Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Free speech bill ignites debate

Measure called a ‘campus gag rule’

- LILLIAN PRICE JASON STEIN

MADISON - Lawmakers were poised Wednesday to vote on a crackdown on University of Wisconsin System students who disrupt other people’s speeches and events, pitting one set of free speech concerns against another.

Republican­s who control the state Legislatur­e are pushing Assembly Bill 299 to protect conservati­ve voices on campus. Approval by the Assembly on Wednesday would send the bill to the state Senate.

“Today we are ensuring that simply because you are a young adult on a college campus, your constituti­onal rights do not go away,” lead sponsor Rep. Jesse Kremer (R-Kewaskum) said. “Around the country we’ve had situations that have gotten to the point of demonstrat­ion shout downs and we do not want to get

to that point in Wisconsin.”

Critics argue the bill isn’t needed in Wisconsin and would actually hinder freedom of speech by suspending or expelling students.

“Our colleges and universiti­es should be a place to vigorously debate ideas and ultimately learn from one another. Instead, this campus gag rule creates an atmosphere of fear where free expression and dissent are discourage­d,” Rep. Lisa Subeck (DMadison) said.

Rep. Bob Gannon (R-West Bend) said he also had some concerns that liberals could try to use the legislatio­n to silence conservati­ve students who might want to protest abortion, gun control or other government policies. Gannon said he supported holding young students accountabl­e for the free exchange of ideas but said more responsibi­lity for that should be placed on the UW administra­tion and faculty.

“I’m afraid it’s going to intimidate students into silence — conservati­ve students into silence,”

Gannon said.

Tensions have mounted in recent months between liberal campuses and conservati­ve speakers. At the University of Wisconsin-Madison in November, conservati­ve speaker and former Breitbart editor Ben Shapiro gave a speech to a conservati­ve student organizati­on and was interrupte­d by liberal activists.

Shapiro had to stop his speech for seven minutes while protesters chanted and yelled.

Kremer’s bill, co-sponsored by Assembly Speaker Robin Vos (RRochester), is aimed at ensuring that violent protests, like those seen at University of California­Berkeley, don’t occur in Wisconsin. He said the bill would give Wisconsin the strongest measure in the country to prevent disruption­s of free speech.

“College campuses should be the one place where the most honest, the most open debate happens,” Vos said.

The UW System currently has policies in place to reprimand students who are out of line during protests. Sponsors of the bill, however, say those policies don’t work and want to replace them.

But opponents say the bill doesn’t clearly spell out what conduct will be punished and could

have a chilling effect on speech.

The proposal would have establishe­d a special council in charge of disciplina­ry hearings when a student is accused of preventing someone from speaking or restrictin­g their free expression. But an amendment offered Wednesday by Kremer dropped the council idea and instead gave the responsibi­lity for discipline to the Board of Regents.

Under the bill, anyone could report a student at one of the system’s four-year or two-year colleges for violating the policies and a student would automatica­lly be sent to a disciplina­ry hearing if reported twice.

A student found guilty of two violations would be suspended for a minimum of one semester. A third violation would result in the student being kicked out of the university.

During freshman and transfer student orientatio­n, students would be informed of the system’s free expression policies and receive First Amendment training and instructor­s would get annual training.

The Assembly approved two other bills Wednesday:

Voucher schools. Senate Bill 293 would eliminate some accountabi­lity requiremen­ts for private schools that receive taxpayer-funded vouchers, including rules that dictate standards for meeting average attendance levels and promoting students from one grade to the next. The Assembly voted, 67-30, to send the bill to Gov. Scott Walker.

The proposal would also require that the schools conduct background checks on employees similar to those required of public school teachers and would impose penalties on schools that knowingly falsify informatio­n. The bill would also allow public schools that lose special-needs students to private voucher schools to recoup those funds from state and local taxpayers.

Renewable energy. Senate Bill 144 would allow waste heat from manufactur­ing to count toward renewable energy requiremen­ts in the state, a controvers­ial concept since it’s different from traditiona­l renewable sources such as wind or solar power. The Assembly sent the bill to Walker on a voice vote.

Chiropract­ors. Lawmakers were expected to vote on Assembly Bill 260,which would allow licensed chiropract­ors to perform physical examinatio­ns for youth sports teams, a role commonly reserved for physicians.

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