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Proposed Calif. Bills Address Student Press Freedom
Colin Sharkey, a program officer with the , reported in an entry on , a higher education blog for the , that two bills have been proposed in California that deal exclusively with the student press. The first, , will make it an offense to steal more than five copies of a free publication, offering some hope to student journalists whose papers have mysteriously gone 鈥渕issing.鈥
The second bill, , addresses California鈥檚 Leonard Law, which extends First Amendment rights to students at private colleges. According to Sharkey鈥檚 piece, AB 2581 bans universities from censoring student press and protects the First Amendment rights of college journalists. AB 2581 adds 鈥渁nd the student press鈥 to California's Leonard Law, which protects student speech from laws on a college campus if the speech is protected by the First Amendment off the campus. This would be a tremendous precedent to set nationwide.
In light of the Supreme Court鈥檚 decision not to hear Hosty v. Carter, student papers fear that their independence could be in jeopardy. Even though Hosty applies only to the Seventh Circuit, and California is in the Ninth Circuit, newspaper editors in California have about what the decision implies for student papers at all public institutions, and fear that this decision is part of a trend that seeks to control student press. The proposed amendment to the Leonard Law would indeed be a step toward fending off institutional encroachments upon student newspapers鈥 independence.
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