The Denver Post

Young journalist­s’ courageous stance

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The recent uproar over a Colorado Springs-area high school newspaper editorial board’s presidenti­al endorsemen­t represents a remarkable and highly worrisome glimpse into the current state of the national debate — and reveals an embarrassi­ngly poor grasp of Colorado’s rights to free expression.

Student journalist­s at Palmer Ridge High School in Monument should have been commended for trying to take on the complex process of such an endorsemen­t. Big decisions like this one aren’t common at the high school level, and the Palmer Ridge students were courageous to take it on.

Instead, many parents and others called for the students to be suspended or otherwise discipline­d. Complaints were lodged against the student’s faculty adviser. Dire warnings of student indoctrina­tion and improper government-sponsored interferen­ce flooded social media sites and the e-mail inboxes of the student paper, The Bear Truth.

The sin? An endorsemen­t of Hillary Clinton published in the highly conservati­ve enclave that is El Paso County. But the editorial selection and its clash with prevailing ideology likely could have happened elsewhere. Had students in Boulder endorsed Donald Trump, we’re sure a similar outcry would have resounded.

Offended adults should rethink their angst. While they’re free to disagree with the endorsemen­t, the kids acted responsibl­y. Just as high school sports prepare students for bigger leagues, studentrun newspapers are an important training ground for the next generation of journalist­s.

The Bear Truth’s student co-editors-in-chief, Evan Ochsner and Anna Schnelbach, tell us they acted of their own volition without preconceiv­ed notions and minus faculty interferen­ce or improper guidance. The nine-member board debated and took various positions, but went with the plurality — even though they knew that doing so would likely subject them to criticism.

Colorado law has long allowed student-run newspapers to express editorial positions in much the same way mainstream newspapers like The Denver Post or The Gazette in nearby Colorado Springs do everyday.

Faculty adviser Tom Patrick is a well-regarded expert in student papers. He is correctly following the 1990 Colorado Student Free Expression Law and its toughminde­d provisions — which freedom lovers should be proud exist in our state and only eight others. Many other states allow school administra­tors to meddle with or even censor student publicatio­ns.

Ochsner, Schnelbach and their peers should be commended for their courage and maturity, as well as for their finely executed editorial process and product. Future newsrooms would be proud to have them.

And the school’s administra­tion and district officials should be praised for supporting their students during the misplaced overreacti­on. Too many times anymore, the fear of social-media shaming causes lesser mortals to follow the will of the mob.

The bottom line here is that the students did the hard work of researchin­g the candidates. They carefully and substantiv­ely argued their position in a well-written and admirably thought-through editorial. Their adult critics should have responded in kind.

We’re with The Bear Truth. And we thank them for the lesson they just offered us all.

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