Submitted by abhikavi t3_126wcne in massachusetts
Quick summary for those out of the loop: a recent Supreme Court case ruled that MA citizens have the right to be rude during the time allotted for citizens to speak during town meetings. NYT coverage, paywall bypass link.
My municipality is reacting to the court case by considering pulling Citizen’s Time from meeting agendas. (So much for a win for free speech, huh?)
It sounds like their read on this case is that someone could abuse this time to, say, read Mein Kampf during Citizen’s Time, and they wouldn’t be able to do anything to stop them. The court case left measures like time limiting/mic cutting/etc open; however, my town doesn’t want to be the one sued over it, and I kinda don’t blame them.
And apparently Citizen’s Time isn’t legally required whereas right now, if you do offer it, you can’t impose any kind of restrictions on civility.
I think some of the boards are kind of panicking; they can picture someone coming into the meeting and being horrific and then if they time-limit them or adjourn the meeting, they end up being sued. So they’re all leaning towards removing Citizen’s Time altogether right now and forming subcommittees to come up with legal alternatives where the potential for abuse is less. (Unclear how possible that’ll be.)
I’m writing in to suggest that instead of permanently abolishing Citizen’s Time, they take a show of hands each meeting to remove it from the next meeting’s agenda. (Technically the chairperson can just take it off, but this makes it a group decision and adds some transparency if they choose to ignore the board’s show of hands.) This at least keeps it as a temporary measure until a new plan is in place. I really hate the idea of legally removing it without an alternative formalized.
I’m also suggesting they take emails for now and read them aloud at meetings on request as a temporary alternative to Citizen’s Time; I’m not a lawyer, but it seems like this would give them more discretion, because I can’t imagine a serious lawsuit because someone emailed them Mein Kampf and they refused to read it. But also as a downside, this does give them a lot of discretion (e.g. what if they only accept emails from people they know & like?). It basically relies on their integrity to not restrict free speech; but that still feels better than no option to speak at all.
Are there any better suggestions I could suggest? I understand why they’re worried, but I want to make sure I keep my ability to make a fuss over the font size choices for the new town center sign.
Is anyone else’s municipality having these debates? What are they coming up with?
DumbshitOnTheRight t1_jeb90ef wrote
My personal feeling is to limit each speaker's "Citizen time" to two minutes or so. If they refuse to stop they can then be ejected, same as anyone else disrupting the proceedings.