If you weren't paying attention at the end of the Chapel Hill Town Council meeting tonight, you might have missed some pretty shocking information. The controversial bus ad policy, the one that allowed the now-famous "end military aid to Israel" ads, was in fact not the policy adopted by Council just last year!
Here is a memo from Transit Director Steve Spade to Roger Stancil detailing the error:
When Transit needed a copy of the policy, I went to the June 13th meeting and used the policy that was included in the packet of materials rather than the policy provided in the supplemental materials that was approved by Council. As a result we have been using the draft policy rather than the one approved by the Council. In reviewing our communication since June 2011, we have consistently applied the draft policy rather than the one approved by the Council.
There were several edits in the policy approved by the Council, most significantly were the addition of two items in section 2.01 that excluded religious and political and social issue advertising.
When the Church of Reconciliation made a request to purchase advertising in February 2012 we applied the draft advertising policy rather than the Council approved policy. If we were to apply the Council approved policy to the Church of Reconciliation ad it would not meet our standards for advertising based on section 2.01‐e that excludes “advertising in which the primary message is one promoting or opposing a particular view on political or social issues, other than advertising authorized under 3.02 or 3.03”. These sections refer to advertising promoting or opposing named candidates and advertising by non‐profits which must conform to the language of 2.01.
Here's a link to the entire memo: http://www.townofchapelhill.org/Modules/ShowDocument.aspx?documentid=16105
Steve and Roger both recommended pulling the Church of Reconcilation ads and refunding the money; however in a memo from Mayor Kleinschimdt, he suggests suspending the current policy and honoring all contracts. He also suggests not accepting any new ads until the policy can be reviewed at the Nov. 5th meeting. You can see that memo here: http://www.townofchapelhill.org/Modules/ShowDocument.aspx?documentid=16108
A motion doing what the Mayor outlined in his memo to Council is what was passed at the end of the meeting. Given the controversy already surrounding the ads, this is indeed an unexpected twist and it should be interesting to see what happens at the November 5th meeting. Hopefully the Council will take this opportunity to correct a bad policy choice from last year, one perhaps made without the proper level of scrutiny.
Issues:
Comments
Commercial political speech over all else, and we don't see it.
I will be asking to revisit this policy to make sure that we are not favoring commercial propaganda over 'political or social issues' free speach. More significant then a 'primary message' is the primary effect.The first bus advertisements were by Wells Fargo, they did not have the primary message of 'please bank at an insitution that is corrupt,has commited fraud and should be subject to anti-trust law.' rather it had something bland like "with you when you have places to go, Wachovia is Wells Fargo in the Carolina's."It is deceptive, un-balanced, inaccurate, but ultimately political and for making a profit before being for the public good. Lets face it, money is becoming more and more concentrated in the hands of some very very rich institutions and people, the cost being that we are left without resources to fund the public wellbeing (i.e. bus transit, affordable housing, schools, etc..) so we end up creating policies that are in the trajectory of selling what remains of what we still have (ultimately a pvt business will do us the 'favor' of running the buses in exchange of profit for them .. thanks because we couldn't afford it anyway). Why do we not have money? Why is austerity going to seriously kick in after the elections, no matter which candidate wins under 'sequestration'?One day we will wake up and realize we can't say anything that is explicit enough that it offends the providers. I find it insane that we are volunteering to undermine ourselves by censoring the spaces through which we can communicate especially since we are already at a terrible disadvantage.
Thank you, Sammy
This whole thing is now even more embarrassing.
What is commercial speech?
There are plenty of other examples, but Sammy's point is one that a number of law professors around the country have raised: What's the difference between political speech and commercial speech? Suppose a candidate for office runs on a platform calling for banning artificial fertilizers on suburban yards; if ChemLawn responds by defending its record of (supposed) environmental sensitivity, is ChemLawn's advertising commercial speech or political speech?Suppose the Town of Carrboro places advertisements encouraging people to do their holiday shopping at locally owned stores in downtown Carrboro - is the commercial speech or political speech?Suppose a local church wants to increase the size of its congregation and they consequently advertise some of the essential beliefs that distinguish them from other churches? Is that commercial speech?
candidate ads
From the summary posted on the town website, it looks like the only political ads allowed are ads for or against a named candidate. Does this mean an ad for or against a referendum would be banned? An ad that said "vote Democratic" or "vote Republican" would be banned (or tip to Marc M "vote Green")
Referendum ads allowed under adopted ad policy
Gerry,I asked Town Attorney Ralph Karpinos this question and he pointed out this section in the certified-as-adopted "Transit Advertising Fee Schedule and Policy." " 3.02 Political Campaign Advertising. Advertising promoting or opposing named candidates for elective office or issues upon which a referendum is being held shall be permissible. All such advertising shall bear conspicuously a paid advertising disclaimer that shall be consistent with the requirements as outlined in Attachment A..."Ed Harrison
thanks for the clairification
so a vote YES (or NO) on transit ad would be OK, but notVote Democratic (or Republican)Hmm.
Finding the correct policy
If I google the term "Transit Advertising Fee Schedule and Policy" and Chapel Hill, the first hit is to the following document: http://www.townofchapelhill.org/Modules/ShowDocument.aspx?documentid=15328I don't think this is the right document since section 3.02 doesn't read like what Ed posted. So in addition to the policy itself, it would appear that there is also a document management problem.
Link to Bus Advertising Policy
See this page, the Council Meeting Summary for 10/24, and look under Bus Advertising Policyhttp://www.ci.chapel-hill.nc.us/index.aspx?page=22&recordid=5605&returnU... I'll let staff know that search engines aren't finding it. Ed Harrison
NC ACLU responds to latest bus ad development
Following the latest development in the Chapel Hill bus ad controversy that Chapel Hill Transit has been enforcing a draft and not a final version of the bus advertising policy, the North Carolina ACLU has sent another letter to Town Attorney, Mayor, and Council Members providing their legal opinion that going forward with this change to enforcing the final policy could be construed as 'viewpoint discrimination'.Here is link to their press release (with link to the full letter at the end)
Update; link to advertising policy
There's now a link to the correct transit advertising policy on the Town of Chapel Hill home page. Ed Harrison
Thanks Ed.
Thanks Ed.
Link to Council meeting agenda item on transit advertising
As posted by the Town Clerk earlier this evening:http://chapelhillpublic.novusagenda.com/Bluesheet.aspx?itemid=2003&meeti... It's the first discussion item. Ed Harrison
NC ACLU remarks at tonight's (11/5/12) Chapel Hill Council Mtg
NC ACLU Legal Director, Chris Brook, made the following remarks tonight during the hearing on the Chapel Hill's bus advertisement policy: