staff, patient care workers and teaching assistants. We know that this University would not exist without our campus workers, and are disappointed with the UC for unilaterally imposing cuts that hurt the lives and families of vital members of our community.
The recent cuts amount to a 1.5% decrease in take home pay for workers making an average of $35,000 per year, and up to $124,000 in higher health costs for each worker in their lifetime. Even before these latest cuts, 99% of Service Workers were income eligible for some form of public assistance. By contrast, UC’s highest paid employees — nearly 700 of whom receive larger salaries than the President of the United States — have already received a 3% across the board raise this year.
The UC system prides itself on accountability, diversity, quality of education and affordability. We are proud to call ourselves UC students, but are calling on the University to live up to its own core values. As tuition skyrockets and students rack up a mountain of debt, our campus workers are being pushed further into poverty. Without students there would be no UC system and without the workers the UC system would be unable to operate. We believe it is time for the UC to shift its priorities, and to start putting students and workers first.
We are calling on all students and student organizations to join us in this fight to support our campus workers in AFSCME 3299 and UAW 2865. AFSCME’s democratically elected leadership has called for a strike, and if our workers step out on to the picket lines, we pledge to stand beside them. We will stand with our campus unions because the fight for worker rights and student rights are one in the same, and together we can win. We pledge to reach out to our fellow students to support our campus workers until they receive the fair contract that they deserve.
Sincerely, [signed]
UC Irvine United Students Against Sweatshops
UC Riverside United Students Against Sweatshops, Local 19
UC Davis Student Labor Coalition
UC Los Angeles Student Collective Against Labor Exploitation
UC Santa Barbara Student Worker Coalition
UC San Diego Student and Worker Collective
UC Berkeley Student Labor Committee

###

United Students Against Sweatshops (USAS) is the nation’s largest youth-led, student labor campaign organization, with affiliated locals on over 150 campuses. USAS affiliates run both local and nationally-coordinated campaigns for economic justice in partnership with worker and community organizations. Since 1997, USAS has won precedent-setting campaigns, educated students about the growing dominance of corporations in the globalized economy, as well as the intersectionality of identity and social justice issues with the labor movement, and has trained tens of thousands of young activists to become skilled organizers, researchers, and campaigners in labor and social justice organizations.

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Homeless Encampments in Fresno - the Mainstream Media & the Advocate Response

Human Rights abuse in the City of Fresno [link]

"Illegal camps are cleared, but Fresno homeless need shelter"
2013-10-24 "Fresno Bee" (a monopolist newspaper) [http://www.fresnobee.com/2013/10/23/3568717/editorial-illegal-camps-are-cleared.html]: 
City should set up temporary camp for those awaiting housing.
Evidence of the gaping hole in Fresno Mayor Ashley Swearengin's plan to deal with rampant homelessness can be seen all over the city.
Homeless people are living behind businesses, along freeways and on the San Joaquin River bottom. Some are squatting in vacant homes and garages. During the day, they panhandle for cash and congregate near parking-lot recycling centers, where they turn in cans, bottles and cardboard for money.
The Swearengin administration is doing the right thing by clearing out the illegal homeless encampments downtown. These encampments were unsanitary and unsafe and created intolerable conditions for nearby residents and businesses.
The mayor's goal of helping the homeless gain independence through "housing first" is also laudable. This strategy provides immediate housing to individuals for stability and then attempts to treat the causes that put them on the streets.
Swearengin deserves credit, too, for launching Fresno First Steps Home, which provides funding to nonprofits and agencies helping the homeless.
But there's a fatal flaw in her homeless plan: housing is expensive and limited, and Fresno has an estimated 4,000 homeless. With the closing of the illegal encampments, most of them are left with nowhere to go but the street.
We recognize the city's stressed finances. But skilled leadership can move mountains at bargain rates. The mayor should assemble a team of city staff, homeless advocates and community leaders to set up a temporary emergency camp.
The camp should have rules, toilets, wash areas and security. It must be fenced and located in an area without adjacent businesses and homes. Most of all, it should be temporary.
Long term, Fresno needs a permanent, dormitory-style place for homeless waiting to transition into housing.
San Antonio, Texas, for example, has the 37-acre Haven for Hope, a nonprofit facility that can house up to 1,500 men, women and children.
Haven for Hope's greatest asset perhaps is its more than 80 federal, state and community partnerships.
It will require that kind of teamwork in Fresno to successfully address our homeless problem.


THE ADVOCATE RESPONSE
2013-10-24 by Mike Rhodes (Responding to The Fresno Bee editorial):
The Fresno Bee printed an editorial about the homeless in this morning’s paper.  Several people have asked me what I thought about it.
What I liked about the Fresno Bee editorial was that it made a strong statement about the need to do something for the thousands of homeless people who are living on the streets right now.  The mayor's narrative is that homeless encampments are bad and that she wants to put people into housing.  That is a nice and simple message that plays well in the media, but the problem is that there is a huge gap between destroying the encampments and when homeless people get a voucher and into an apartment.  This is something that I have been talking about for years.  While I find it hard to believe that the mayor thinks that you can destroy homeless peoples shelters and then VIOLA, they are all in housing, that is what she is saying.  The Bee just called her out on her faulty logic.  I get that she is trying to be "positive," but there is such a huge disconnect between what she is saying and reality, people can't help but notice.
Aside from The Bee's acknowledgment that this GAP exists, I did not like the analysis or the solutions they offer.  For example, they wrote "The Swearengin administration is doing the right thing by clearing out the illegal homeless encampments downtown."  I disagree.  The homeless encampment they destroyed yesterday was a calm place with a stable group of people who looked out for each other.  The owner of the land did not mind that the homeless were there, but was coerced into having them removed, rather than be fined by the City of Fresno for the clean up.  At least that is what the owner told the people who lived there.  The Grain Silo encampment was just a poor neighborhood that homeless people lived in because they could not afford to live somewhere else.  The camp provided protection from predators and there was always someone around to look after a neighbors property if a resident left for a while.  Without having neighbors you can trust, people are more vulnerable.  How is it better for a woman to live alone out in the open or under an oleander bush, without neighbors to protect her?  Homeless encampments provide protection and stability for people who find themselves in very difficult circumstances.
Also, having thousands of people displaced from the encampments in the downtown area is going to be a problem for the health and safety of everyone.  At least when people lived in these encampments we could provide them with portable toilets and trash bins.  That is no longer the case.  Where do you think all of that waste is going to end up now?
The Bee’s solution is to put homeless people into a big encampment that “must be fenced and located in an area without adjacent businesses and homes.”  Great!  First City Hall tells people that the homeless are criminals, they destroy their shelters, take their property and now they want to put them in a concentration camp in some remote location?  This has been done before and the outcome is not good.
The answer is decentralized safe and legal places for the homeless to live.  Homeless advocates wrote a proposal to do this in January 2012.  A copy of that proposal is also below.
***
PROPOSAL FOR SAFE AND LEGAL HOMELESS ENCAMPMENTS IN FRESNO
The Need -
The City of Fresno allowed homeless encampments to exist and grow for several years but in the past couple of months has cleared out all the major encampments in the city. This dislocation has resulted in thousands of homeless people in Fresno having no safe and legal place to live.
Existing shelters cannot house all of the homeless who are now sleeping on sidewalks and other locations not intended for human habitation. As temperatures dipped below freezing in late December, one woman died as she slept on the sidewalk outside of the Poverello House. Many others are sick with pneumonia and other illnesses related to their exposure to the cold weather.
The cost to city and county government, if we allow the situation to continue as it currently exists, will be enormous. The price of providing emergency medical care and hospitalization would be dramatically reduced if we redirected those dollars to provide the homeless with a safe and legal place to live.
Although the city’s goal of decent, affordable and permanent housing for everyone is a good goal, we all know that it cannot be achieved anytime soon. Therefore, there will be homeless people who do not make it into a shelter and have no place to sleep. It is with those people in mind, and there are currently thousands of them in the City of Fresno, that this proposal is intended to assist.

Safe and Legal Campsites -
The fastest and easiest way to dramatically improve life for the homeless would be to allow them to construct shelters and provide them with basic public services. With shelters like tents, the homeless can get out of the rain and stay considerably warmer than if they have no protection from the rain, wind and cold.
These encampments will exist on public and private land. The City of Fresno could determine which property it owns that will be used for these encampments. The city will allow encampments to be developed, through a conditional use permit, for any owner of property who wanted to use his/her land for that purpose. The city will work with other state, federal or county governmental entities to facilitate the use of the land for encampments.
Initially, Phase I of this proposal seeks to allow the establishment of encampments at existing sites, with limited development of infrastructure. A longer-term project will see some infrastructure put into place to better serve the needs of the homeless residents.
These campsites will be self-governing and not overseen by any social service agency or government entity. The residents will be like any other group of people living in a small neighborhood. They will be provided with drinking water, portable toilets and trash pickup. Those services could be paid for by the city, county, community groups, churches, and/or individuals.
The individuals living in these safe and legal homeless encampments will be responsible for maintaining the campsite. No illegal activity will be permitted in the camp. If there are legal problems, they will be handled in the same way as they are in any other neighborhood in Fresno.
These campsites will be distributed throughout the city and consist of no more than 100 residents per encampment. The purpose of the multiple locations is an acknowledgment that homeless people live throughout the community, and the intention is to equitably distribute the encampments throughout the city as much as possible. The purpose of limiting each camp to 100 people or less is to avoid concentrating the homeless in one location and impacting any single area with a high density of homeless people.
Possible campsites include vacant lots, churches, parks and unused government property.
Phase I of this proposal will start immediately and utilize the areas where the homeless are already living.

Phase I will allow the homeless to construct simple structures (tents and tarps) and live in them until something better is available. This will take away the stigma of living illegally and being told to “move on,” when there is nowhere better to move on to. This decriminalization of poverty is an important first step in allowing people to live with dignity and respect.
Phase I will provide every group of 10 or more homeless people living together with basic public services (drinking water, toilets, and trash service). Providing the homeless with these services will not only dramatically improve their lives but also clean up our. Having access to drinking water should be a service provided to every citizen of this community, whether rich or poor.

Phase II, which will take a couple of months to start, will seek new locations for the homeless encampments. These new locations will have improved infrastructure and might be associated with a church or a community group, or they could be independent and located on property owned by someone who allows the encampment on his/her property.
The range of shelters in Phase II might include tents, wooden buildings, modified tool sheds and other structures deemed appropriate by the residents. Although residents in the Phase II development might stay for a while, none of these encampments is intended to be permanent. The goal is to work with the residents, address any issues they have that are holding them back and get them into decent and affordable housing as soon as possible.
The primary goal of phase one and two of this project is to improve the lives of the homeless while saving taxpayers money and improving public safety.  By stabilizing and improving their lives, it will improve their chances of getting a job and/or getting the help they need from social service agencies. That assistance ranges from health services, mental health services, alcohol or drug addiction treatment, job training or getting a better education. Being in a stable location will help the homeless get the assistance they need.
A cost-benefit analysis of this proposal would show that it will save the taxpayers money. Our streets, businesses and residential neighborhoods will benefit by providing homeless people with basic public services. Homeless people will benefit by improved living conditions, better contact with social service agencies and ultimately getting into a house.

Phase III, We recognize that there is both an independent and resourceful spirit among homeless people. A portion of the population will never be served by traditional housing. Additionally, many homeless individuals posses underutilized construction skills or the capacity to learn those skills.  In Phase III we would like to identify location(s) suitable for the development of permanent self sustaining communities that are being designed by architect Arthur Dyson and the non-profit organization, Eco-Village. At an location agreeable to the residents and the jurisdictions, an Eco-Village will be planned for phased development. Residents that will work on the site will establish a temporary camp on site. Through sweat equity and volunteers labor the shared facilities (bathrooms, kitchen, community space, etc.) and individual dwellings will be built and occupied by the residents.  The work will be guided by tradesmen and trained professionals.
Alternatively, the City or County may determine an existing unused public facility that it desires to convert for use as shelter. Like with the Eco-Village, a temporary camp will be located on site and homeless individuals will work on the adaptation of the facility for shelter. In turn they will gain skills and earn equity in the final product.
Additional suggestions are to establish true 24/7 Emergency Shelter for up to 30 days, following acquiring federal funding for Emergency Shelter and Services.  Development of transitional housing for up to 2 years.  We also support a permanent housing development utilizing existing and foreclosed homes in Fresno and the new affordable housing being developed as part of Housing First.

Resisting Restrictive College Campus Speech Code

"Unlearning Liberty: Campus Censorship and the End of American Debate Hardcover"
by Greg Lukianoff [http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1594036357]


"Challenging Your College's Speech Code"
available as a pamphlet, ready to download and print, 2010-12-10 from "FIRE" [http://thefire.org/article/12594.html]:
Contact: Robert Shibley [215-717-3473] [robert@thefire.org]
FIRE is pleased to offer this pamphlet for public university students interested in pursuing legal challenges against university policies that restrict freedom of speech.

What is a “speech code”?
Speech codes are university regulations prohibiting expression that would be constitutionally protected in society at large. They do not have to be labeled as a “speech code” in your student handbook—in fact, they almost certainly will not be. Any university regulation restricting speech—whether found in a harassment policy, an Internet usage policy, or elsewhere—might be a speech code.

Why are speech codes problematic?
Speech codes are fundamentally at odds with the function of a university as an open marketplace of ideas. After all, how can a university promote open discussion and discourse if students fear punishment for saying the “wrong” thing? Furthermore, at public universities, speech codes are against the law. Public universities are government actors and, as such, are legally required to uphold the First Amendment rights of their students. In cases going back decades, courts (including the Supreme Court) have consistently held that college students at public universities enjoy full First Amendment rights.

Why should I care about speech codes?
Speech codes restrict your right to free speech in exactly the place where this right should be most celebrated: the college campus. Speech codes prohibit all kinds of constitutionally protected speech—everything from political statements to jokes and satire—and deaden the dialogue that should be taking place at our nation’s colleges and universities. Colleges are supposed to be engaged in a search for truth, so it’s a big problem if students can’t speak their minds on campus, explore the merits of new ideas, and search for novel ways of thinking. Moreover, speech codes teach college students that censorship, and not debate, is the proper response to speech with which one disagrees.
Typically, speech codes are aimed at expression that another person might find offensive or controversial, as well as the expression of views that are disfavored or in the minority on campus. However well-intentioned, speech codes serve to establish a strict orthodoxy of “acceptable” views and stifle the full range of expression that belongs at a university.

Do speech codes really exist at many colleges?
Yes. FIRE has found that the vast majority of the nearly 400 colleges and universities we surveyed nationwide maintain policies that clearly restrict a substantial amount of protected expression. Given the vital importance of free expression to both a liberal education and to our democracy, and the fact that speech codes at public universities brazenly violate the Constitution, this sad state of affairs simply cannot be allowed to stand.

What is the purpose of a speech code challenge?
The purpose of a speech code challenge is to obtain an official declaration by a court of law that a university’s speech code is unconstitutional. The court’s declaration will be binding not only on that school, but also on any other public university in the same jurisdiction. Thus, by challenging their institution’s speech codes, students can make both their campuses and those nearby freer for themselves and their fellow students.

What is FIRE ?
The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) is a non-partisan, non-profit organization dedicated to defending civil liberties on campus. We’ve been fighting for student and faculty rights since 1999, and we’ve been very successful in doing so. Since our founding, FIRE has won over 190 public victories at more than 135 colleges and universities that have a total enrollment of nearly three million students. FIRE is directly responsible for changing over 90 unconstitutional or repressive policies affecting more than 1.9 million students. Though we do not directly engage in litigation, we have coordinated seven successful constitutional challenges to speech codes. To learn more about FIRE, check out our website at www.thefire.org.

How does FIRE challenge speech codes?
FIRE has several attorneys on staff, but we do not directly litigate. Rather, we coordinate legal challenges to speech codes by identifying restrictive speech codes at public universities; finding students at those institutions who are willing to challenge the policies; and finally, securing the pro bono (that is, volunteer) assistance of attorneys who are members of our nationwide Legal Network. These skilled attorneys are dedicated to protecting First Amendment rights on campus and are willing to donate their time and expertise to defending students threatened by unconstitutional speech codes. Once we have matched up an unconstitutional speech code with a willing student-plaintiff and a Legal Network attorney, we are ready to file a complaint in federal court. The complaint will ask the court to declare the university’s speech code unconstitutional, thus forbidding the university from maintaining or enforcing it and forcing the university to comply with the First Amendment.

What is FIRE’s track record with speech code challenges?
FIRE has never lost a speech code litigation case. To date, FIRE has coordinated speech code litigation at seven schools: Citrus College (California), Shippensburg University (Pennsylvania), Texas Tech University, the State University of New York at Brockport, San Francisco State University, Temple University (Pennsylvania), and Tarrant County College (Texas). In each of these challenges, the university either settled out of court by voluntarily revising its speech codes, as in the cases of Citrus College and SUNY-Brockport, or was handed a legal defeat in court, as in the cases of Shippensburg, Texas Tech, San Francisco State, Temple, and Tarrant County College. You can read more about these victories on our website, www.thefire.org. Our unbroken series of successful challenges speaks to the care with which FIRE proceeds in coordinating litigation. We challenge university policies only when they are clearly unlawful, and we try to procure student-plaintiffs and attorneys who are committed to winning the challenge. Most importantly, FIRE’s track record reflects that the law is firmly on our side when it comes to the unconstitutionality of campus speech codes.

What do students who serve as plaintiffs actually do? Is it a lot of work?
Very little is actually required from students serving as plaintiffs in speech code challenges, as a student’s day-to-day involvement in the suit is very limited. A student-plaintiff would first meet with the cooperating attorney and sign an affidavit—a sworn statement—stating that he or she would like to engage in protected speech that is prohibited by the policy or policies in question without fear of punishment. After that, the student’s involvement with the case would likely be largely complete in terms of his or her responsibilities or required presence. The court would then receive arguments from the university and from the student’s attorney, and begin the process of deciding whether or not the policies are unconstitutional. It is rare for a student to be required to appear in court at all, and FIRE will help every step of the way.

What happens to students who file speech code challenges?
Students who file speech code challenges continue to live their lives just as before and proceed to obtain their degrees and begin their careers, just like their fellow students. Many students receive positive media attention and are hailed for their commitment to principle and willingness to stand up for the First Amendment. Some former plaintiffs become successful attorneys themselves, like Robert J. Corry, who led a successful challenge of Stanford University’s speech code and now practices as a civil rights and criminal defense attorney in Colorado. Mr. Corry was named one of America’s top lawyers under the age of 40 by the National Law Journal.

Why should I get involved?
Challenging your school’s speech codes is an excellent way to stand up for not only your own right to free expression, but for the rights of your fellow students. Students on every public university campus are legally entitled to the full protection of the First Amendment—and any denial of this right is unlawful, unconstitutional, and a betrayal of the university’s role as a marketplace of ideas. You don’t have the option of violating the law, so why should your university? Institutions of higher education play a vital role in our society in educating students inside and outside the classroom and preparing them for the world that awaits them beyond the campus. This process cannot fully take place without the liberty to discuss issues freely and participate in a true exchange of ideas. Because speech codes deny students this freedom, they need to be removed from our colleges and universities, and often, it takes a constitutional challenge mounted by a determined student to do so. Students can aid in the effort to rid our campuses of speech codes at no financial cost to themselves and with little time and effort. While no outcome is ever guaranteed in court, the law is firmly on the side of those challenging university restrictions on the freedom of expression.

Contact FIRE
FIRE attorneys stand ready to answer any questions you may have about your rights and challenging your university’s speech codes. Please do not hesitate to contact us.
WILL CREELEY [will@thefire.org], Director of Legal and Public Advocacy at the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) [601 Walnut Street, Suite 510, Philadelphia, PA 19106] [215-717-3473]


"Army vet handing out U.S. Constitution on campus meets free-speech rules"
2013-10-20 by Debra Saunders from the "San Francisco Chronicle" [http://blog.sfgate.com/djsaunders/2013/10/20/army-vet-handing-out-u-s-constituion-on-campus-meets-free-speech-rules/]:
Here’s the video Army veteran/student Robert Van Tuinen made after Modesto Junior College security stopped him from passing out copies of the U.S. Constitution. Not only did security stop Van Tuinen from giving away the Constitution, the officer sent him to talk to the administration — the equivalent of being sent to the principal’s office in high school. That exchange also is on the video.
I found it instructive that the guard accused Van Tuinen of acting on behalf of the Heritage Foundation, which prints and gives out copies of the Constitution. I asked Van Tuinen if he thought the school had targeted him because he was passing out a document printed by a conservative organization. His answer: “I’m pretty sure that they go after everybody. The administration didn’t even realize until later that the constitutions were made by Heritage.”
In his view, the school is mostly afraid of any form of political speech by students.
In other words, this was sort of a bureaucratic decision:  Don’t make waves. You’ll make work for us.



"Speaking truth to power at Modesto Junior College"
2013-10-18 by Debra J. Saunders from the "San Francisco Chronicle" [http://www.sfgate.com/opinion/saunders/article/Speaking-truth-to-power-at-Modesto-Junior-College-4907823.php]:
Army veteran Robert Van Tuinen decided to celebrate U.S. Constitution Day on Sept. 17 by handing out copies of the Constitution at Modesto Junior College, where he is a student. If he had been at UC Berkeley or another politically correct campus, some liberal students probably would have picked an argument with him, maybe even accused him of hate speech.
But as this was Modesto Junior College, Van Tuinen didn't attract a lot of notice. Until, that is, a security guard told Van Tuinen that he couldn't hand out the Constitution. Or the Communist Manifesto, for that matter. On an edited video, Van Tuinen captured the guard explaining that "passing out anything whatsoever, you have to have permission through the student development office."
An administrative aide at that office explained the school's policies for "time-place-and-manner free-speech area." Students have to sign up in a binder to use a small designated space, and since two students already were protesting, Van Tuinen would have to wait his turn to speak freely and pass out literature. When Van Tuinen told her he just wanted to pass out copies of the Constitution, she asked, "Umm, why?"
Van Tuinen was appalled. When he served in Kuwait, he learned that the military doesn't put a high premium on free speech. Soldiers don't have the same rights as students, and the brass had little interest in his pontificating on the framers' intent. "That's when I figured out the service wasn't the best place for me," he confided. But who knew that college life would be equally casual about stifling his self-expression?
Yes, Virginia, there is a California college campus where protest is not a major.
Let me confess. In this job, I've observed campus protest at its best, that is to say, worst - Berkeley students throwing incendiary objects at the chancellor's home, tree-sitters camped in a campus grove for 20 interminable months and UC Davis paying a $1 million settlement to pepper-sprayed students. I can't help it, I find Van Tuinen's story cute as a button.
But it's not. It's not because campus personnel told a student he cannot give out copies of the U.S. Constitution. In a statement, college President Jill Stearns asserted, "There is absolutely no requirement that a student register weeks in advance and hand out his literature only in a small marked area." But a security guard and staff binder suggest otherwise. The very fact that a campus has a two-person free-speech zone troubles Robert Shibley, vice president for the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE), which has aided Van Tuinen in the free-speech lawsuit he filed against the college.
"We're seeing a lack of a sense of proportion," quoth Shibley, "and frankly a fundamental fear of free speech that is very disturbing to see in higher education."
At community colleges, Shibley added, many students have to balance an academic workload and jobs; they don't have time to occupy the quad or save the trees. Which makes Van Tuinen unique.
And it makes the Modesto Junior College policy all that much harder to understand. It's 2013 - college staff should understand the sanctity of free speech. Instead, they only saw procedures set out in overly nuanced language burped out of committee based on bland advice from an academic league. Oddly, it seems the policy's goal was to avoid controversy, not accommodate the exchange of ideas.
Amazingly, college brass still hasn't figured out that they cannot win this case because their policies step on First Amendment rights. And yes, they are running a college.
Van Tuinen told me he found out about the free-speech zone about a week before U.S. Constitution Day. He said he hoped he would be able to distribute copies of the Constitution, provided by the Heritage Foundation, without interference, but brought along a camera just in case. You could say that Van Tuinen was trolling for trouble. But if handing out copies of the U.S. Constitution without intruding on the liberty of others attracts school security, this country is in trouble. As the woman in student development succinctly put it: Umm, why?

Community college strikes back -
"We do not comment on pending litigation, however, we express our thanks to those individuals willing to stand up for our Constitution and expression of free speech. We affirm the commitment of the college and district to civil discourse. We appreciate all points of view across the spectrum and support every individual's right to express their view.
"Modesto Junior College and the Yosemite Community College District wholly support the state and federal constitutions and student free speech. The administration would not prohibit a student from passing out the Constitution. As such, we promote and celebrate Constitution Day each year at both of our college campuses." - Nick Stavrianoudakis, district public affairs director, Yosemite Community College District


"Lawsuit! Student Ordered to Stop Handing Out Constitutions on Constitution Day Files Suit"
2013-10-10 from "FIRE" [http://thefire.org/article/16327.html]:
FRESNO, Calif., Oct. 10, 2013—A student who was ordered by college administrators to stop handing out copies of the Constitution on campus—on Constitution Day—filed suit today in federal court. Modesto Junior College (MJC) student and Army veteran Robert Van Tuinen is suing the Yosemite Community College District and MJC administrators for violating his First Amendment rights. Van Tuinen is represented by the law firm of Davis Wright Tremaine [http://www.dwt.com/offices/WDC/] and is assisted by the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE).
“Last month, Robert Van Tuinen caught on camera administrators who were so unfamiliar with the basic principles of free speech that they prevented him from passing out the Constitution to his fellow students on Constitution Day,” said FIRE President Greg Lukianoff. “Even in the face of national shock and outrage, the college has failed to reform its absurd ‘free speech zone.’ Now it will have to defend that policy in federal court.”
MJC made national news when on September 17 (the anniversary of the U.S. Constitution's signing) it prevented Van Tuinen from handing out copies of the U.S. Constitution in a grassy area by the student center. As captured in a video taken by Van Tuinen, a campus police officer informed him that he could not pass out any materials without first registering with the student development office. After unsuccessfully attempting to convince the officer that this would violate his right to free speech, Van Tuinen went into the student center at the officer’s request.
After further speaking with the officer, Van Tuinen then spoke with MJC administrator Christine Serrano, who told him that he could only pass out literature inside the “free speech area,” which she informed him was “in front of the student center, in that little cement area.” Asking for an application and a copy of his student ID, Serrano told Van Tuinen that she had “two people on campus right now, so you’d have to wait until either the 20th, 27th, or you can go into October.” When Van Tuinen continued to protest, Serrano told him to make an appointment to meet with Vice President of Student Services Brenda Thames so that she could further explain to him “what the time, place, and manner is.”
In response to public outrage (including more than 150,000 views of the video of the college’s censorship on YouTube), MJC President Jill Stearns issued a statement about the incident claiming that “students may distribute printed material on campus in areas generally available to students and the community as long as they do not disrupt the orderly operation of the college.” However, this statement is in direct conflict with the college’s actual procedures—procedures that are seen being enforced in the video and that Stearns only promised to “evaluate.”
The complaint’s multiple counts charge the community college district with violating Van Tuinen’s free speech rights under the First Amendment, both as the rules were applied to him and as written on their face. It also charges the district with violating the right to free speech guaranteed in the California Constitution and with failing adequately to train its employees to respect students’ right to free speech. Van Tuinen is requesting an injunction prohibiting the college from enforcing its speech code as well as monetary damages to be determined by the court.
“Constitutional law can get pretty complicated at times. This is not one of those times,” said FIRE Senior Vice President Robert Shibley. “As FIRE has said from the beginning, every person at Modesto Junior College responsible for enforcing this policy should have known better. The fact that Modesto’s policy was not immediately abandoned when its shameful results were exposed on video is more evidence that too many college administrators fear freedom of speech—and demonstrates how out of touch they are with an American public that respects the First Amendment.”

Modesto Junior College Free Speech Zone -
The small area circled in orange below is the "free speech area" cited by Modesto administrators as justification for not allowing the free distribution of literature across campus. 

Below is a photo of the free speech area marked above.


"President Stearns' statement about the Constitution and expression of free speech"
from Jill Stearns, President of "Modesto Junior College" [http://www.mjc.edu/general/news/releases/2013/presidentsternsstatement.html]:
On September 18, 2013, Modesto Junior College received a letter regarding a posted copy of an edited video taken on the MJC campus. Modesto Junior College and the Yosemite Community College District immediately launched a comprehensive review of the incident.   
Upon review, it was determined conversation between the student and staff was confusing regarding distribution of materials on campus. A formal apology has been provided the student. We deeply regret this misunderstanding. College staff have been provided the policy and procedure for review and follow-up training is planned to further ensure that clear and accurate information is provided in the future.   
As described in the District's official Board Policy and Administrative Procedure, students may distribute printed material on campus in areas generally available to students and the community as long as they do not disrupt the orderly operation of the college. There are procedures to avoid duplicative use of areas. The district is evaluating its policies and procedures. The college and district administration support the peaceful distribution of printed materials on campus. There is absolutely no requirement that a student register weeks in advance and hand out his literature only in a small marked area.   
Modesto Junior College and the Yosemite Community College District wholly support student free speech and support Constitution Day with activities each year. It is thus troubling to see this type of incident unfold the way it has, and for the college to be subjected to allegations of censorship. The college and district support civil discourse as a fundamental pillar of education. Although we appreciate free speech, it is disheartening that some of the public response has diverted so drastically from the principles of civility and in fact has become directed at individuals. Staff have been called morons, idiots, whores, and Nazis. Moreover, some communication was egregious to the point of death threats which clearly violates any precepts of free speech.   
MJC remains committed to excellence in educational programs, service to students, and institutional effectiveness. The college is taking even this most unfortunate incident and using it as an opportunity to review policy, procedure, and interaction to improve service to students.    I wish to express my thanks to those individuals willing to stand up for our Constitution and expression of free speech. To those who were offended by the appearance of censorship, we again affirm the commitment of the college and district to civil discourse. We appreciate all points of view across the spectrum and support every individual's right to express their view.   


"Modesto Junior College Guidelines and Procedure for Requesting College Facilities for Free Speech"Office of the Student Development and Campus Life
Modesto Junior College
435 College Avenue, Modesto, CA 95350
Phone 209 575-6700 Fax 209 575-6143
---
The Yosemite Community College District (“YCCD”) Board policy 5550, in furtherance of and consistent with California Education Code § 76120, provides the Colleges of the District are non-public forums, except for those areas on each campus designated as “free speech areas,” which are deemed limited public forums. The Chancellor shall enact such regulations and administrative procedures as are necessary to reasonably regulate the time, place and manner of the exercise of free expression in the limited public forums.
These regulations shall be
(1) content-neutral;
(2) narrowly tailored to serve a significant governmental interest; and
(3) leave open ample alternative channels of communication.
YCCD Board policy 5550 allows Modesto Junior College to establish institutional regulations and procedures, and in accordance with Board policy, Modesto Junior College has established such regulations and procedures to provide students and community members with the opportunity to exercise their right of expression, while fostering an atmosphere and conditions in which Modesto Junior College’s educational mission can be carried out without disruption. Modesto Junior College shall identify appropriate locations on campus to be used as limited public forum use as prescribed by YCCD Board Policy.
Limited public forums on Modesto Junior College’s campus are identified herein below:
A. Modesto Junior College (East Campus) the area(s) generally available to students and the community is designated as the stage area northeast of the Quad. The Free Speech boards are located in front of the Student Center.
B. Modesto Junior College (West Campus) generally available to students and the community is designated in the Quad area in between Yosemite and Sierra Halls. The Free Speech boards are located inside Mary Stuart Rogers Student Learning Center. Modesto Junior College reserves the right to assign applicants to use limited public forum locations based upon College operations.

GUIDELINES:
1. No event, speech, demonstration, activity or other exercise of “Free Speech” on campus shall interfere with or disrupt the educational process or other scheduled activities of the campus or its facilities.
2. To insure no conflicts with scheduled campus events, all college and non-college groups and individuals are to request advance approval.
3. Modesto Junior College recognizes the right of free expression, but encourages speakers to be respectful of all people. The following examples are considered unprotected speech, and will not be tolerated: threats, incitement of imminent lawless action, racial and sexual harassment, fighting words, obscenity and defamation.
4. Cooperation with Modesto Junior College staff is expected when visiting the campus and/or using campus tables, equipment and facilities.
5. Compliance with pertinent college, city, state and federal regulations.
6. The signature of the requesting/responsible party indicates agreement to work within these guidelines, and if the application is submitted on behalf of a college group, the requesting college representative agrees to attend and supervise the entire event.
7. Use of free speech areas is limited to normal hours of college operation.
8. Refusal to cooperate with the above guidelines will subject the user to possible punitive action, including, but not limited to, termination of the program in process; denial of further use of Free Speech Areas; Discipline; Probation; Suspension; Expulsion and/or Removal from campus. Modesto Junior College students have the right to appeal the decision of the designated college official.

PROCEDURES:
Students and Student Groups: To use the free speech areas, student groups or individuals must submit a completed “Limited Public Forum Request Form” to the Office of Student Development and Campus Life for approval not less than five (5) working days prior to the proposed date of use. In order to provide the most access to the most people, no individual or group may reserve free speech areas more than eight (8) hours per semester. Requests for additional time per semester may be authorized by administration if space and time is available. Student requests submitted less than five (5) working days before the proposed date of use (“last minute requests”) will be considered, but must be reviewed by the Student Activities Advisor, and reconciled with the College Facilities Office.
Non-Students and Off-campus groups: To use the free speech areas, non-students and groups from off-campus must submit a completed “Limited Public Forum Request Form” to the Office of Student Development and Campus Life for approval not less than five (5) working days prior to the proposed date of use. In order to provide the most access to the most people, no individual or group may reserve free speech areas more than eight (8) hours per semester. Requests for additional time per semester may be authorized by administration if space and time is available. No last minute requests are permitted.

CANCELLATION NOTIFICATION:
If cancellation is necessary, immediate notice shall be given to the Office of Student Development and Campus Life.

Limited Public Forum Request Form
5 Working Days Required for Processing
Applicant/Organization:
Are you and/or the Group: a Student or Non-Student ? (mark one)
Date Requested:
Hours of Use: East Campus____ West Campus____
Intended Use:
Number of Participants: ______ Will there be amplified sound? Yes _____ No _____ (mark one)
If yes, please describe: __________________________________________________________________
Please describe any additional set up requirements you may require (i.e., tables, chairs, etc.) and/or any materials you will bring on to the campus (petitions, displays, printed materials, promotional items, etc):
Requesting / Responsible Party Contact Information:
Physical Address:
Contact Person: ___________________________ Phone Number:
Email contact: Other Phone:
Form of Identification and ID Number__________________________ Office Staff ID Verification___
(Initial)
Your signature(s) below affirm the guidelines for use of the free speech areas will be followed.
Date:
Applicant’s Authorized Signature
FOR COLLEGE USE ONLY: Date Application Received:
Approved by SD/CL: ____________________________________ Date:
Approved by Vice President- Student Services:: ____________________________________ Date:
Approved by President: ____________ Date:
(President approval required only if Applicant is a for-profit organization) 10/17/11
Office of the Student Development and Campus Life
Modesto Junior College
435 College Avenue, Modesto, CA 95350
Phone 209 575-6700 Fax 209 575-6143



Complaint in 'Van Tuinen v. Yosemite Community College District, et al.'
Posted 2013-10-10 to [http://thefire.org/article/16329.html], the following is an extract: 
ROBERT VAN TUINEN, Plaintiff,
v.
YOSEMITE COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT, DR. JOAN SMITH, JILL STEARNS, MICHAEL GUERRA, BRENDA THAMES, BECKY CROW, CHRISTINE SERRANO, DOE DEFENDANT 1, Defendants.

Plaintiff Robert Van Tuinen complains of Defendants and alleges:
I. INTRODUCTION
1. Each year on September 17 the United States celebrates the freedoms guaranteed by the Constitution and Bill of Rights. Congress officially designated September 17 as “Constitution Day” to commemorate the anniversary of the date that the Constitution was signed in 1787. Pursuant to that legislation, the Department of Education requires educational institutions that receive federal funding to hold educational programs pertaining to the United States Constitution on that date.  Notice of Implementation of Constitution Day and Citizenship Day , 70 Fed. Reg. 29727 (May 24, 2005).

2. On September 17, 2013, the students of Modesto Junior College (the “College”) received a very different lesson on Constitution Day, as the school’s officials barred Plaintiff Robert Van Tuinen from distributing copies of the U.S. Constitution to fellow students in a public area of the campus. Both a College security officer and a College administrator instructed Mr. Van Tuinen that he would be allowed to distribute his message and any written materials only in the College’s “free speech zone” that occupies a miniscule proportion of its East Campus, and only after scheduling his planned activity several days or weeks ahead of time. These actions were taken under College policies that not only require prior  permission – with at least  five days ’ notice – to engage in even such non-obtrusive speech as handing out literature, but also limit all individuals and student groups to using the free speech zone no more than eight hours each semester. Given the size of the student body, the free speech “allowance” amounts to scarcely more than two-and-half minutes per student, per semester. The policies contain no criteria for control of the free speech zone, which is thus left to the sole discretion of College security and administrators.

3. The College’s reflexive bureaucratic restriction of free expression is sadly ironic, as “[t]he essentiality of freedom in the community of American universities is almost self-evident.” Sweezy v. New Hampshire , 354 U.S. 234, 250 (1957). In a long line of cases, the United States Supreme Court has made clear that “[t]eachers and students must always remain free to inquire, to study and to evaluate, to gain new maturity and understanding; otherwise our civilization will stagnate and die.”  Id . The Court has stressed that “state colleges and universities are not enclaves immune from the sweep of the First Amendment.”  Healy v. James , 408 U.S. 169, 180 (1972). Quite to the contrary, “[t]he vigilant protection of constitutional freedoms is nowhere more vital than in the community of American schools.”  Id . (quoting Shelton v. Tucker , 364 U.S. 479, 487 (1960)). Accordingly, courts have zealously guarded the freedoms of speech, assembly, and petition in recognition that “[t]he college classroom with its surrounding environs is peculiarly the ‘marketplace of ideas,” id , and that “[t]he first danger to liberty lies in granting the State the power” to limit these freedoms “against a background and tradition of thought and experiment that is at the center of our intellectual and philosophic tradi- tion.”  Rosenberger v. Rector & Visitors of Univ. of Va. , 515 U.S. 819, 835 (1995).

4. This is a civil rights action to protect and vindicate the First and Fourteenth Amendment rights of Mr. Van Tuinen and his fellow students in the Yosemite Community College District (the “District”), as well as their rights under Article 1 of the California Constitution. By policy and practice, the District unlawfully restricts the College’s students’ constitutional rights to free expression. The policies enforced against Plaintiff are facially overbroad and prohibit the exercise of rights to free expression on the District’s college campuses.

5. This action seeks declaratory and injunctive relief, damages, and attorneys’ fees, to vindicate and safeguard the fundamental constitutional rights of Mr. Van Tuinen and his fellow students to freedom of speech and due process of law as secured by the First and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution, and by the Liberty of Speech Clause in the California Constitution. The College’s and District’s policies and enforcement practices are challenged on their face and as applied to Mr. Van Tuinen.

[ ... ]
V. STATEMENT OF FACTS
A. Violation of Plaintiff’s Constitutional Rights
22. On September 17, 2013, Mr. Van Tuinen endeavored to distribute copies of the U.S. Constitution to fellow students outside the campus student center at Modesto Junior College.

23. Approximately ten minutes after he began handing out copies of the Constitution, a College campus security officer, Doe Defendant 1, arrived and told Mr. Van Tuinen that any individual who wants to distribute pamphlets or literature on campus must first register with the College Student Development office.

24. Mr. Van Tuinen responded that requiring him to pre-register with College officials in order to distribute copies of the Constitution would impair his freedom of speech. After Doe Defendant 1 insisted that Mr. Van Tuinen would not  be permitted to continue speaking to students or distributing literature without official approval, Mr. Van Tuinen followed the officer into the student center.

25. Once inside, Mr. Van Tuinen explained to Doe Defendant 1 that he intended to start a chapter of Young Americans for Liberty at the College and wanted to distribute copies of the Constitution to spark student interest. Doe Defendant 1 told Mr. Van Tuinen that “as a student on campus passing out anything whatsoever, you have to have permission through the Student Development office.” Doe Defendant 1 then directed Mr. Van Tuinen to the Student Development office.

26. In the Student Development office, Mr. Van Tuinen spoke with Administrative Specialist Christine Serrano. Defendant Serrano told Mr. Van Tuinen that because of “a time, place, and manner” restriction, he could distribute literature only inside the “free speech area,” which was located “in front of the student center, in that little cement area.” The “free speech area” is a small, slightly raised concrete “stage” that makes up a minuscule portion of the College campus, as described in Paragraph 38 of this Complaint.

27. Defendant Serrano told Mr. Van Tuinen to fill out an application, which she indicated would require providing, among other things, a photocopy of his student identification card. Defendant Serrano informed Mr. Van Tuinen that she had “two people on campus right now, so you’d have to wait until either the 20th, 27th, or you can go into October.” Mr. Van Tuinen reiterated his desire to  pass out copies of the Constitution that day – on Constitution Day. Defendant Serrano denied his request, stating “you really don’t need to keep going on.”

28. Defendant Serrano then telephoned an unnamed person and informed that individual that Mr. Van Tuinen “just wants to question the authority of why can’t he hand out constitutional-type papers.” Thereafter, Defendant Serrano told Mr. Van Tuinen that he would have to make an appointment with College Vice President of Student Services Brenda Thames so that she could further explain to him “what the time, place, and manner is.”

29. On information and belief, when Doe Defendant 1 approached Mr. Van Tuinen outside the student center, when he spoke with him within the student center, and when he directed Mr. Van Tuinen to the Student Development office, Doe Defendant 1 knew, or should have known, that Mr. Van Tuinen would be instructed that he must restrict his distribution of literature to the “free speech area,” subject to the application and other limits that doing so entails.

30. Doe Defendant 1 and Defendant Serrano censored Mr. Van Tuinen’s lawful and constitutionally protected expression.

31. The actions by Doe Defendant 1 and Defendant Serrano have caused Mr. Van Tuinen to refrain from expressing his beliefs or distributing literature while on campus for fear of being punished under College or District policies.

32. Doe Defendant 1 and Defendant Serrano knew or should have known that preventing Mr. Van Tuinen from speaking and distributing literature in public areas of the College campus violates his clearly established constitutional rights.

B. The District’s and College’s Policies
33. The Yosemite Community College District includes two two-year colleges (Columbia College and Modesto Junior College). In the 2011-2012 academic year, 16,209 Full Time students were enrolled. The District had a 2011- 2012 budget of $114.4 million.

34. The District promulgates Policies and Administrative Procedures pursuant to Cal. Educ. Code §§ 66300 and 70902.

35.   District Policy 3900 (formerly policy 5550) titled “Time, Place & Manner,” provides that “[t]he Colleges of the District are non-public forums, except for those areas designated as ‘free speech areas’, which are limited public forums.” ( See Exhibit A.) District Policy 3900 also establishes that “The Chancellor shall enact such administrative procedures as are necessary to reasonably regulate the time, place and manner of the exercise of free expression in the limited public forums.” Policy 3900 further states: “The administrative procedures promulgated  by the Chancellor shall not prohibit the right of students to exercise free expression, including but not limited to the use of bulletin boards designated for such use, the distribution of printed materials or petitions in those parts of the College designated as ‘free speech areas’, and the wearing of buttons, badges, or other insignia.”

36. Pursuant to District Policy 3900, the College adopted and published “Guidelines and Procedure for Requesting College Facilities for Free Speech” (the “College Guidelines”). ( See Exhibit B.) The College Guidelines state that District Policy 3900 was promulgated “in furtherance of and consistent with California Education Code § 76120,” and it “provides that Colleges of the District are non-  public forums, except for those areas on each campus designated as ‘free speech areas,’ which are deemed limited public forums.”

37. California Education Code § 76120, however, does not declare that campuses are non-public forums, and states that “[s]uch rules and regulations shall not prohibit the right of students to exercise free expression,” including “the distribution of printed materials or petitions.”

38.  Nevertheless, the College Guidelines confine all approved campus expression to two small areas of the campus. The College Guidelines state that  pursuant to District Policy 3900, the College has identified “appropriate locations on campus to be used as limited public forum use as prescribed by [District] Board Policy.” According to the College Guidelines, “Limited public forums on Modesto Junior College’s campus” include, at the College’s East Campus, “the stage area northeast of the Quad,” and “Free Speech boards … located in front of the Student Center.” The East Campus Map shows this area of the Quad. It is indicated by the green shaded area. ( See Exhibit C, East Campus Map, modified with color and explanation, and related photograph.) At its longest and widest points, Plaintiff estimates that the free speech area on the East Campus is approximately 28 feet long, and 22 feet across, though it is irregularly shaped with several angles and small outcroppings, but in any event comprises approximately 600 square feet. The College Guidelines further provide a “[l]imited public forum” at the College’s West Campus, a space “designated in the Quad area in between Yosemite and Sierra Halls,” and “Free Speech boards … located inside Mary Stuart Rogers Student Learning Center.”

39. The College’s East and West Campuses have many suitable open areas and sidewalks beyond the free speech areas where student expressive activity, including distribution of literature, will not interfere with or disturb access to College buildings or sidewalks, impede vehicular or pedestrian traffic, or in any way substantially disrupt the operations of campus or the College’s educational functions.

40. The College Guidelines state that the College “reserves the right to assign applicants to use limited public forum locations based upon College operations,” without describing any criteria the College applies to assigning free speech applicants to a specific location.

41.  The College Guidelines further require that students request permission to distribute printed materials on campus. According to the College Guidelines: To use the free speech areas, student groups or individuals must submit a completed “Limited Public Forum Request Form” to the Office of Student Development and Campus Life for approval not less than five (5) working days prior to the proposed date of use. * * * Student requests submitted less than five (5) working days before the  proposed date of use (“last minute requests”) will be considered, but must be reviewed by the Student Activities Advisor, and reconciled with the College Facilities Office. (Emphasis added).

42. In addition, the College Guidelines limit individuals or groups to eight hours of access to the “free speech areas” per semester. “Requests for additional time per semester may be authorized by administration if space and time is available.” With just over 17,900 students enrolled, a Fall semester that runs for 16 weeks from August 26 through December 14, 2013, and Guidelines restricting the availability of the “free speech zone” to “normal hours of operation,” which generously construed might encompass 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mondays through Fridays, students are even more limited in their ability to exercise their rights to free speech. Indeed, if each student sought to exercise his or her right to free expression on the East Campus, they would be able to do so for a mere 2.57 minutes  per semester .

43. The College’s “Limited Public Forum Request Form,” affirms that the College requires “5 Working Days … For Processing.” ( See Exhibit D.) Students must indicate on the form whether they plan to use the East Campus or West Campus free speech area, and the hours of use, submit a form of identification, and affirm that “the guidelines for use of the free speech areas will be followed.”

44. The College Guidelines do not provide standards to guide the discretion of the public officials of the College tasked with reviewing requests to use “free speech areas” or to evaluate requests for additional time, thus empowering such public officials to administer the policy arbitrarily or on the basis of  impermissible factors.

45. Because the policy functions as a licensing scheme with which students must comply before engaging in the exercise of their free speech rights, the policy constitutes a prior restraint on speech, resulting in censorship.

46. Students are subject to disciplinary action for violating District and College rules and regulations. The College Guidelines state that “[r]efusal to cooperate with the … guidelines will subject the user to possible punitive action, including, but not limited to, termination of the program in process; denial of further use of Free Speech Areas; Discipline; Probation; Suspension; Expulsion and/or Removal from campus.”

47. District Policy 3900 and the College Guidelines have a chilling effect on Mr. Van Tuinen’s rights, and those of all students of the District and the College, to engage freely and openly in expressive activities, including distributing literature.

48. Mr. Van Tuinen wishes to engage in expressive activities, including distributing literature, on the College’s campus without the need to obtain advance approval from College officials, but he has not done so since being censored by Doe Defendant 1 and Defendant Serrano on September 17, 2013, for fear of disciplinary action.

49. All of the acts of Defendants, their officers, agents, employees, and servants were executed, and are continuing to be executed, by the Defendants under the color and pretense of the policies, statutes, ordinances, regulations, customs, and usages of the State of California.

50. Because the policies and actions of Defendants prevent Mr. Van Tuinen from exercising his constitutional rights to free expression at the College, he is suffering irreparable injury.

51. Defendants’ policies and actions create a hostile atmosphere for free expression on campus, chilling the speech of other College students who are not  before the Court.

VI. CAUSES OF ACTION FIRST CAUSE OF ACTION
As-Applied Violation of Plaintiff’s Right to Free Speech Under the First and Fourteenth Amendments (42 U.S.C. § 1983)
52. Plaintiff repeats and realleges each of the foregoing allegations in this Complaint.

53. The First and Fourteenth Amendments extend to campuses of state colleges and universities.  Healy v. James , 408 U.S. at 180.

54. The College bears the burden of justifying regulation of expressive activity in the public areas of the campus.

55.   By stopping Plaintiff’s lawful activities distributing copies of the U.S. Constitution on the Modesto Junior College campus without prior approval and outside the “free speech zone,” Defendants have explicitly and implicitly chilled Plaintiff’s free expression, and have deprived Plaintiff of his clearly established rights to freedom of speech and expression secured by the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States.

56. Doe Defendant 1 and Defendant Serrano violated a clearly established constitutional right of which all reasonable college administrators and staff should have known, rendering them liable to Mr. Van Tuinen under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.

57. The denial of constitutional rights is irreparable injury  per se , and Mr. Van Tuinen is entitled to declaratory and injunctive relief. As a consequence of  being denied his First Amendment right to distribute copies of the U.S. Constitution on Constitution Day, Plaintiff experienced significant emotional pain and anguish.

58. Plaintiff is entitled to a declaration that Defendants violated his First Amendment rights. Additionally, Plaintiff is entitled to damages in an amount to be determined by the evidence and this Court, and the reasonable costs of this lawsuit, including his reasonable attorneys’ fees.

SECOND CAUSE OF ACTION
As-Applied Violation of the Right to Liberty of Speech Under the California State Constitution

59. Plaintiff repeats and realleges each of the foregoing allegations in this Complaint.

60. Plaintiff’s peaceful speech activities are protected under article 1, section 2 of the California Constitution.

61. By stopping Plaintiff’s lawful activities distributing copies of the U.S. Constitution on the College campus without prior approval and outside the “free speech zone,” Defendants, acting under color of state law and according to policy and practice, have explicitly and implicitly chilled Plaintiff’s free expression, and deprived Plaintiff of his clearly established rights to freedom of speech protected under article 1, section 2 of the California Constitution.

62. Because of Defendants’ policies and actions, Plaintiff has suffered, and continues to suffer, irreparable injury that cannot be fully compensated by an award of money damages.

63. Plaintiff is entitled to a declaration that Defendants violated his Liberty of Speech rights under the California Constitution. Additionally, Plaintiff is entitled to damages in an amount to be determined by the evidence and this Court, and the reasonable costs of this lawsuit, including his reasonable attorneys’ fees.

THIRD CAUSE OF ACTION  Facial Challenge to Violation of Right to Free Speech Under the  First and Fourteenth Amendments (42 U.S.C. § 1983) – Prior Restraint 

64.     Plaintiff repeats and realleges each of the foregoing allegations in this  Complaint. 

65.     Students have a First Amendment right to engage in expressive  activities and to distribute written materials in the public areas of a state college  without obtaining advance permission from government officials.  Widmar v.  Vincent   , 454 U.S. 263, 267 n.5 (1981);   Papish v. Board of Curators of Univ. of Mo.  ,  410 U.S. 667 (1973);   Jews for Jesus, Inc. v. City Coll. of San Francisco  , 2009 WL  86703, at *3 (N.D. Cal. Jan. 12, 2009). 

66.     A permitting requirement is a prior restraint on speech and therefore   bears a heavy presumption against its constitutionality.   Berger v. City of Seattle  ,  569 F.3d 1029, 1037 (9th Cir. 2009). The presumptive invalidity and offensiveness  of advance notice and permitting requirements stem from the significant burden  they place on free speech. 

67.     The policies and conduct of Defendants restricting all First  Amendment protected speech by requiring an advance application to engage in such  activity before allowing expressive activities on the College campus grounds is an  unconstitutional prior restraint on First Amendment rights. 

68.     Laws that subject the exercise of First Amendment freedoms to the   prior restraint of a license, without narrow, objective, and definite standards to  guide the licensing authority, are unconstitutional.  Shuttlesworth v. City of    Birmingham  , 394 U.S. 147, 150-51 (1969). Defendants’ policies vest unfettered  discretion in College security and administrative personnel to restrict  constitutionally protected expression. 

69.     As a direct result of the Defendants’ continued maintenance of District  Policy 3900 and the College Guidelines, Plaintiff and other similarly situated students have been, and will continue to be, irreparably injured in that they have   been, and will be, deprived of their right to free speech under the First and  Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution. 

70.     As a legal consequence of the Defendants’ violation of Plaintiff’s and  other similarly situated students’ First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, Plaintiff   is entitled to injunctive relief, and the reasonable costs of this lawsuit, including his  reasonable attorneys’ fees. 

FOURTH CAUSE OF ACTION  Facial Challenge to Violation of Right to Free Speech Under the Plaintiff’s  First and Fourteenth Amendment Rights (42 U.S.C. § 1983) –   Overbreadth 

71.     Plaintiff repeats and realleges each of the foregoing allegations in this  Complaint. 

72.     The College bears the burden of justifying any regulation of expressive  activity in the public areas of the campus. Any restrictions on speech in public  areas must serve a substantial public interest and must be narrowly tailored and  applied so as not to burden more speech than is essential. 

73.     Even purportedly neutral regulations, such as time, place, or manner   restrictions, must be narrowly tailored and must not burden more speech than  necessary to achieve a substantial governmental interest. 

74.     The College cannot legitimately declare the vast majority of public  areas on campus to be “non-public forums.”   McGlone v. Bell   , 681 F.3d 718 (6th  Cir. 2012). Nor can the College identify a substantial governmental interest to be  served by preventing individuals from speaking through the distribution of literature  in the public areas of campus. 

75.     The policy restricting all First Amendment protected speech to  designated “free speech zones” at the College is unconstitutionally overbroad because it does not serve a significant governmental interest, is not narrowly drawn,  and impermissibly restricts student expression. 

76.     The policies restricting speech on campus burden far more speech than  is necessary to serve the asserted interest. Rather than being narrowly tailored to   protect speech as the Constitution requires, the College policies are tailored to   preclude speech. Among other, less speech-restrictive alternatives, the College  could enforce rules against those who actually disrupt traffic and/or educational  activities or who engage in disorderly conduct. 

77.     As a direct result of the Defendants’ continued maintenance of District  Policy 3900 and the College Guidelines, students at the College are deprived of   their right to free speech under the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the  Constitution. 

78.     As a legal consequence of the Defendants’ violation of Plaintiff’s and  other similarly situated students’ First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, as alleged  above, Plaintiff is entitled to injunctive relief, and the reasonable costs of this  lawsuit, including his reasonable attorneys’ fees.

FIFTH CAUSE OF ACTION  Facial Challenge to Violation of Right to Free Speech Under the Plaintiff’s  First and Fourteenth Amendments Rights (42 U.S.C. § 1983) –   Vagueness 

79.     Plaintiff repeats and realleges each of the foregoing allegations in this  Complaint. 

80.     A state enactment is void for vagueness if the prohibitive terms are not  clearly defined such that a person or ordinary intelligence can readily identify the  applicable standard for inclusion and exclusion.  Grayned v. City of Rockford   ,  408 U.S. 104, 108 (1972). 

81.     Defendants’ policies restricting speech fail to adequately advise the  students subject to discipline under them of the obligations the policies create, and are unconstitutionally vague on their face in violation of the First Amendment and  of the due process guarantee of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. 

82.     Defendants’ policies do not provide standards to guide the discretion of    public officials at the College as to whether the College Guidelines apply to   particular acts of free expression in the first instance, or for reviewing requests to  use “free speech areas,” or for evaluating requests for additional time beyond the  eight hours of free expression allotted to each student per semester. This empowers  such public officials to administer the policy on the basis of impermissible factors  or through arbitrary application. 

83.     Because of Defendants’ policies and actions, Plaintiff has suffered, and  continues to suffer, economic injury and irreparable harm. Plaintiff is therefore  entitled to injunctive relief, and the reasonable costs of this lawsuit, including his  reasonable attorneys’ fees.

SIXTH CAUSE OF ACTION Facial Challenge to Violation of the Right to Liberty of Speech Under the California Constitution

84.   Plaintiff repeats and realleges each of the foregoing allegations in this Complaint.

85.   Under California law applicable to restrictions implicating the Liberty of Speech Clause in the State constitution, for a restriction governing speech in a  public forum to survive, the communicative activity must be basically incompatible with the normal activity of that particular place at a particular time.  Kuba v. 1-A  Agric. Ass’n , 387 F.3d 850, 857 (9th Cir. 2004).

86.   The policies and conduct of Defendants restricting all First Amendment protected speech by requiring an advance application to engage in such activity before allowing expressive activities on the College campus grounds is an unconstitutional prior restraint on the Liberty of Speech. This is so because no compelling governmental interest is advanced by the policy, the policy is over-broad, and there are no guidelines for application of the policy by administrators. The policy vests unfettered discretion in Defendants to restrict constitutionally  protected expression.

87.   The Defendants’ purported “time, place and manner” restrictions are unreasonable in light of the purpose of the forum, are overly broad, and are not narrowly tailored to serve significant government interests nor leave open ample alternative channels of communication.

88.   As a proximate result of Defendants’ actions, Plaintiff and other  similarly situated students have been and will continue to be irreparably injured in that they have been and will be deprived of their rights under the Liberty of Speech Clause in the California Constitution.

89.   As a direct result of the Defendants’ violation of the Plaintiff’s and other similarly situated students’ constitutional rights, and of the continued main- tenance of District Policy 3900 and the College Guidelines, students at the College continue to be prohibited from engaging in constitutional speech activities.

90.   As a legal consequence of the Defendants’ violation of Plaintiff’s and other similarly situated students’ Liberty of Speech rights, as alleged above, Plaintiff is entitled to injunctive relief, and the reasonable costs of this lawsuit, including his reasonable attorneys’ fees.

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Police snipers positioned to shoot at anti-brutality gathering

OCTOBER 22ND IN THE CALIFORNIA STATE CAPITAL. FAMILIES OF THOSE MURDERED BY POLICE LEAVE A COFFIN AT AG KAMALA HARRIS OFFICE WITH THEIR LOVED ONES NAMES AND EACH SAID THE NAME OF THEIR LOVED ONE AS THEY THROW A RED ROSE TO THE GROUND, AFTER EACH NAME WAS READ...
THE CROWD RESPONDED WITH "JUSTICE!"
THESE ARE THE FAMILIES WE HAVE JOINING IN SACRAMENTO SO FAR, IF YOU ARE NOT ON THE LIST PLEASE LET US KNOW!!
 JUSTICE FOR JOE WHITEHOUSE
 JUSTICE FOR GARY HAWKINS
 JUSTICE FOR ERNEST DUENEZ JR
 JUSTICE FOR LAMONT HARMON
 JUSTICE FOR OSCAR GRANT
 JUSTICE FOR JAMES RIVERA JR
 JUSTICE FOR KENNETH HARDING JR
 JUSTICE FOR MARIO ROMERO
 JUSTICE FOR BOBBY HENNING
 JUSTICE FOR KELLY THOMAS
 JUSTICE FOR MICHAEL NIDA
 JUSTICE FOR ALAN BLUEFORD
 JUSTICE FOR MANUEL DIAZ
 JUSTICE FOR JOSE DE LA TRINIDAD
 JUSTICE FOR JAVIER ARRAZOLA
 JUSTICE FOR TONY FRANCIS
 JUSTICE FOR DAVID RAYA
 JUSTICE FOR CAESAR CRUZ
 JUSTICE FOR ANDRES AVILA
 JUSTICE FOR RIGOBERTO ARCEO
 JUSTICE FOR ROBERT RAMIREZ
 JUSTICE FOR ALFONSO LIMON
 JUSTICE FOR JAMES W. MOORE SR
 JUSTICE FOR DAVID SILVA
 JUSTICE FOR US MARINE VETERAN CORPORAL ALLAN "AJ" DeVILLENA II
 JUSTICE FOR IGNACIO OCHOA
 JUSTICE FOR LAMARR R. ALEXANDER SR.

 FAMILIES OF THOSE INCARCERATED JOINING SACRAMENTO
 JUSTICE FOR JESUS AGUIRRE

 MURDERED BY SON OF A COP & NO JUSTICE
 JUSTICE FOR BIDAL MIKAELE BEN TAITO

 FAMILIES STANDING IN SOLIDARITY THROUGHOUT CALIFORNIA
 JUSTICE FOR IDRISS STELLEY
 JUSTICE MARTIN HERNANDEZ
 JUSTICE FOR DAVON JOHNSON
 JUSTICE FOR DONNY GENE SIMMONS JR
 JUSTICE FOR LUIS GUTIERREZ
 JUSTICE FOR EVERARDO TORRES
 JUSTICE FOR JOEL ACEVEDO
 JUSTICE FOR RONALD ADUDDEL
 JUSTICE FOR KENNY BEEBY
 JUSTICE FOR STEVEN BOURS
 JUSTICE FOR DOUG ZERBY
 JUSTICE FOR JUSTIN HERTL
 JUSTICE FOR SONIA CASTENEDA
 JUSTICE FOR RITA ELIAS
 JUSTICE FOR MICHAEL MAHONEY
 JUSTICE FOR JOSE LUIS RAMIREZ
 JUSTICE FOR EVERARDO TORRES
 JUSTICE FOR VICTOR ORTEGA
 JUSTICE FOR JOEY PINASCO
 JUSTICE FOR LUTHER BROWN
 JUSTICE FOR JOHNATHAN CUEVAS

Linda L R Roberts posted to Occupy Stockton -
At the police brutality event on Tuesday, the 22 of Oct, there were bunches of CHP, Sacramento City police, on bikes, on foot and on horses. I was legal observing standing so that I could see the crowd. Behind me, the CHP, came up to two activists from Stockton, asked what their names were and arrested one. He had been filming the police earlier. Someone found me and I asked what happened. The guy, who was not arrested, said that after they asked his name, they said that he was clean but had a "history". I went over the the CHP and I know one of them from past demos. They denied that they were asking names, first lie, they asked two folks at least their names. I told them that I didn't want them going around asking names as folks didn't have to tell them. They said that the guy they arrested, had a warrant, so didn't need his name as they knew him. I said, "Oh, local?" and they said yes. Second lie, both of these men were from Stockton. I tried to look up this guy on our inmate finder system and could not. I don't know if his name is spelled wrong and I don't have his birthdate. I don't think that cops lying to suspects are the same as cops lying to the public or to us. Also, there were two snipers on the roof during the demo. I went home to Oak Park in the early afternoon and there was open prostitution and meth selling near my house. Our tax dollars at work. Many cops and cop cars at the Mc Donald's demo. 15 folks selling drugs on my street that same day.

"National Day Against Police Brutality - Sacramento, CA - Rooftop Snipers in Place"
2013-10-23 posted by Zird Omstead [www.youtube.com/watch?v=boO7HFsWEaA]:
October 22 marks the National Day Against Police Brutality. Protest rallies and marches took place in dozens of cities and featured hundreds of families who've lost a loved one to the Industrial Police Complex.
In Sacramento, California a large and peaceful group gathered for a permitted rally at the Capitol. As usual, police were omnipresent and overbearing. This video shows the presence of a rooftop sniper and spotter ready to put their training (on how to kill from a distance) to work.
---
Message from the videographer Karen Perry: The two man team of a sniper and a spotter came out onto the roof just before the video captured them and I witnessed the whole thing. They brought with them a large black duffel bag at least 6' long. They setup with the spotter scanning the crowd with his binoculars and the sniper setup prone along the ground next to where they setup the bag. They're up on the roof ready to move into active shooting if/when ordered to. Whether he's got the rifle out of his bag or not, the fact of the matter is that they're deploying these kinds of weapon systems with impunity whenever they feel threatened, bored, or simply want to run drills. Kind of like the drills they were running all day on 9-11. These drills have a way of going live. Police brings guns, police use guns. I'm not into hyperbole, and in this case I don't need to be. The rifles in the bag, man, just like always!
(another comment from Karen Perry) October 22, 2013 on the steps of the California Capitol in Sacramento. This event marks the #O22 National Day Against Police Brutality and featured a march, speakers, music, and tables presenting stories of those killed by police as well as other social justice organizations seeking change.
 This video is a look at the event while the march was off in the streets of Sacramento.
 This is one of two videos showing the rooftop snipers on this day of peaceful gathering to testify about loss at the hands of a criminal police system.
 The two man team came out together, carrying their large bag of weapons and whatnot. One hunkered down in between the pillar fence in prone snipe position, the other doing the spotting with the binoculars. After a time, the boys packed up and headed off to the other side of the roof to do more sight seeing. Solidarity. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QiGc4iO2Mxg



2013-10-22 photo showing the Brown Berets of Sacraztlan