Judges: RICHARD P. IEYOUB
Filed Date: 1/5/2004
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Dear Mr. Fanning:
By telephone conference on August 1, 2003, you requested clarification of certain parts of Attorney General Opinion No. 03-0207. This office has extensively researched the jurisprudence of this State as well as other states and we have not found any case law pertaining to advertisements on publicly owned internet web sites. Nor have we found any Louisiana statutes pertaining to the creation of web sites for public entities, including school boards, in exchange for the sharing of advertising revenues.
The only Louisiana statute we found that pertains to public schools and the internet is R.S.
Attorney General Opinion No. 03-0207 stated that the School Board's web site is an incorporeal movable and that the School Board may therefore dispose of it in accordance with law. It then stated that the only possible authorization for the sale or lease of a school board owned web page was found in R.S.
However, as we now understand the terms of the Ed Web proposal, it does not appear that it would involve a lease or disposition of the School Board's web site. Any advertising would be on the "frontpages," which are owned by Ed Web. In any event, it is not clear that space on the School Board's web pages devoted to advertising procured under the Ed Web contract is a lease or disposition of that space within the context of R.S.
The question then becomes whether there is other authority for the School Board to enter into this contract. We believe that Ed Web is proposing to enter into a service contract with the School Board. Under the proposal, Ed Web will provide services to the School Board, including assisting in maintaining and upgrading, as necessary, the School Board's web site and procuring the advertising. The fees from the advertising will be divided between Ed Web and the School Board. Those advertising revenues paid to Ed Web will be their only compensation under the contract. The School Board does not have to pay Ed Web for their services.
R.S.
As noted above, R.S.
The fact that the School Board will receive a portion of the advertising revenues makes that portion of the proposed contract similar to other arrangements that schools make as part of their fundraising activities. This office has recognized in Attorney General Opinion Nos. 89-589 and 93-456 that individual schools may legally engage in activities designed to raise funds for the schools and that the school boards have the power to set up their own guidelines for fundraising activities.
You requested clarification of our previous opinion as to the discussion of "academic purposes." In Attorney General Opinion No. 93-694, this office considered whether the Ascension Parish School Board could contract for radio broadcasts in one of the parish schools, which broadcasts would air during the lunch hour, class breaks, and pre and post class times. This office ultimately determined that there was no authorization for such a contract. In the discussion, this office reviewed jurisprudence and previous Attorney General Opinions which indicated that parish school boards are without authority to use or utilize any property dedicated to school purposes for any other purpose than that of public education. The opinion found that the jurisprudence seemed to indicate that public authorities can make such casual and incidental use of a building as long as it is not inconsistent with the main purpose for which it was erected.
In the Ascension Parish School Board situation, as in the present case, the purpose of the proposed contract was to obtain additional revenue for the school board. However, there are differences between the facts in Attorney General Opinion No. 93-694 and the present case. First, the purpose of the advertising is to generate revenue not only to pay the School Board, but also to pay for the web site services being provided by Ed Web under its proposed contract. It is the method being used to compensate the contractor for its services, without having to use School Board funds to do so. Second, the web site services being provided relate to the web pages for the School Board and the various schools in the school district, so they are clearly educational in nature. We do not believe that the method being used to pay for the services, the advertising, changes the educational nature of the web pages. To do so would call into question the authority of many of the fundraising activities undertaken by school boards and individual schools, including yearbook and athletic program advertisements, corporate logos on scoreboards and other fundraising activities with corporate involvement, which, as noted above, are clearly permissible. We therefore believe that access by students to the School Board's web pages at school would be permitted, as long as such access is in accordance with the School Board's internet use policy.
Attorney General Opinion No. 03-0207 also raised certain First Amendment concerns. Solicitation is a recognized form of speech protected by the First Amendment. See Schaumburg v, Citizens for a BetterEnvironment,
In Perry Education Assn. v. Perry Local Educators' Assn.,
The right to use government property for private expression depends on whether the property, by law or tradition, has been given the status of a public or nonpublic forum or has been designated for specific official use. The government does not create a public forum by inaction or by permitting limited discourse, but only by intentionally opening a nontraditional forum for public discourse. See Cornelius v. NAACP LegalDefense and Educational Fund, Inc.,
In each of these cases, there was no intent found on the part of the school systems to create a public forum, despite the fact that in each case advertisements were solicited from the general public. In each case, the schools had policies and procedures that governed what sort of advertisements would be acceptable. In the Hazelwood case, the court stated that educators have the right to control expressive activity that "students, parents and other members of the public might reasonably perceive to bear the imprimatur of the school." See Hazelwood,
In Diloreto, the court stated that "government policies and practices that historically have allowed commercial advertising, but have excluded political and religious expression, indicate an intent not to designate a public forum for all expressive activity, but to reserve it for commercial speech." See Diloreto, 196 F.3d at 958.
Therefore, it appears that the School Board's web pages would be a nonpublic forum, and subject to reasonable regulation by the School Board, as long as the School Board does not intend the web pages to be a public forum. We note that the Ed Web proposal contains restrictions on certain types of advertising that can be sold and gives the School Board the right to veto any advertisement. Based on our review of the cases cited above, it would appear that the School Board would not, by virtue of entering into the proposed Ed Web contract, be found to have intended to create a public forum. Commercial advertising on the web sites regulated by the School Board as to content would not convert what was a nonpublic forum into a public forum.
The School Board could therefore place reasonable regulations on the types of advertising that would be permitted, as it has done, as long as the regulations are content based and not based on a particular viewpoint. Regulations that would prohibit persons from expressing a certain viewpoint on a particular topic would be improper, even though the web pages are a nonpublic forum. To avoid this, and to avoid the web pages from being thought of as a public forum in the first place, the School Board should allow only commercial advertisements for products and services on the web pages and should refrain from opening the web pages to expressions of public opinion.
Yours very truly,
RICHARD P. IEYOUB Attorney General
By: ____________________________ ROBERT E. HARROUN, III Assistant Attorney General
United States v. Kokinda ( 1990 )
Village of Schaumburg v. Citizens for a Better Environment ( 1980 )
Louisiana Associated Gen. Contr. v. Calcasieu ( 1991 )
Disposal Systems, Inc. v. Calcasieu Parish School Bd. ( 1971 )
Riley v. National Federation of Blind of North Carolina, ... ( 1988 )
Hazelwood School District v. Kuhlmeier ( 1988 )
Shaw v. Caddo Parish School Bd. ( 1977 )
planned-parenthood-of-southern-nevada-inc-v-clark-county-school ( 1991 )