Amidon v. STUDENT ASS'N OF STATE UNIV. OF NEW YORK

     05-6623-cv
     Amidon v. Student Ass’n of the State Univ. of N.Y.



1                         UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

2                             FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT

3

4                                 August Term 2006

5        (Argued: March 23, 2007              Decided: November 20, 2007)

6        Docket Nos. 05-6623-cv(L), 05-6664-cv(CON), 06-0117-cv(XAP)

7    -------------------------------------------------------x

 8   ERIC AMIDON, WINSTON BROWNLOW, and COLLEGIAN ACTION LEADERSHIP
 9   LEAGUE OF NEW YORK, by its President,
10
11                           Plaintiffs-Appellees-Cross-Appellants,

12               -- v. --

13   STUDENT ASSOCIATION OF THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT
14   ALBANY, NEW YORK PUBLIC INTEREST RESEARCH GROUP, “NYPIRG,” and
15   PRESIDENT OF THE STUDENT ASSOCIATION OF THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF
16   NEW YORK AT ALBANY, in his official capacity,
17
18                           Defendants-Appellants-Cross-Appellees.

19   -------------------------------------------------------x

20   B e f o r e :     WALKER and B.D.PARKER, Circuit Judges, and CASTEL,
21                     District Judge.*
22

23         Appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court

24   for the Northern District of New York (David N. Hurd, Judge),

25   granting summary judgment to the plaintiffs and denying summary

26   judgment to the defendants on the grounds that the Student


     *
       The Honorable P. Kevin Castel, United States District Judge for
     the Southern District of New York, sitting by designation.
                                    -1-
1    Association of the State University of New York at Albany

2    violated the First Amendment by using an advisory student

3    referendum to determine the amount of funding student

4    associations receive from a pool of mandatory student activity

5    fees.

6         AFFIRMED.

 7                                 THOMAS MARCELLE, Law Office of
 8                                 Thomas Marcelle, Albany, New York,
 9                                 for Eric Amidon, Winston Brownlow,
10                                 and Collegian Action Leadership
11                                 League of New York.

12                                 LEWIS B. OLIVER, Jr., Oliver &
13                                 Oliver, Albany, New York, for the
14                                 Student Association of the State
15                                 University of New York at Albany.

16                                 MICHAEL B. DE LEEUW (Alexander R.
17                                 Sussman, Darcy M. Goddard, Michael
18                                 F. Savicki, Sloan S.J. Johnston,
19                                 Alexis Karteron, on the brief),
20                                 Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver &
21                                 Jacobson LLP, New York, New York,
22                                 for New York Public Interest
23                                 Research Group.

24                                 David C. Vladeck, Georgetown
25                                 University Law Center, Institute
26                                 for Public Representation,
27                                 Washington, D.C., for amicus curiae
28                                 Connecticut Public Interest
29                                 Research Group.

30   JOHN M. WALKER, JR., Circuit Judge:

31        In this appeal from a November 7, 2005 judgment of the

32   United States District Court for the Northern District of New

33   York (David N. Hurd, Judge), we decide whether the Student

34   Association (“SA”) of the State University of New York at Albany

                                    -2-
1    (“SUNY-Albany”) violated the First Amendment by using an advisory

2    student referendum to determine how to allocate funds from a

3    mandatory student activity fee among student organizations.       The

4    district court held that it did.     See Amidon v. Student Ass’n of

5    the State Univ. of N.Y. at Albany, 399 F. Supp. 2d 136 (N.D.N.Y.

6    2005).     For the reasons that follow, we agree.

7                                  BACKGROUND

8            Every semester, SUNY-Albany collects a mandatory student

9    activity fee of $80 from each student, generating approximately

10   $1.69 million annually.     A student who fails to pay this

11   mandatory fee cannot register for classes and has his transcript

12   withheld.     N.Y. Comp. Codes R. & Reg. tit. 8, § 302.14(c)(2).

13   Plaintiffs Eric Amidon and Winston Brownlow enrolled at SUNY-

14   Albany in Fall 2001 and have paid the student activity fee each

15   semester.

16           The SA distributes the funds to recognized student

17   organizations (“RSOs”), of which there are more than one hundred.

18       A regulation issued by SUNY’s Board of Trustees requires the SA

19   to make funding allocation decisions in a viewpoint-neutral

20   manner.     See id. § 302.14(c)(1)(i).1    Since August 2003, the SA


     1
       The collection of mandatory student activity fees is, in the
     first instance, authorized by the Board of Trustees. See N.Y.
     Comp. Codes R. & Reg. tit. 8, § 302.14(a). While the Trustees’
     regulations place some constraints on the manner in which funds
     may be allocated, the distribution of mandatory fees is largely
     delegated to student governments. At SUNY-Albany, the SA has
     adopted provisions in its Constitution and Bylaws establishing
     procedures for allocating funds. We note that the applicable
                                    -3-
1    Constitution has included (1) a requirement that all SA

2    committees and the SA Senate adhere to the principle of viewpoint

3    neutrality, (2) a definition of viewpoint neutrality, (3) a rule

4    that any SA decision violating viewpoint neutrality is “invalid

5    and null and void,” (4) a “standard evaluation form” for

6    submission by RSOs in support of funding requests,2 (5)

7    requirements of public disclosure upon an RSO’s request of any

8    documents relating to a decision denying funding and written

9    statements of the reasons for the denial, and (6) hearing

10   procedures for new and previously unfunded RSOs.    SA Const. §§

11   808, 809.

12        RSOs generally must re-apply for funding every year through

13   one of the following methods:

14        1.     Budget Submission: The RSO may present a budget to the

15               Student Association, which the SA Senate may adopt,

16               reject, or modify.

17        2.     Student Referendum: The RSO may seek funding based upon

18               a campus-wide student referendum in which the RSO asks


     regulations, the SA Constitution and Bylaws, have been amended
     during the pendency of this suit. For the purposes of deciding
     this appeal, we need not discuss the history of those amendments
     in detail; this opinion addresses only the iteration of the
     scheme governing the allocation of student fees that was current
     as of the district court’s decision.
     2
       A standard evaluation form requires an RSO to disclose its
     purpose and function, the size of its membership, whether it
     receives funding from other sources, whether it collects dues
     from members, whether it collects fees from events, and its
     proposed budget and expenses to date.
                                    -4-
1               “whether all students should pay a certain dollar

2               amount” to that organization out of the student

3               activity fund.   To proceed by referendum, the RSO must

4               either obtain a two-thirds vote of the SA Senate or

5               submit a petition signed by at least 15% of the student

6               body.

7         In September 2004, the Trustees amended the regulation

8    governing student activity fees to mandate that while advisory

9    referenda of the student body were permissible in making funding

10   decisions, such referenda could not be binding on the student

11   government.   See N.Y. Comp. Codes R. & Reg. tit. 8, §

12   302.14(c)(1)(i).   In March 2005, the SA adopted Bylaws

13   implementing this rule.     Pursuant to the Bylaws, the SA may use

14   referenda only “to advise [it] regarding the appropriate level of

15   funding and not to determine whether a group will or will not be

16   funded.”   SA Bylaws § 517.1-.2.   The SA Bylaws set forth a

17   nonexclusive set of criteria, to be discussed later, that

18   determine whether the SA should employ the assistance of an

19   advisory referendum to help calculate a particular level of

20   funding.   SA Bylaw § 517.5.

21        Two organizations receive what the plaintiffs characterize

22   as “preferential” treatment.    Dippikill, a non-profit corporation

23   that provides an 861-acre property to the school for various

24   activities, is the subject of an advisory referendum at least

25   every four years and most recently received an allocation of
                                    -5-
1    $210,000.   The second is New York Public Interest Research Group

2    (“NYPIRG”), an RSO whose “mission is to train students in the

3    skills of civic engagement and advocacy through hands-on

4    experience.”   It provides numerous services to SUNY-Albany such

5    as nonpartisan voter registration, homelessness awareness and

6    service campaigns, and a book exchange.    Although it claims to be

7    nonpartisan, plaintiffs assert that it has a “liberal agenda” and

8    an “ideological bent.”    Like Dippikill, its funding is re-

9    assessed every four years by an advisory referendum guaranteed to

10   NYPIRG by the SA.3    In the most recently reported referendum in

11   Spring 2003, the students approved, and the SA Senate allocated,

12   $5 of each student’s $80 fee to NYPIRG.

13        Amidon and Brownlow decided to counter NYPIRG’s “liberal

14   agenda” by establishing the “conservative” RSO College Action

15   Leadership League of New York (“CALL-NY”).    CALL-NY “focuses on

16   affordable and accessible higher education and environmental

17   problems facing the world” and hopes to solve “consumer and

18   environmental problems” by “unleashing the power of the free

19   enterprise system.”    In Spring 2003, Amidon presented a bill to

20   the SA Senate requesting a referendum to the student body on

21   whether $5 per student per semester should be allocated to CALL-



     3
       The parties dispute whether this referendum was advisory prior
     to the 2004 amendments to the New York regulations that resulted
     in the current SA bylaws. We agree with the district court that
     this factual dispute is immaterial to the resolution of this
     case. Amidon, 399 F. Supp. 2d at 148 n.10.
                                    -6-
1    NY.     The SA Senate rejected the bill without adopting any

2    findings.     Undaunted, CALL-NY also sought funding for the 2003-04

3    school year by submitting a proposed budget to the SA, and it was

4    allocated $1,200.

5             Plaintiffs filed suit against the SA on March 9, 2004,

6    alleging violations of their constitutional rights.     The

7    following day, prior to serving the complaint, Amidon once again

8    formally requested that the SA Senate approve a referendum for a

9    $5 per student per semester allocation to CALL-NY.     The SA Senate

10   voted unanimously not to place the CALL-NY funding question on a

11   referendum ballot.     A CALL-NY representative then served the

12   March 9, 2004 summons and complaint upon the SA Senate president.

13       CALL-NY did not otherwise apply for funding for the 2004-05

14   school year.

15           The complaint asserted five claims against the SA under 42

16   U.S.C. § 1983.     Claim I, the focus of this appeal, charged that

17   the use of student referenda to fund and defund RSOs facially

18   violated the First Amendment.4    Plaintiffs sought, inter alia,


     4
        Claim II asserted facial and as-applied challenges under the
     First Amendment to NYPIRG’s guaranteed access to student
     referenda. Claim III alleged that the SA violated the Equal
     Protection Clause by guaranteeing NYPIRG access to the student
     referenda while not doing so for other RSOs. Claim IV alleged
     that the SA violated the Equal Protection Clause by requiring all
     RSOs except NYPIRG to re-apply for funding every year. Finally,
     claim V asserted an as-applied challenge under the First
     Amendment claiming that the SA Senate was impermissibly vested
     with “unbridled discretion” to determine whether an RSO’s funding
     would be the subject of a student referendum.
          In light of its grant of summary judgment to plaintiffs on
                                    -7-
1    declaratory and injunctive relief, nominal damages of $1 for the

2    violation of their constitutional rights, a refund of $5 per

3    plaintiff per semester of their mandatory student activity fees,

4    and attorney’s fees.

5         Plaintiffs moved for summary judgment.    NYPIRG, believing

6    that plaintiffs’ primary goal was to defund it, sought, and was

7    granted, permission to intervene.    NYPIRG and the SA filed cross-

8    motions for summary judgment.

9         The district court granted summary judgment to plaintiffs on

10   claim I.    Amidon, 399 F. Supp. 2d at 153.   The district court

11   held that SUNY-Albany had created a public forum in the form of a

12   fund to support student speech, for which viewpoint neutrality

13   was required.    Id. at 147-48.   It concluded that the use of

14   advisory referenda was facially viewpoint-based because it

15   necessarily “reflect[ed] the majority view of the value of the

16   RSO on the ballot,” did not serve as a proxy for the amount of

17   funding needed, and simply informed the decision makers of public

18   opinion about the group applying for funding.     Id. at 150.

19        NYPIRG and the SA timely appealed, and plaintiffs cross-

20   appealed.

21                                DISCUSSION



     their first claim, the district court dismissed claims II, III,
     and V. See Amidon, 399 F. Supp. 2d at 151-52. The district
     court dismissed claim IV without prejudice because neither party
     presented sufficient evidence to warrant granting summary
     judgment. Id. at 153.
                                    -8-
1            We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de

2    novo.    Town of Southold v. Town of East Hampton, 477 F.3d 38, 46

3    (2d Cir. 2007).    Summary judgment is appropriate when “there is

4    no genuine issue as to any material fact and . . . the moving

5    party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.”     Fed. R.

6    Civ. P. 56(c).    We must construe all the evidence in the light

7    most favorable to the nonmoving party, drawing all inferences and

8    resolving all ambiguities in its favor.      LaSalle Bank Nat’l Ass’n

9    v. Nomura Asset Capital Corp., 424 F.3d 195, 205 (2d Cir. 2005).

10        I.     Constitutionality of the Use of Advisory Referenda

11        We are asked to rule on the constitutionality of the SA’s

12   referendum policy in the context of a facial challenge.       In

13   raising a facial challenge, plaintiffs face a “heavy burden.”

14   Nat’l Endowment of the Arts v. Finley, 524 U.S. 569, 580 (1998)

15   (quoting Rust v. Sullivan, 500 U.S. 173, 183 (1991)).     Facial

16   invalidation is “strong medicine,” Lopez Torres v. N.Y. State Bd.

17   of Elecs., 462 F.3d 161, 205 (2d Cir. 2006), and is used

18   “sparingly and as a last resort.”      Finley, 524 U.S. at 580

19   (quoting Broderick v. Oklahoma, 413 U.S. 601, 613 (1973)).         To

20   prevail, plaintiffs must “demonstrate a substantial risk” that

21   application of the challenged practice or provision will lead to

22   a First Amendment violation.    See id.

23        Plaintiffs’ challenge to the use of advisory referenda is

24   based upon the jurisprudence of compelled speech.     After


                                      -9-
1    discussing compelled speech doctrine in general, we will turn to

2    its application to mandatory student activity fees.

3              A.   Viewpoint Neutrality and Student Activity Fees

4         The First Amendment’s guarantee of freedom of speech

5    includes both the right to speak freely and the right to refrain

6    from speaking at all.   Wooley v. Maynard, 430 U.S. 705, 714

7    (1977); see also Riley v. Nat’l Fed’n of the Blind of N.C., 487

8    U.S. 781, 796-97 (1988).   “If there is any fixed star in our

9    constitutional constellation, it is that no official, high or

10   petty, can prescribe what shall be orthodox in politics,

11   nationalism, religion, or other matters of opinion or force

12   citizens to confess by word or act their faith therein.”     W. Va.

13   State Bd. of Educ. v. Barnette, 319 U.S. 624, 642 (1943).

14   Consequently, individuals may “hold a point of view different

15   from the majority and . . . refuse to foster . . . an idea they

16   find morally objectionable.”   Wooley, 430 U.S. at 715.

17        Because an individual should be allowed to believe as he

18   sees fit without coercion from the state, his First Amendment

19   interests are implicated when the state forces him to contribute

20   to the support of an ideological cause he opposes.    See Abood v.

21   Detroit Bd. of Educ., 431 U.S. 209, 234-35 (1977).    In

22   articulating this right, the Supreme Court has acknowledged

23   Thomas Jefferson’s view that “to compel a man to furnish

24   contributions of money for the propagation of opinions which he

25   disbelieves[] is sinful and tyrannical.”   Id. at 234 n.31
                                    -10-
1    (quoting I. Brant, James Madison: The Nationalist 354 (1948))

2    (internal quotation marks omitted).   Accordingly, the Court has

3    held that teachers’ unions and state bar associations, to which

4    members of those professions are required to pay dues, cannot

5    expend objecting members’ dues on ideological activities not

6    “germane” to their purposes.   See id. at 235-36 (teachers’

7    unions); Keller v. State Bar of Cal., 496 U.S. 1, 13-14 (1990)

8    (state bar associations).

9         The Court has applied similar principles to restrict the

10   ability of public universities to expend funds that students are

11   required to contribute in the form of activity fees.   In Board of

12   Regents of the University of Wisconsin v. Southworth, 529 U.S.

13   217, 222-23 (2000) [hereinafter Southworth I], the University of

14   Wisconsin supported the activities of RSOs through a fund to

15   which every student was required to contribute.   One of the ways

16   the RSO could obtain funding was through binding student

17   referenda on whether the RSO should be funded or defunded.     Id.

18   at 224-25, 235.   Some students challenged the process as

19   violative of their rights to freedom of expression and

20   association because it forced them to contribute to speech

21   activities with which they disagreed.   Id. at 227.

22        The Court upheld the fee, but, for a number of reasons,

23   declined to apply the “germaneness” standard it used to evaluate

24   the expenditures of teachers’ unions and bar associations.    Given

25   that a university seeks, as part of its mission, “to stimulate
                                    -11-
1    the whole universe of speech and ideas,” the standard appeared

2    unworkable.    Id. at 232.   The Court also afforded a degree of

3    deference to the school’s judgment, stating that it “is not for

4    the Court to say what is or is not germane to the ideas to be

5    pursued in an institution of higher learning.”      Id.   The Court

6    was also concerned that its disposition could make the

7    university’s program “ineffective.”     Id.   As a result, the Court

8    did not require the university to allow “each student to list

9    those causes which he or she will or will not support.”      Id.    The

10   Court instead imposed a less onerous safeguard for objecting

11   students borrowed from its analogous public forum cases: Funds

12   from a mandatory student activity fee to support student speech

13   must be allocated in a viewpoint-neutral way.      Id. at 229-30,

14   233-34.

15        The Court left undecided whether the use of a binding

16   referendum to fund or defund an RSO violated the First Amendment.

17   Id. at 235-36.   In dicta, however, the Court stated:

18        It is unclear to us what protection, if any, there is
19        for viewpoint neutrality in this part of the process.
20        To the extent the referendum substitutes majority
21        determinations for viewpoint neutrality it would
22        undermine the constitutional protection the program
23        requires. The whole theory of viewpoint neutrality is
24        that minority views are treated with the same respect
25        as are majority views. Access to a public forum, for
26        instance, does not depend upon majoritarian consent.
27        That principle is controlling here.
28
29   Southworth I, 529 U.S. at 235 (emphasis added).

30             B.     Use of Advisory Referenda

                                      -12-
1         In this case, we are asked to decide whether, on its face,

2    the SA’s advisory student referenda provisions violate Southworth

3    I’s requirement of viewpoint neutrality.

4         As a preliminary matter, we agree with the district court

5    that our decision in Carroll v. Blinken, 957 F.2d 991 (2d Cir.

6    1992), is not controlling.   In that case, students sued SUNY-

7    Albany and NYPIRG because, inter alia, NYPIRG was allocated funds

8    every two years from a pool of student activity fees based upon

9    an advisory student referendum.     Id. at 993-94.   Although we held

10   that the students’ funding of NYPIRG’s activities amounted to

11   compelled speech and association, id. at 997, we concluded with

12   scant analysis that use of the referendum was content-neutral.

13   Id. at 999.   Importantly, we decided Carroll prior to the Supreme

14   Court’s decision in Southworth I – which cast doubt on the use of

15   referenda – and analyzed the funding provision as a regulation of

16   the “non-speech” elements of expressive conduct and a time,

17   place, and manner restriction.    See id. at 999 (citing to both

18   classes of cases).   Given our lack of full explanation in

19   Carroll and the Supreme Court’s intervening decision, we are free

20   to decide anew whether the SA’s use of advisory student referenda

21   discriminates based on viewpoint.     See Mastrovincenzo v. City of

22   N.Y., 435 F.3d 78, 93 (2d Cir. 2006).

23                   1.   Allocation Versus Funding

24        Defendants argue that because the advisory referenda at

25   issue help to determine the amount of funding an RSO receives
                                    -13-
1    rather than whether to fund at all, the referenda do not

2    implicate the First Amendment concerns articulated in Southworth

3    I.   Because, given the nature of the public forum at issue, a low

4    level of funding can have the same impact as no funding at all,

5    we find that this factual difference has no constitutional

6    significance.

7         A pool of student activity fees to fund private speech is a

8    limited public forum in which forum principles apply.

9    Rosenberger v. Rector & Visitors of the Univ. of Va., 515 U.S.

10   819, 830 (1995).   There may be restrictions on speech in a

11   limited public forum so long as they are viewpoint-neutral and

12   reasonable in light of the forum’s purpose, see Make the Road by

13   Walking, Inc. v. Turner, 378 F.3d 133, 143 & n.4 (2d Cir. 2004);

14   see also Bronx Household of Faith v. Bd. of Educ., 331 F.3d 342,

15   351 (2d Cir. 2003), and do not serve as a facade for viewpoint

16   discrimination, Cornelius v. NAACP Legal Def. & Educ. Fund, 473

17   U.S. 788, 812 (1985).   The denial of funding in a viewpoint-

18   discriminatory manner is as impermissible as the denial of access

19   to a physical forum in a viewpoint-discriminatory manner.     See

20   Good News Club v. Milford Cent. Sch., 533 U.S. 98, 110 (2001);

21   see also Rosenberger, 515 U.S. at 830-31, 835.   This proscription

22   on how funds are allocated is compelled partly by the danger to

23   liberty when the state sets out to classify speech and the risk

24   that protected speech will be chilled when school officials “cast

25   disapproval on particular viewpoints of its students . . . in one
                                    -14-
1    of the vital centers for the Nation's intellectual life, its

2    college and university campuses.”      See Rosenberger, 515 U.S. at

3    836.

4           A university’s viewpoint-discriminatory decision respecting

5    how much funding to allocate to an RSO raises the same concerns

6    as a viewpoint-discriminatory decision respecting whether to fund

7    an RSO at all.    The level of funding a group receives may serve

8    as an expression of approval or disapproval of the group’s

9    message.    And the amount allocated to a group, whether a lot or a

10   little, can skew debate on issues on which the group advocates a

11   position.    In this context, a comparatively low level of funding

12   may not be much different than a complete denial of funding.     A

13   parallel lies in the realm of campaign contributions:

14          A restriction on the amount of money a person or group
15          can spend on political communication during a campaign
16          necessarily reduces the quantity of expression by
17          restricting the number of issues discussed, the depth
18          of their exploration, and the size of the audience
19          reached. This is because virtually every means of
20          communicating ideas in today’s mass society requires
21          the expenditure of money.
22
23   Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1, 19 (1976) (per curiam); see also

24   Fed. Election Comm’n v. Nat’l Conservative Political Action

25   Comm., 470 U.S. 480, 493 (1985).

26          The defendants argue that RSOs only have “an equal

27   opportunity to be considered for funding,” but not a “right to

28   equal funding,” and therefore the First Amendment only requires

29   that RSOs have “access” to the fund.     While we do not disagree

                                     -15-
1    with the defendants’ predicates, their conclusion misses the

2    point of Southworth I: A funding decision based on the speaker’s

3    viewpoint is impermissible irrespective of whether the harmed RSO

4    had the same right as any other RSO to be “considered” for

5    funding.

6                    2.   Whether the Referenda Reflect Viewpoints

7         Viewpoint discrimination is a “subset or particular instance

8    of the more general phenomenon of content discrimination,” in

9    which “the government targets not subject matter but particular

10   views taken by speakers on a subject.”   Rosenberger, 515 U.S. at

11   829, 831.   We have no doubt that the student referendum in this

12   case reflects the student body’s majority opinion of the value or

13   popularity of an RSO’s speech.   Indeed, the SA concedes as much

14   in its brief when it states that “[a]ny RSO may use such an

15   advisory referendum in an effort to demonstrate widespread

16   support among the student body for the services provided by an

17   RSO.”   SUNY Blue Br. at 36.

18        It is apparent that any contrary or minority view is at a

19   disadvantage because the referendum simply asks the student body

20   whether an RSO is entitled to a certain amount of funding.    For

21   example, according to an affidavit of NYPIRG’s executive

22   director, NYPIRG’s referendum was used “to gauge whether there is

23   continued support from the student body for the educational

24   programming services and resources provided by NYPIRG.”

25   Similarly, the referenda submitted by CALL-NY asked for a set
                                    -16-
1    amount of funding per student per semester.     Viewpoint

2    discrimination arises because the vote reflects an aggregation of

3    the student body’s agreement with or valuation of the message an

4    RSO wishes to convey.   Cf. Forsyth County v. Nationalist

5    Movement, 505 U.S. 123, 134 (1992) (concluding that a fee for

6    holding an assembly or parade was based on the content of an

7    applicant’s speech because an administrator “‘must necessarily

8    examine the content of the message that is conveyed,’ [and]

9    estimate the response of others to that content” (internal

10   citation omitted)); Ward v. Rock Against Racism, 491 U.S. 781,

11   791 (1989).

12        We reject the defendants’ argument that there is no

13   viewpoint discrimination here because some RSOs simply do not

14   generate any real public interest.     Defendants rely on the

15   Supreme Court’s decision in Arkansas Educational Television

16   Commission v. Forbes, 523 U.S. 666 (1998).     Forbes held that a

17   public television network could exclude an independent

18   congressional candidate who lacked any real public support from a

19   televised debate that included the Democratic and Republican

20   candidates.   Id. at 682-83.   Although the Court held that the

21   televised debate was a nonpublic forum in which viewpoint

22   discrimination was prohibited, it concluded that the candidate’s

23   exclusion was not viewpoint discrimination because he “was

24   excluded not because of his viewpoint but because he had

25   generated no appreciable public interest.”     Id. at 682.
                                     -17-
1         Forbes’ theory of viewpoint neutrality is distinguishable.

2    The Court explained that when the network excluded Forbes from

3    the debate,

 4              objective lack of support, not . . . platform, was the
 5              criterion. . . . A candidate with unconventional views
 6              might well enjoy broad support by virtue of a
 7              compelling personality or an exemplary campaign
 8              organization. By the same token, a candidate with a
 9              traditional platform might enjoy little support due to
10              an inept campaign or any number of other reasons.
11
12   523 U.S. at 683.     Forbes drew a distinction, perhaps subtle,

13   between a candidate’s viewpoint and the degree of interest in

14   hearing the candidate, and concluded, in that context, that one

15   was not necessarily a proxy for the other.

16        Unlike Forbes, the vote in a student body referendum

17   substantially captures one thing: the student body’s valuation of

18   the RSO.   While the policy at issue in Forbes may have skewed

19   debate in favor of charismatic candidates or well-run campaigns,

20   the referendum policy creates a substantial risk that funding

21   will be discriminatorily skewed in favor of RSOs with

22   majoritarian views.    Favoritism of majority views is not an

23   acceptable principle for allocating resources in a limited public

24   forum.   See Rosenberger, 515 U.S. at 835; see also Southworth I,

25   529 U.S. at 235.

26

27                   3.     The Advisory Nature of the Referenda

28        These viewpoint-discriminatory referenda have no place in

29   the funding allocation process, which requires that “minority
                                    -18-
1    views [be] treated with the same respect as are majority views.”

2    Southworth I, 529 U.S. at 235.    The SA conceded at oral argument

3    before the district court that the referendum “really serves no

4    purpose in a viewpoint-neutral decision making process.”    Amidon,

5    399 F. Supp. 2d at 151.   Use of the referendum, on the other

6    hand, can place minority views “at the mercy of the majority.”

7    See Sante Fe Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Doe, 530 U.S. 290, 304 (2000).

8    The SA therefore has no reason to use these purposeless but

9    discriminatory referenda in its allocation decisions.   And we

10   think this is true even when the referenda are advisory.

11        The defendants argue that the First Amendment is offended by

12   the student referenda only when their viewpoint-discriminatory

13   results require a particular funding decision; conversely, they

14   argue, when the referenda are only advisory, the SA is free to

15   disregard the results and maintain viewpoint neutrality.   We

16   disagree: While a decision maker is free to disregard a

17   viewpoint-discriminatory, advisory referendum, this practice

18   nevertheless injects a substantial risk of undetectable viewpoint

19   discrimination into the allocation process.

20        An analogous situation may be found in the constitutional

21   proscription against granting unbridled discretion in the prior

22   restraint context.   The Court prohibits unbridled discretion

23   because it allows officials to suppress viewpoints in

24   surreptitious ways that are difficult to detect.    See Forsyth

25   County, 505 U.S. at 130-31; see also Thomas v. Chicago Park
                                      -19-
1    Dist., 534 U.S. 316, 323 (2002).   In order to make decisions

2    granting or denying permits subject to effective judicial review,

3    there must be “adequate standards to guide the official’s

4    decision.”   Field Day, LLC v. County of Suffolk, 463 F.3d 167,

5    176 (2d Cir. 2006) (quoting Thomas, 534 U.S. at 323).     While we

6    do not require “perfect clarity and precise guidance,” Ward, 491

7    U.S. at 794; see also Field Day, 463 F.3d at 179, a law

8    subjecting speech to a prior restraint must, as a prophylactic

9    matter, contain “narrow, objective, and definite standards to

10   guide the licensing authority.”    Forsyth, 505 U.S. at 131

11   (quoting Shuttlesworth v. Birmingham, 394 U.S. 147, 150-51

12   (1969)).

13        Although the defendants are correct that the Supreme Court

14   has not incorporated the rule against unbridled discretion into

15   the requirement of viewpoint neutrality, the Seventh Circuit’s

16   decision in Southworth on remand from the Supreme Court

17   illustrates the appropriateness of such a rule.     See Southworth

18   v. Bd. of Regents of the Univ. of Wis., 307 F.3d 566, 578 (7th

19   Cir. 2002) [hereinafter Southworth II].   In determining whether

20   the plaintiff had standing to mount a facial challenge to the

21   university’s program, the Seventh Circuit held that “the

22   prohibition against unbridled discretion is a component of the

23   viewpoint-neutrality requirement.”    Id. at 579.   The court

24   engrafted this requirement onto Southworth I’s viewpoint-

25   neutrality test because of the risks of viewpoint discrimination
                                    -20-
1    that attend unbridled discretion and because of the Supreme

2    Court’s application of forum principles to student activity

3    funds.    Id. at 578-80.

4         While there is no need for us to hold that unbridled

5    discretion in general violates Southworth I’s call for viewpoint

6    neutrality, the use of these advisory referenda raises concerns

7    similar to those in Southworth II.     A student referendum

8    incorporated into the RSO funding process provides the SA Senate

9    with a window into how the student body has valued an RSO,

10   increasing the risk that it will make a viewpoint-discriminatory

11   decision to appease its electoral constituents.    Because the

12   referendum incorporated in the funding process is only advisory,

13   courts cannot tell the degree to which the referendum infected

14   the SA’s decision.

15        The Supreme Court has suggested that the use of referenda

16   might be constitutional depending upon “what protection . . .

17   there is for viewpoint neutrality.”     See Southworth I, 529 U.S.

18   at 235.    But here there are no effective safeguards to prevent a

19   discriminatory advisory referendum from tainting the allocation

20   process.    The defendants point to SA Bylaw § 517.5, which

21   provides the following nonexclusive criteria to determine whether

22   the SA should use a referendum to determine funding:

23        1.     “[W]hether the organization can demonstrate that it

24               will expend funds for the enrichment of campus life at

25               [SUNY-]Albany”
                                     -21-
1         2.   “[W]hether the organization can provide services that

2              complement the educational mission of [SUNY-]Albany”

3         3.   “[W]hether the organization can demonstrate that it has

4              undertaken successful events and activities in the

5              past”

6         4.   “[W]hether the organization maintains a constitution or

7              bylaws”

8         5.   “[W]hether the organization is directed by students”

9         6.   “[W]hether the organization can demonstrate sufficient

10             student interest in its activities to warrant a

11             particular level of funding”

12        Just as written criteria alone do not ensure that an

13   official’s discretion is adequately “bridled,” Beal v. Stern, 184

14   F.3d 117, 126 n.6 (2d Cir. 1999), the foregoing criteria do not

15   save the use of advisory referenda.     First, because the criteria

16   are nonexclusive, there is a disconcerting risk that the SA could

17   camouflage its discriminatory use of the referenda through post-

18   hoc reliance on unspecified criteria.     See City of Lakewood v.

19   Plain Dealer Publ’g Co., 486 U.S. 750, 757-58 (1988).     Second, of

20   the enumerated criteria, factors (1) and (2) are too vague and

21   pliable to effectively provide the constitutional protection of

22   viewpoint neutrality required by Southworth I.     In sum, we fail

23   to see how viewpoint-discriminatory referenda can be saved by a

24   nonexclusive set of “safeguards,” some of which are so indefinite


                                   -22-
1    as to be meaningless and thus incapable of providing guidance to

2    student decision makers.

3         The requirement that each RSO complete a standard evaluation

4    form, see SA Bylaw § 513.1, also does not help.       While it

5    provides useful information to the SA, the parties point to no

6    standards governing its use.

7         Finally, the SA Constitution’s general requirement that

8    funding decisions be viewpoint-neutral is insufficient to salvage

9    the process.   SA Const. § 808.    While it is important and useful

10   for the SA to acknowledge the obligations imposed by Southworth

11   I, the bare statement without meaningful protections is

12   inadequate to honor its commands.        It does nothing to help courts

13   identify covert viewpoint discrimination, nor does it prevent

14   self-censorship by timid speakers who are worried that officials

15   will discriminate against their unorthodox views notwithstanding

16   constitutional proscriptions.     Cf. Southworth II, 307 F.3d at

17   578-79.   We acknowledge that the Seventh Circuit in Southworth

18   II held that the student association was not vested with

19   unbridled discretion because the university had an express policy

20   prohibiting viewpoint discrimination, sanctions for the violation

21   of viewpoint neutrality, and imposed procedural requirements for

22   hearings, see id. at 587-88, all of which are present here.       And

23   we do not necessarily disagree with that holding, as far as it

24   goes.   But there was no advisory referendum policy at issue in


                                       -23-
1    that case.   The question was limited to whether the student

2    association had unbridled discretion to make funding decisions.

3         The defendants argue that deference is due to the manner in

4    which schools accomplish their educational missions.     See, e.g.,

5    Hazelwood Sch. Dist. v. Kuhlmeier, 484 U.S. 260, 273 (1988)

6    (upholding the censorship of a high school newspaper where it was

7    “reasonably related to legitimate pedagogical concerns”); Bethel

8    Sch. Dist. No. 403 v. Fraser, 478 U.S. 675, 685-86 (1986)

9    (upholding the disciplining of a high school student for a

10   sexually explicit speech at a school assembly).    But cases like

11   Hazelwood explicitly reserved the question of whether the

12   “substantial deference” shown to high school administrators was

13   “appropriate with respect to school-sponsored expressive

14   activities at the college or university level,” 484 U.S. at 273

15   n.7, where the relation between students and their schools is

16   “different and at least arguably distinguishable.”     See

17   Southworth I, 529 U.S. at 238 n.4 (Souter, J., concurring).     In

18   Southworth I, the Supreme Court established the appropriate

19   degree of deference owed to universities in implementing funding

20   programs by imposing a requirement of viewpoint neutrality rather

21   than germaneness.   See id. at 232-33.    We see no reason to grant

22   the SUNY-Albany additional latitude.

23        The defendants need not be troubled that our views of the

24   matter would prevent a university from allocating its scarce

25   monetary resources unevenly among RSOs.    The demand for proceeds
                                    -24-
1    from SUNY-Albany’s student activity fund will undoubtedly exceed

2    supply.   Southworth v. Bd. of Regents of Univ. of Wis., 376 F.3d

3    757, 772 (7th Cir. 2004) [hereinafter Southworth III].    While

4    economic scarcity cannot justify viewpoint discrimination in

5    funding student activities, Rosenberger, 515 U.S. at 835, we have

6    no concern with differential funding so long as the allocation

7    decisions are made without regard to the recipients’ viewpoints.

8         SUNY-Albany is therefore free to allocate based upon

9    neutral, objective criteria, see Rosenberger, 515 U.S. at 835;

10   Southworth II, 307 F.3d at 595, that ultimately have a disparate

11   impact on different viewpoints so long as the university’s

12   purpose is not to discriminate based on viewpoint.    See Boy

13   Scouts of Am. v. Wyman, 335 F.3d 80, 93-94 (2d Cir. 2003).

14   Because an RSO’s financial needs do not necessarily reflect its

15   viewpoint, the university does not “impermissibly distort[] [its]

16   marketplace of ideas” by considering those needs.     Cf. Davenport

17   v. Wash. Educ. Ass’n, 127 S. Ct. 2372, 2381 (2007).    The SA may

18   therefore consider the varying costs RSOs will face in

19   communicating their messages and providing their services, such

20   as the size of space needed or the costs of distributing programs

21   to attendees.   See Southworth II, 307 F.3d at 595.   If an RSO

22   demands an amount of funding that does not genuinely reflect its

23   costs and needs, the SA is free to provide less.    But the

24   university must ensure that the allocation decision is based upon

25   an RSO’s objective financial needs.
                                    -25-
1         Consistent with public forum principles, our decision does

2    not foreclose the use of advisory referenda that are reasonable

3    in light of the forum’s purpose and viewpoint neutral.    For

4    example, we see no impediment to using an advisory referendum

5    (or, perhaps more aptly labeled, a survey) to ascertain how many

6    students anticipate attending a specific event for which an RSO

7    seeks funding as a means of assessing that RSO’s prospective

8    costs.   The referendum at issue here, which asks simply whether

9    an RSO should receive a certain amount of funding, plainly

10   crosses the line and fails to provide the protection of viewpoint

11   neutrality the constitution requires.

12                     4.   The Use of Advisory Referenda Under Strict

13                          Scrutiny

14        Because the use of the advisory referenda at issue here

15   amounts to viewpoint discrimination, to pass constitutional

16   muster this practice must survive strict scrutiny, cf. Boos v.

17   Barry, 485 U.S. 312, 321 (1988), which requires that the policy

18   be narrowly tailored to serve a compelling governmental interest,

19   Hotel Employees, 311 F.3d at 545; see also R.A.V., 505 U.S. at

20   395; Hobbs v. County of Westchester, 397 F.3d 133, 149 (2d Cir.

21   2005).

22        The defendants do not argue that the advisory referenda

23   serve a compelling purpose; rather, they argue that the SA is

24   free to disregard them to the extent they are viewpoint-

25   discriminatory.    Nor is there a meaningful claim that they are
                                      -26-
1    narrowly tailored to any compelling interest.     Consequently, the

2    district court properly granted summary judgment to plaintiffs

3    and denied summary judgment to the SA and NYPIRG.

4         II.    Use of Binding Referenda in Allocating Funds to NYPIRG

5         Plaintiffs argue on cross-appeal that the SA violated the

6    First Amendment by using a binding referendum to allocate funding

7    to NYPIRG.    We do not reach this issue because plaintiffs were

8    untimely in filing their cross-appeal notice.

9         A cross-appellant must file within (1) 30 days of entry of

10   judgment or (2) 14 days after the filing of the first notice of

11   another party, whichever is later.      Fed. R. App. P. 4(a)(3); see

12   also In re Johns-Manville Corp., 476 F.3d 118, 120 (2d Cir.

13   2007).     Judgment was entered on November 7, 2005, and the SA and

14   NYPIRG filed their notices of appeal on December 6, 2005.

15   Plaintiffs filed their cross-appeal notice on January 5, 2006,

16   beyond the time limit.    Even if it remains an open question

17   whether the non-statutory timing requirement for filing a cross-

18   appeal is jurisdictional after Bowles v. Russell, 127 S. Ct.

19   2360, 2365-66 (2007) (holding that statutory time limits on

20   filing notices of appeal are jurisdictional), we must strictly

21   enforce the time limit if an adverse party invokes it, In re

22   Johns-Manville Corp., 476 F.3d at 121, 123-24, as the defendants

23   have done here.

24                                 CONCLUSION


                                      -27-
1        For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district

2   court is AFFIRMED.




                                  -28-