A campus political group is accusing UCLA of suppressing free speech because the university may impose additional security costs for an event the group plans to hold in November.

The Alliance Defending Freedom, a conservative legal organization representing Bruin Republicans, sent Chancellor Gene Block a letter Monday calling on the university to rescind additional security costs on its upcoming event. The group plans to host Ben Shapiro, a conservative commentator, Nov. 13.

Tyler Fowlkes, the internal vice president of Bruin Republicans, said the university has told the club it will have to pay the security costs for the event if more than 30 percent of its event’s attendees are not affiliated with UCLA. He added the club’s officers could be responsible for the event’s security costs, which he said could be several thousand dollars.

“We’re being (made) financially responsible for something the university should be paying for,” said Fowlkes, a fourth-year political science student.

UCLA spokesperson Tod Tamberg said UCLA’s policies governing safety expenses for campus events state the university will waive basic security costs for an event if at least 70 percent of its attendees are affiliated with UCLA. If less than 70 percent of the event’s attendees are affiliated with UCLA, the university will bill the cost of the event’s security to the student group holding the event.

However, Tamberg added that even if less than 70 percent of the event’s attendees are affiliated with UCLA, the university will pay all incremental security costs associated with protests that may occur in connection with the event.

Fowlkes said UCLA has not given the club a specific estimate of the event’s security costs, and will only do so the week of the event.

“We are forced into a situation where we have to put our names down financially for an undisclosed amount,” he said.

Tamberg said it is sound safety planning to assess security needs as an event date draws closer, and added UCPD may learn additional information about safety and security risks in the next few weeks.

Jordan Sadlier, president of Bruin Republicans and a fourth-year political science student, said even if 70 percent of the event’s attendees were affiliated with UCLA, the group would still have to pay for crowd control and for a third party to oversee ticket sales.

Fowlkes said he thinks it is unfair for the university to use the ratio of UCLA-affiliated individuals attending the event to make its decision on whether to charge the security costs to the club.

“We’re signing for us to be financially responsible for all security costs if we can’t meet a quota that is used subjectively in its implementation and is completely outside our realm of control,” he said.

Sadlier added he thinks the university arbitrarily enforces the policy and is singling out Bruin Republicans for its conservative views.

“This is viewpoint discrimination – they are enforcing this because of the nature of our event,” Sadlier said.

Shapiro, who graduated from UCLA in 2004, is the editor-in-chief of the Daily Wire, a conservative news and opinion website. He also briefly worked as an opinion columnist for the Daily Bruin when studying at UCLA. When Shapiro gave a speech at UC Berkeley last month, the security costs for the event totaled $600,000, according to the Daily Californian.

“Ben Shapiro’s an alumnus. … He preaches to 700,000 people daily on a radio podcast. Clearly, to those people, he’s not controversial,” Fowlkes said.

Fowlkes said UCLA has funded the security costs for other speakers, like Hillary Clinton, who came to campus in 2014.

“Plenty of other groups have brought speakers to campus that are controversial and deemed as high of a status as Ben Shapiro,” he said.

Tamberg said Clinton’s visit to UCLA was not subject to the same policy as the Bruin Republicans event because her speech was not a student-organized event.

Fowlkes said he thinks the university is violating the club’s First Amendment rights by imposing the security costs and said the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that speech cannot be financially burdened.

“Free speech shouldn’t be based on viewpoint and a reaction to a hostile mob,” he said.

Sadlier added he thinks UCLA should fund the event’s security costs because UC Berkeley and the University of California funded the security costs for Shapiro’s event last month.

“(UCLA) should follow the free speech mantra of the (UC) and pay the security costs,” he said.

He added the club has given the university until Friday to respond to its letter, and said the club will determine its next steps after hearing from the university.

Published by Rupan Bharanidaran

Bharanidaran is the News editor. He was previously a news reporter for the campus politics beat, covering student government and the UCLA administration.

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3 Comments

  1. They’re right that it’s viewpoint discrimination. There are several other occasions when UCLA covered security costs for events where less than 70% of participants were UCLA-affiliated.

    UCLA wants to be seen as doing its part in some kind of a resistance. Taking actions like these are not only naked expressions of bias, but unconstitutional. If you can’t handle providing a forum for competing opinions, then you’re not a university, just some adult daycare.

  2. I’m no fan of Ben Shapiro’s ideas, but the University should absolutely cover all the costs. This is a no brainer. He is an intelligent, articulate person whom students and faculty could at least hear out in person. Please, UCLA, step up and support your students regardless of political affiliation!

  3. The link provided by the article consists of regulations (last updated in 2009) about the cost of safety services for student-organized event. It clearly states exactly what Tamberg, the UCLA spokesperson, has said. So UCLA has the rules on its side, on this case.
    We could argue whether those rules are always enforced – obviously the group that is about to be penalized said that they aren’t, but they didn’t bring any evidence on that. Moreover, simply because a rule is not always enforced, it doesn’t mean that it should never be enforced.
    The whole argument about UC Berkeley paying for the fees and hence UCLA should do that too is simply desperation. While they are under the big UC umbrella, each UC has different policies in many aspects of campus life – there is no reason why they should behave the same way simply because it’s convenient for a group to be so.

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