School District Affirms Student Speech Rights After 10th Grader Punished for ‘gay? fine by me’ T-Shirt (12/7/2007)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.orgNEW
YORK -- The Spencer-Van Etten School
District has met a demand from the New York Civil
Liberties Union that it send a message directly to its student body affirming
students’ constitutional right to free speech. The development occurred in
response to the censorship of a Tioga County
High School student for
wearing a “gay? fine by me” T-shirt.
Heathyre Farnham, a 10th grade student, was sent home from
school on September 21 for wearing the T-shirt.
After the New York Civil Liberties Union intervened in
October, the school district admitted it had violated Farnham’s free speech
rights and agreed to issue a declaration that all high school students are
permitted to wear clothing that conveys controversial messages, including
messages supporting lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people.
Barrie Gewanter, director of the NYCLU’s Central New York
Chapter, worked with NYCLU staff attorneys Matt Faiella and Palyn Hung to
represent Farnham, who organized public opposition to the censorship with her
mother, Brynda Beeman.
“Heathyre displayed enormous courage in refusing to surrender
her First Amendment rights or the rights of her classmates,” Faiella said.
“These students stand behind an inclusive message of free speech, and I think
that’s great.”
Gewanter delivered a presentation to the high school’s
faculty on students’ First Amendment rights on October 22. The following day,
the school district’s attorney publicly admitted that the censorship was a
mistake. That evening, Gewanter addressed the district’s school board, while
Faiella continued to negotiate with the school district’s attorneys about
issuing a statement to the high school’s students affirming their free speech
rights.
On November 2,
the following message, most of which was proposed by the NYCLU, was broadcast
over the schools public address system:
“The school
dress code does not prohibit students from displaying controversial or political
messages. There is a wide range of these types of messages that are acceptable,
including messages supportive of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people.
The dress code does prohibit students from displaying obscene or profane words
or images or messages promoting the use of alcohol, drugs or tobacco
products.”
The school
district subsequently issued Farnham a private apology.
Gewanter said the statement and apology were necessary to
repair the damage caused by the censorship.
“When you enact censorship like this, it puts a chilling
effect on the student body, and you cannot cure this chill with silence,”
Gewanter said. “We appreciated the opportunity to address the faculty and school
board, but the Spencer-Van Etten school district had the further obligation to
inform students that they have First Amendment rights in their school.”
This incident
and the resulting publicity raised created an opportunity to educate the school
board, faculty, and the community on students’ free speech rights and the
challenges some LGBT youth face within their schools.
“The NYCLU feels
these are positive developments,” Gewanter said.
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