1ST CIRCUIT CONSIDERS CHALLENGE TO BOARD OF ED'S REMOVAL OF MATERIALS DISPUTING ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
Sheri Qualters
Law.com
March 3 2010
A panel of the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals grilled a lawyer
about his clients' standing to bring First Amendment claims against
Massachusetts state educational agencies and officials for removing
from a teacher curriculum guide Web sites that dispute the existence
of an Armenian genocide.
Harvey Silverglate, of counsel to Boston's Zalkind Rodriguez Lunt &
Duncan, represented a group of Massachusetts students and teachers
and the nonprofit Assembly of Turkish American Associations on the
plaintiffs' side of Griswold v. Driscoll at the hearing on Tuesday.
The plaintiffs claim the state board of education's 1999 decision to
remove materials disputing the Armenian genocide from a curriculum
guide violated the First Amendment's free speech clause.
They filed suit in the District of Massachusetts on Oct. 26, 2005,
and the court dismissed the case on June 10, 2009. With regard to the
Assembly of Turkish American Associations, the lower court ruled that
the lawsuit was time-barred by the three-year statute of limitations
and there was no continuing violation of constitutional rights that
extended the statute of limitations. With regard to the individual
plaintiffs, the district court addressed the merits of the case in
finding that they lacked standing. Specifically, Chief Judge Mark
Wolf wrote:
"Plaintiffs seek to escape the consequences of the general principle
that government speech is immune from First Amendment scrutiny by
emphasizing that the instant case allegedly involves the removal of
contra-genocide materials from the Curriculum Guide as a result of
political pressure. They assert that this case is analogous to [the
U.S. Supreme Court decision in Board of Education Trustees Island
Trees Union Free School District No. 26 v. Pico] and, therefore,
that they have stated a valid claim. Plaintiffs' reliance on Pico is,
however, unpersuasive for several reasons."
At the 1st Circuit oral argument, Silverglate and the judges debated
his case's similarity to the 1982 Supreme Court decision in Pico. In
that case, a plurality of the Supreme Court deemed that the removal of
nine books chosen by professional educators from school library shelves
because of their controversial viewpoints violated the First Amendment.
When Silverglate argued that his clients had the same standing as
the plaintiffs in Pico, retired U.S. Supreme Court Justice David
Souter told him "that may get you nothing more than a remand for
factual development."
Silverglate replied "the case is controlled in every material respect
by Pico."
"There's no question that the online library here was made ultimately
for the benefit of the students via the teacher, just like in Pico,"
Silverglate said.
Circuit Judge Jeffrey Howard wanted to know how the students were
being injured, given that the curriculum guide was voluntary.
Silverglate responded that the plaintiffs were similarly situated to
the students in Pico, in that "they were in the realm of voluntary
inquiry."
Circuit Judge Michael Boudin told Silverglate that the circumstances
of his case and the Pico case are very different. "Taking books off
library shelves seems a little different than deciding what goes into
a curriculum package," Boudin said.
Under questioning by Souter, Silverglate agreed that Massachusetts
could constitutionally limit curriculum materials only to those avowing
the existence of the Armenian genocide. Silverglate said it was the
decision to bow to political pressure and remove the materials once
they were included that violated the plaintiffs' constitutional rights.
Massachusetts Assistant Attorney General William Porter, who argued
the case for the defendants, opened by asserting that the plaintiffs
do not have standing to bring the claim because the curriculum guide
is "a series of recommendations" to educators. "It does not compel
the speech of any teacher or student," Porter said.
Porter also said the curriculum changes made because of political
influences were within the rights of the state's educators. "The
curriculum guide is government speech, and the government is free
to identify the analysis it intended to convey and change it,"
Porter said.
Porter said that there's no comparison between the removal of two or
three pages in the curriculum guide and the activity Pico protected.
He further argued that subsequent Supreme Court decisions, such as the
2003 ruling in U.S. v. American Library Assoc. Inc., left Pico behind.
That ruling rejected a First Amendment challenge to a federal law
that bars public libraries from getting federal funds for Internet
access unless they install pornography-blocking software.
"The court upheld a requirement that federal funds require libraries
to use Internet-filtering software," Porter said. "The court found
libraries had wide latitude."
http://www.law.com/jsp/article.js p?id=1202445394078&st_Circuit_Considers_Challe nge_to_Board_of_Eds_Removal_of_Materials_Disputing _Armenian_Genocide
Sheri Qualters
Law.com
March 3 2010
A panel of the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals grilled a lawyer
about his clients' standing to bring First Amendment claims against
Massachusetts state educational agencies and officials for removing
from a teacher curriculum guide Web sites that dispute the existence
of an Armenian genocide.
Harvey Silverglate, of counsel to Boston's Zalkind Rodriguez Lunt &
Duncan, represented a group of Massachusetts students and teachers
and the nonprofit Assembly of Turkish American Associations on the
plaintiffs' side of Griswold v. Driscoll at the hearing on Tuesday.
The plaintiffs claim the state board of education's 1999 decision to
remove materials disputing the Armenian genocide from a curriculum
guide violated the First Amendment's free speech clause.
They filed suit in the District of Massachusetts on Oct. 26, 2005,
and the court dismissed the case on June 10, 2009. With regard to the
Assembly of Turkish American Associations, the lower court ruled that
the lawsuit was time-barred by the three-year statute of limitations
and there was no continuing violation of constitutional rights that
extended the statute of limitations. With regard to the individual
plaintiffs, the district court addressed the merits of the case in
finding that they lacked standing. Specifically, Chief Judge Mark
Wolf wrote:
"Plaintiffs seek to escape the consequences of the general principle
that government speech is immune from First Amendment scrutiny by
emphasizing that the instant case allegedly involves the removal of
contra-genocide materials from the Curriculum Guide as a result of
political pressure. They assert that this case is analogous to [the
U.S. Supreme Court decision in Board of Education Trustees Island
Trees Union Free School District No. 26 v. Pico] and, therefore,
that they have stated a valid claim. Plaintiffs' reliance on Pico is,
however, unpersuasive for several reasons."
At the 1st Circuit oral argument, Silverglate and the judges debated
his case's similarity to the 1982 Supreme Court decision in Pico. In
that case, a plurality of the Supreme Court deemed that the removal of
nine books chosen by professional educators from school library shelves
because of their controversial viewpoints violated the First Amendment.
When Silverglate argued that his clients had the same standing as
the plaintiffs in Pico, retired U.S. Supreme Court Justice David
Souter told him "that may get you nothing more than a remand for
factual development."
Silverglate replied "the case is controlled in every material respect
by Pico."
"There's no question that the online library here was made ultimately
for the benefit of the students via the teacher, just like in Pico,"
Silverglate said.
Circuit Judge Jeffrey Howard wanted to know how the students were
being injured, given that the curriculum guide was voluntary.
Silverglate responded that the plaintiffs were similarly situated to
the students in Pico, in that "they were in the realm of voluntary
inquiry."
Circuit Judge Michael Boudin told Silverglate that the circumstances
of his case and the Pico case are very different. "Taking books off
library shelves seems a little different than deciding what goes into
a curriculum package," Boudin said.
Under questioning by Souter, Silverglate agreed that Massachusetts
could constitutionally limit curriculum materials only to those avowing
the existence of the Armenian genocide. Silverglate said it was the
decision to bow to political pressure and remove the materials once
they were included that violated the plaintiffs' constitutional rights.
Massachusetts Assistant Attorney General William Porter, who argued
the case for the defendants, opened by asserting that the plaintiffs
do not have standing to bring the claim because the curriculum guide
is "a series of recommendations" to educators. "It does not compel
the speech of any teacher or student," Porter said.
Porter also said the curriculum changes made because of political
influences were within the rights of the state's educators. "The
curriculum guide is government speech, and the government is free
to identify the analysis it intended to convey and change it,"
Porter said.
Porter said that there's no comparison between the removal of two or
three pages in the curriculum guide and the activity Pico protected.
He further argued that subsequent Supreme Court decisions, such as the
2003 ruling in U.S. v. American Library Assoc. Inc., left Pico behind.
That ruling rejected a First Amendment challenge to a federal law
that bars public libraries from getting federal funds for Internet
access unless they install pornography-blocking software.
"The court upheld a requirement that federal funds require libraries
to use Internet-filtering software," Porter said. "The court found
libraries had wide latitude."
http://www.law.com/jsp/article.js p?id=1202445394078&st_Circuit_Considers_Challe nge_to_Board_of_Eds_Removal_of_Materials_Disputing _Armenian_Genocide