Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Thursday, August 17, 2006
Georgia Tech Changes Speech Code To Settle Suit By Conservative Students
In response to a suit filed on behalf of students by the Alliance Defense Fund, Georgia Institute of Technology has agreed to change portions of its speech code for students living in on-campus housing. Yesterday's Atlanta Journal Constitution reports that the school has agreed to eliminate language that prohibits students from any attempt to "injure, harm" or "malign" a person because of "race, religious belief, color, sexual/affectational orientation, national origin, disability, age or gender." The Christian and Jewish plaintiffs alleged that the speech code infringed free expression by religious conservatives who wish to speak out against homosexuality and feminism. Under the court order issued yesterday embodying the settlement between the parties, Georgia Tech will need court approval if it changes its speech code any time in the next five years. Praising the settlement, Alliance Defense Fund Senior Legal Counsel David French said: "Officials at Georgia Tech had been enforcing draconian speech codes that prohibited any kind of student speech they deemed to be 'intolerant.' This is a tremendous victory for free speech."(See prior posting.)