The bus operator's policy in Bloomington (my current stomping grounds!) is 
slightly less vague that Steve's posting might suggest, although vagueness 
remains a serious problem.  Citing its concerns about creating the appearance 
of favoritism and imposing controversial views on captive audiences, the policy 
limits ads to commercial ads, works of art, and "noncontroversial public 
service announcements."  The policy specifically excludes political ads and ads 
containing "statements of position in support of or in opposition to 
controversial public issues."  I assume the policy could be read to preclude 
not only atheistic messages but also sectarian religious appeals, although 
that's certainly not clear (which tends to support the ACLU's vagueness 
challenge).

Under a more clearly worded policy, could the bus operator exclude all 
political and religious advertising?  Cf. Lehman v. City of Shaker Heights.  Or 
would that be regarded as impermissible viewpoint discrimination, at least as 
to the religious messages?  Cf. Lamb's Chapel, Good News Club, Rosenberger, etc.

Dan Conkle

**********************************************
Daniel O. Conkle
Robert H. McKinney Professor of Law
Indiana University Maurer School of Law
Bloomington, Indiana  47405
(812) 855-4331
fax (812) 855-0555
e-mail con...@indiana.edu
**********************************************

________________________________
From: religionlaw-boun...@lists.ucla.edu 
[mailto:religionlaw-boun...@lists.ucla.edu] On Behalf Of Steve Sanders
Sent: Friday, May 15, 2009 1:12 PM
To: Religionlaw@lists.ucla.edu
Subject: City rejects atheist bus ad as "too controversial"

The Indiana Atheist Bus Campaign is seeking to buy advertising on municipal 
buses with the slogans "In the beginning, man created God" and "You can be good 
without God."  The group explains on its web site (http://inatheistbus.org/), 
"We want to let everyone know that it's all right not to believe in a deity, 
that you do not need to be 'saved,' and that you can be a good person without 
religion.  We hope that everyone will look at the facts and evidence before 
making life decisions, including religion."

The bus operator in Bloomington, IN (my old stomping grounds) refused to accept 
the "You can be good without God" ads because they were "too controversial."  
The Indiana Civil Liberties Union has sued on behalf of the campaign.  See 
http://inatheistbus.org/2009/05/05/bloomington-rejects-you-can-be-good-without-god-lawsuit-underway/
 for links to the complaint and press release.

Bloomington Mayor Mark Kruzan (disclosure: one of my undergrad classmates and 
old friends) says the city legal department won't represent Bloomington 
Transit, which is a separate municipal corporation which contracts with the 
city legal department.  According to the Bloomington Herald-Times, "Kruzan said 
having city legal defend BT in court would amount to 'promoting government 
sanctioned censorship' because the bus service gets city legal's services at an 
hourly rate less than that of a private law firm, which is in essence a partial 
taxpayer subsidy."


_____________________________________

Steve Sanders

Attorney<http://www.mayerbrown.com/lawyers/profile.asp?hubbardid=S597744167>, 
Supreme Court and appellate litigation practice group, Mayer Brown LLP, Chicago

Co-editor, Sexual Orientation and the Law 
Blog<http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/lgbtlaw/>

Adjunct faculty, University of Michigan Law School (Winter term 2010)

Email: steve...@umich.edu<mailto:steve...@umich.edu>

Personal home page: www.stevesanders.net<http://www.stevesanders.net/>





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