In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112
B ADGER C ATHOLIC, INC., formerly
known as Roman Catholic Foundation,
UW–Madison, Inc., et al.,
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
Cross-Appellants,
v.
D AVID G. W ALSH , et al.,
Defendants-Appellants,
Cross-Appellees.
Appeals from the United States District Court
for the Western District of Wisconsin.
No. 07-C-505—Lynn Adelman, Judge.
A RGUED O CTOBER 27, 2009—D ECIDED S EPTEMBER 1, 2010
Before EASTERBROOK, Chief Judge, and EVANS and
WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges.
E ASTERBROOK, Chief Judge. The University of Wisconsin
at Madison charges every student a fee, which goes
2 Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112
into funds for extracurricular activities. The fund
dedicated to student services (such as counseling and
tutoring) distributes about $2.5 million annually. Many
of the recipients use the money to offset the costs of
speech: funded organizations include FH King (which
promotes sustainable agriculture), the MultiCultural
Student Coalition (which promotes “social justice and
the principles of unity, integrity, responsibility, and
respect”), and Sex Out Loud (which promotes “healthy
sexuality”). When some students objected to paying
for other students’ speech, the University defended its
program as creating a public forum that advances its
academic mission using viewpoint-neutral criteria. The
Supreme Court accepted this assurance that funds are
distributed without regard to the speakers’ perspectives
and concluded that a neutral, forum-creating program
could be funded by a uniform fee collected from each
student. University of Wisconsin v. Southworth, 529 U.S.
217 (2000).
Among the applicants for funds at the University’s
Madison campus is a student organization that, when
it applied for recognition as a “registered student organiza-
tion” eligible for money, was known as the University
of Wisconsin Roman Catholic Foundation. In 2007
it changed its name to Roman Catholic Foundation,
UW–Madison. Last year the group became Badger
Catholic. We use the current name, which has the
virtue of brevity if not stability. Badger Catholic’s ap-
plication for student-organization status was rejected
because its members and officers included some non-
students, such as a bishop. A reorganization eventually
Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112 3
satisfied the University that students are in control, and
the University’s Chancellor approved Badger Catholic as
a registered student organization in 2007. To be eligible
for reimbursement, a group must submit a budget for
the approval of student government and eventually the
administration. Badger Catholic has had trouble with
this process. Each budget has been rejected at least in
part by the student government, the administration, or
both on the ground that much of Badger Catholic’s
speech is religious in character. The University won’t
pay for three categories of speech: worship, proselytizing,
and religious instruction. It is willing to use student
activity fees for what it calls dialog, discussion, or debate
from a religious perspective, but not for anything that
it labels worship, proselytizing, or religious instruction.
These categories have little meaning on their own, but
examples demonstrate where the University has drawn
the line. One of the district court’s opinions sets out the
six specific programs for which the University has
refused to reimburse any of the group’s expenses.
590 F. Supp. 2d 1083, 1088–89 (W.D. Wis. 2008). One
program is called “mentoring for busy students” and
entails meetings between students and “one of the
spiritual directors for spiritual mentoring/counseling
and to talk about anything they wanted for a half-hour.
The spiritual directors included Catholic nuns and
priests who would offer guidance or prayer if requested
by the student.” Another program was a summer retreat
for leadership training. During the four-day retreat,
three masses were said and four communal prayer
sessions held.
4 Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112
Although the University promised the Supreme Court
in Southworth to distribute funds without regard to the
content and viewpoint of the students’ speech, it has
concluded that this promise does not apply to speech
that constitutes the practice of religion. In response to
Badger Catholic’s suit under 42 U.S.C. §1983, the Univer-
sity (as we call the defendants collectively) contended
that funding for prayer, proselytizing, or religious in-
struction would violate the Establishment Clause of the
First Amendment (applied to the states through the
Fourteenth Amendment), and that the obligation not to
violate the Constitution is a compelling interest that
justifies a departure from neutrality. The district court
concluded, however, that reimbursing the expenses
of religious speakers, through a program equally
available to secular speakers, does not violate the
Establishment Clause, and that, having established a pub-
lic forum (which is how Southworth treats the student-
fee program), the University must not exclude speakers
who want to use the forum for worship. 578 F. Supp. 2d
1121 (W.D. Wis. 2008), reconsideration denied, 590
F. Supp. 2d 1083 (W.D. Wis. 2008).
The court entered a declaratory judgment providing
that the University must reimburse Badger Catholic’s
activities on the same basis as it reimburses other
student groups. The University is free to decline funding
for all summer retreats; if it does not pay for training
workshops over the summer for members of FH King,
it need not pay for Badger Catholic’s retreats either.
Likewise, if the University refuses to fund a group such
as Sex Out Loud that counsels students to engage in
Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112 5
“healthy sexuality” (and distributes contraceptives to
reduce the risk), it need not fund a group that counsels
from a religious perspective. If the University decides
that no student group should receive more than 1% of
the fund, or some dollar cap, it could apply that
neutral rule to Badger Catholic in common with all
other claimants on the limited pot. But having decided
that counseling programs are within the scope of the
activity fee, the University cannot exclude those that
offer prayer as one means of relieving the anxiety that
many students experience.
The district court correctly read the Supreme Court’s
decisions in holding that the University would not
violate the Establishment Clause by funding Badger
Catholic’s programs. Two decisions in particular—Widmar
v. Vincent, 454 U.S. 263 (1981), and Rosenberger v. University
of Virginia, 515 U.S. 819 (1995)—support that conclusion.
The University of Missouri at Kansas City allowed
student groups to use its facilities, but it withheld per-
mission for a group called Cornerstone, which
wanted to use a meeting room for “religious worship
and religious discussion.” Widmar, 454 U.S. at 265.
(Cornerstone’s normal program included “prayer,
hymns, Bible commentary, and discussion of religious
views and experiences”, id. at 265 n.2.) The University of
Missouri contended, just as the University of Wisconsin
has done, that any subsidy to worship would violate
the Establishment Clause—and it added that providing a
rent-free room on campus is a subsidy as surely as the
transfer of cash to pay for renting a room off campus. The
6 Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112
Justices agreed with the premise that a free room is a
form of subsidy but not with the conclusion that a
subsidy violates the Establishment Clause. As long as
the University makes facilities equally available to
secular and sectarian groups, the Court held, there is no
constitutional problem. Indeed, Widmar added, excluding
a religious speaker would amount to content discrim-
ination, which is forbidden in a public forum such as
the one the University had established. Cornerstone
therefore was entitled to a room where its members
could meet, pray, sing hymns, and proselytize.
A decade after Widmar, the University of Virginia
declined to pay for the expense of printing Wide Awake,
a religious newspaper that a student group published in
an effort to educate and convert other students (in
other words, to proselytize). The University of Virginia
conceded that this was content discrimination but con-
tended, just as the University of Wisconsin has, that by
devoting part of the student-activity fund to religious
speech, it would violate the Establishment Clause. Al-
though Widmar was seemingly against it, the University
of Virginia contended that there is a difference of con-
stitutional magnitude between providing services in
kind (such as making meeting rooms available) and
handing over cash or reimbursing a religious speaker’s
expenses. The Supreme Court rejected that effort to
distinguish Widmar, holding that cash and in-kind subsi-
dies must be treated identically. 515 U.S. at 832–34.
And the Court reiterated Widmar’s conclusion that with-
holding support of religious speech when equivalent
Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112 7
secular speech is funded is a form of forbidden view-
point discrimination. Id. at 828–30.
Decisions since Rosenberger reinforce its conclusion
that underwriting a religious speaker’s costs, as part of
a neutral program justified by the program’s secular
benefits, does not violate the Establishment Clause even
if the religious speaker uses some of the money for
prayer or sectarian instruction. One good example is
Zelman v. Simmons-Harris, 536 U.S. 639 (2002), which
held that states may allow school vouchers to be used
at religious schools without violating the Constitution,
when the decision about which school to attend reflects
a private choice about how best to educate children.
Similarly, Good News Club v. Milford Central School, 533
U.S. 98 (2001), held that a school would not violate
the Establishment Clause by providing facilities to a
religious group, which proposed to use them for
singing religious songs, praying, and memorizing scrip-
ture, when the facilities were equally available to
secular groups—and Good News Club added that any
departure from neutrality would be viewpoint discrim-
ination that is forbidden in a public forum, which the
school district created by allowing private groups to use
its facilities. See also Witters v. Washington Department
of Services for the Blind, 474 U.S. 481 (1986) (reimbursing
the tuition of a theology student does not offend the
Establishment Clause, when the scholarship is part of a
program that is neutral with respect to religion and the
student chooses where to use the scholarship).
These decisions dispose of the University’s contention
that, in refusing to fund Badger Catholic’s proposed
8 Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112
activities, it was engaged in content discrimination
rather than viewpoint discrimination. Two district judges
have handled parts of this litigation. Judge Shabaz
called the University’s distinction viewpoint discrimina-
tion. 2008 U.S. Dist. L EXIS 4137 (W.D. Wis. Jan. 17, 2008).
After the suit was transferred when Judge Shabaz
stopped hearing cases, Judge Adelman called it content
discrimination. 578 F. Supp. 2d at 1137. Both judges
thought the discrimination unconstitutional.
The Supreme Court is not always clear about the dif-
ference; in Rosenberger it said that “[v]iewpoint discrim-
ination is [just] an egregious form of content discrim-
ination.” 515 U.S. at 829. Elsewhere it has held that
content discrimination can be part of a lawful system
of allocating limited funds; this is why a university
could decline to pay for any retreats or counseling, if the
content of the speech would place it outside the scope
of the program. (One example, from Christian Legal Society
v. Martinez, 130 S. Ct. 2971, 2998 (2010) (Kennedy, J.,
concurring): A university can decline to pay for an art
historian to address a conference devoted to public
transit, because the art historian’s perspective is outside
the scope of the conference.) A university can define
the kind of extracurricular activity that it chooses to
promote, reimbursing, say, a student-run series of silent
movies and a debate team, while leaving counseling to
the student-health service that the university operates
itself. But the University of Wisconsin has chosen to pay
for student-led counseling, and its decision to exclude
counseling that features prayer is forbidden under
Widmar and its successors. The label applied to that
discrimination is unimportant.
Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112 9
Although the University’s main theme in the dis-
trict court was that reimbursement would violate the
Establishment Clause, its main theme on appeal is that
a public agency is entitled to withhold funds from
religious speech, even though not commanded by the
Establishment Clause to do so. Zelman held that a state
is entitled to offer school vouchers that can be cashed at
sectarian schools but not that it is required to do so. Argu-
ments such as Professor (then judge, and now professor
again) McConnell’s that the Constitution requires a state
to follow a principle of neutral funding have not
carried the day at the Supreme Court. See Michael W.
McConnell, The Selective Funding Problem: Abortions and
Religious Schools, 104 Harv. L. Rev. 989 (1991).
One recent illustration of the Justices’ willingness to
allow states to exclude some religious uses from
public expenditures is Locke v. Davey, 540 U.S. 712 (2004).
A state program of college scholarships had a proviso:
the money could not be used to study for the ministry.
The Court held that although the state could have
allowed the money to be spent for studies in devotional
theology (citing Witters), the restriction was compatible
with the Free Exercise Clause, because “there are some
state actions permitted by the Establishment Clause but
not required by the Free Exercise Clause.” 540 U.S. at 719.
By choosing not to use public funds to train ministers,
the state was making a choice no different from operating
a university that includes a department of philosophy
but not a department of theology or a seminary. The
University of Wisconsin contends that it has made the
sort of choice that Locke approved.
10 Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112
That’s not entirely right, and for two reasons. First, the
Court stressed in Locke that the state’s program did not
evince hostility to religion. The scholarships could be
used at pervasively sectarian colleges, where prayer and
devotion were part of the instructional program; only
training to become a minister was off limits. 540 U.S.
at 724–25. The University of Wisconsin, by contrast, does
not support programs that include prayer or religious
instruction. Second, and more importantly, the state’s
decision in Locke concerned how to use funds over
which it had retained plenary control. Choosing which
programs to support and which not, whether by having
a department of philosophy but not a seminary, or by
granting scholarships to study theology but not prepare
for the ministry, is a form of government speech. See
Pleasant Grove v. Summum, 129 S. Ct. 1125 (2009); Illinois
Dunesland Preservation Society v. Illinois Department
of Natural Resources, 584 F.3d 719 (7th Cir. 2009).
That’s why Locke declared that public-forum analysis
was “simply inapplicable.” 540 U.S. at 720 n.3. But the
University of Wisconsin is not propagating its own mes-
sage; it has created a public forum where the students,
not the University, decide what is to be said. And
having created a public forum, the University must
honor the private choice.
Readers who think that this line is overly formalistic—
selective funding as permissible public choice, versus
selective funding as impermissible restriction on
private choice in a public forum—must recall that the
University of Wisconsin itself persuaded the Supreme
Court to hold that dissatisfied students are not entitled
Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112 11
to get their student-activity fees back, precisely because
the fees are used to operate a public forum in which
students themselves, and not the University, decide what
is to be said. The Supreme Court gave its imprimatur in
Southworth, with the proviso that the University must
establish neutral rules and not shut out any perspective
that is within the program’s general definition of extra-
curricular student activity. Just as there is a big difference
between a university as publisher of its own newspaper
and as censor of a student paper—the university may
choose as publisher what goes into the alumni news but
cannot censor a paper or selectively decline to pay where
students are the publishers, see Hosty v. Carter, 412 F.3d
731 (7th Cir. 2005) (en banc)—so a university cannot
shape Badger Catholic’s message by selectively funding
the speech it approves, but not the speech it disap-
proves. Once it creates a public forum, a university
must accept all comers within the forum’s scope. This is
why, in another decision arising from the University of
Wisconsin’s fee system, we held that the University
is not entitled to exercise a general discretion over
which groups can draw on the funds. See Southworth v.
University of Wisconsin, 307 F.3d 566 (7th Cir. 2002).
The University’s assurance that it will fund discussion
and debate, including discussion with a religious compo-
nent, because it views discussion and debate as an im-
portant part of education, coupled with a declaration
that there is just too much devotional activity in
Badger Catholic’s program, leads us to wonder how the
University would deal with an application by a student
group comprising members of the Society of Friends.
12 Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112
Quakers view communal silence as religious devotion,
and a discussion leading to consensus as a religious
exercise. Adherents to Islam and Buddhism deny that
there is any divide between religion and daily life; they
see elements of worship in everything a person does.
Now maybe Quakers, Muslims, and Buddhists scorn
the University’s largesse (as Badger Catholic did until
2003), but a constitutional rule must be general enough
to handle all sorts of religion and all choices by student
groups.
We deferred action on this appeal while the Supreme
Court had Christian Legal Society under advisement. It
is the latest in the sequence, beginning with Healy v.
James, 408 U.S. 169 (1972), and extending through
Widmar, Rosenberger, and Southworth, in which colleges
or universities set limits on what student organizations
they would recognize and fund. Healy, which forbade
viewpoint discrimination, did not concern religion, so
we have not discussed it. All the other cases in this se-
quence concern student groups that engage in sectarian
speech. We wanted to see whether the Court would
modify the approach articulated in Widmar, Rosenberger,
and Southworth. The Court left that approach in place
and reiterated the norm that universities must make
their recognition and funding decisions without regard
to the speaker’s viewpoint. The Justices divided on the
question whether Hastings College of the Law had satis-
fied the neutrality requirement, but no Justice disagreed
with the propositions that “[a]ny access barrier must
be reasonable and viewpoint neutral” (130 S. Ct. at 2984)
Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112 13
and that “singl[ing] out religious organizations for dis-
advantageous treatment” (id. at 2987) is permissible only
if the requirements of “strict scrutiny” can be satisfied.
Christian Legal Society described Widmar as a case
holding that refusing to allow “religious worship and
discussion” in a public forum is forbidden viewpoint
discrimination (ibid.). There can be no doubt after
Christian Legal Society that the University’s activity-fee
fund must cover Badger Catholic’s six contested
programs, if similar programs that espouse a secular
perspective are reimbursed.
This conclusion disposes of the University’s appeal.
Badger Catholic has filed a cross-appeal seeking addi-
tional relief. It asked the district court for damages and
an injunction; the judge awarded only a declaratory
judgment. The request for damages founders on the
Supreme Court’s decision that a state (including a state
official sued in an official capacity) is not a “person” for
the purpose of §1983, see Will v. Michigan Department
of State Police, 491 U.S. 58 (1989), which means that dam-
ages from the state treasury are not available under that
statute. See, e.g., Lapides v. University System of Georgia,
535 U.S. 613, 617–18 (2002); Arizonans for Official
English v. Arizona, 520 U.S. 43, 69 (1997). The University of
Wisconsin is part of the state, Wis. Stat. §§ 36.01–36.62;
Southworth, 529 U.S. at 221, so damages cannot be
awarded under federal law.
Badger Catholic sees two ways around this. One is
damages from the defendants in their individual capaci-
ties. The district court held, however, that in this capacity
14 Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112
the defendants enjoy the benefit of official immunity.
Divided decisions such as Christian Legal Society and
Locke show that this corner of the law cannot be regarded
as so clear that personal liability is appropriate. “If
judges . . . disagree on a constitutional question, it
is unfair to subject [public officials] to money damages
for picking the losing side of the controversy.” Wilson
v. Layne, 526 U.S. 603, 618 (1999). Accord, Pearson v.
Callahan, 129 S. Ct. 808, 823 (2009).
Badger Catholic’s other avenue to damages is state
law. After the University declined to reimburse some of
its expenses in earlier academic years, the parties
reached an agreement under which Badger Catholic’s
requests would be reconsidered. Badger Catholic
contends that the University has not kept its promise,
and that it is entitled to compensation for breach of con-
tract. Here its problem is that it did not give the
notices required by Wisconsin law. Wis. Stat. §16.007
(claims against the state), §893.82(3) (claims against state
employees). Badger Catholic concedes that it did not
follow the state’s procedures but contends that noncompli-
ance should be excused because the state knew what
relief it wants. We agree with the district court, however,
that Wisconsin does not have a doctrine of constructive
compliance; it requires strict performance of all statutory
conditions to recovering on a contract with the state.
Wis. Stat. §893.82(2m); Riccitelli v. Broekhuizen, 227 Wis. 2d
100, 116, 595 N.W.2d 392, 399 (1999) (treating this statute
as jurisdictional and therefore not amenable to excep-
tions or excuses).
Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112 15
As for the choice between declaratory judgment and
an injunction: that’s a matter left to the district judge’s
discretion, see eBay Inc. v. MercExchange, L.L.C., 547 U.S.
388 (2006), which was not abused. A declaratory judg-
ment cannot be enforced by contempt proceedings, but
it has the same effect as an injunction in fixing the par-
ties’ legal entitlements. See Steffel v. Thompson, 415 U.S. 452,
466–71 (1974). Badger Catholic fears that the University
will attempt to dance around the declaratory judgment,
as it has retreated from its assurance to the Supreme
Court in Southworth that the program is implemented
without regard to the speakers’ views. A litigant who
tries to evade a federal court’s judgment—and a declara-
tory judgment is a real judgment, not just a bit of
friendly advice—will come to regret it. The problem
with issuing an injunction straight off is that the details
required by Fed. R. Civ. P. 65(d)(1)(C) would be con-
siderably more elaborate than the terms of a declara-
tory judgment. The district judge was not looking
for an opportunity to take over management of the
University’s activity-fee program. If the entry of a regula-
tory injunction can be avoided by a simpler declaratory
judgment, everyone comes out ahead. See Horne v.
Flores, 129 S. Ct. 2579, 2593–95 (2009) (discouraging the
use of regulatory injunctions in litigation against parts
of state government). If Badger Catholic’s fears come to
pass, then more relief lies in store. For now, however, a
declaratory judgment suffices.
A FFIRMED
16 Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112
W ILLIAMS, Circuit Judge, dissenting. The University
of Wisconsin at Madison has created a forum by designat-
ing funds with the goal of enhancing the educational
and extracurricular experience of its students. The line
it has drawn in defining the limits of its forum is view-
point neutral and constitutionally sound—it neutrally
allows each student group equal access to the student
fund as long as the group identifies activities that are
reasonably within the goals of the limited forum it has
created. Because I believe the panel’s opinion fails to
recognize the University’s power to define the purposes
and goals of its own forum, I respectfully dissent.
I.
As an initial matter, I believe it is important to set out
a brief background on forum analysis and Free Speech,
and to be absolutely clear on what the University will
and will not fund and where it draws the line. The Con-
stitution does not guarantee an unlimited freedom for
private speakers on government property, and sorts
government properties into three categories to determine
the level of review: traditionally public fora, designated
public fora, and limited public fora. Christian Legal
Society v. Martinez, 130 S. Ct. 2971, 2983 n.11 (2010);
Choose Life Ill., Inc. v. White, 547 F.3d 853, 864 (7th Cir.
2008). Speakers may only be excluded from a tradi-
tionally public forum such as a park or a public street if
the exclusion meets strict scrutiny. Choose Life Ill., Inc.,
547 F.3d at 864 (citations omitted). Strict scrutiny also
applies when a governmental entity creates a “designated
Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112 17
public forum” by intentionally opening a nontraditional
space for public discourse. Id. The third category of fora
is the limited public forum, in which the governmental
entity opens property for the use by certain groups or
dedicated to the discussion of certain subjects. Id. In
this limited forum, content discrimination against entire
subject matters is permissible when it preserves the
purpose of the forum, but viewpoint discrimination
is not permitted against speech otherwise within the
forum’s limits. Rosenberger v. Rector & Visitors of the Univ.
of Va., 515 U.S. 819, 829-30 (1995). A student activity fee
such as the one here undisputedly creates a limited
public forum, Christian Legal Society, 130 S. Ct. at 2984,
and not a generally open one.
The University’s forum funds activities that enhance
the students’ educational and extracurricular campus
experiences. The panel begins by stating that the Univer-
sity must reimburse Badger Catholic’s activities on
the same basis it reimburses other student groups. And
it does, irrespective of the group’s religious perspective.
The panel is correct that the University offers funding
for training workshops during the school year and sum-
mer breaks, but Badger Catholic is also free to access that
funding and it has. For example, in the 2007-08 year,
Badger Catholic was reimbursed for events titled “Leader-
ship Training Group” and “Mary House Overnight.”
Badger Catholic is also free to access funding that is
provided to student groups that offer student counseling.
Just as Sex Out Loud could access the forum to counsel
students on “health sexuality,” Badger Catholic could
access the forum for activities that counseled students
18 Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112
from a religious perspective. In the 2007-08 year, Badger
Catholic was reimbursed for various small groups such
as “Breakfast Club,” “Catholic Student Union,” “New
Student Welcome” and “Sunday Night Sexuality.”
The University pointedly does not exclude events or
activities from the forum because they approach leader-
ship training or counseling from a religious perspective.
In fact, Badger Catholic was reimbursed for the vast
majority of the funding it sought in the relevant year,
an amount of money totaling 9% of the total fund.
What the University has not funded are six activities
that do not merely involve, but are mostly “worship,
proselytizing or prayer” because those activities do not
further the forum’s goals. Our task is to determine
whether this line is both viewpoint neutral and rea-
sonable in light of the forum’s purpose of enhancing
the students’ educational and extracurricular campus
experience.
II.
As the panel notes, the Supreme Court recently had the
opportunity to revisit and summarize its jurisprudence
on the limited public forum in Christian Legal Society v.
Martinez, 130 S. Ct. 2971 (2010). I cannot agree, however,
with the panel’s conclusion that “there can be no doubt”
that Christian Legal Society decides the issue here and
believe it is worth taking time to discuss the Court’s
approach to and application of the limited public forum
analysis in a public university setting.
Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112 19
In Christian Legal Society, the Court discussed the pro-
gression of the law in three cases that define the cur-
rent limitations on a public university’s limited forum. In
Healy v. James, 408 U.S. 169 (1972), the Court held that a
public educational institution exceeds constitutional
bounds when it restricts speech simply because it finds
the views expressed by a group to be abhorrent. Then, in
Widmar v. Vincent, 454 U.S. 263 (1981), the Court relied on
Healy and held that a university could not single out
religious organizations for disadvantageous treatment
as compared to the treatment offered to secular groups.
In reaching this holding, the Court emphasized that a
“university’s mission is educational and decisions of
this Court have never denied a university’s authority
to impose reasonable regulations compatible with that
mission upon the use of its campus and facilities.” Widmar,
454 U.S. at 268. Finally, in Rosenberger v. Rector and
Visitors of the University of Virginia, 515 U.S. 819 (1995), the
Court held that the school had selected journalistic
efforts with religious editorial viewpoints and im-
permissibly treated them differently than other
journalistic efforts. Put concisely, the Court’s position
after the Healy, Widmar, and Rosenberger line of cases
stands for the idea that “a university generally may not
withhold benefits from student groups because of their []
outlook.” Christian Legal Society, 130 S. Ct. at 2988. The
states retain the right to preserve the property under
their control, however, and they can prevent access to a
self-created forum, as long as “any access barrier” is
“reasonable and viewpoint neutral.” Id. at 2983.
20 Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112
The panel principally relies on Widmar, but it is im-
portant to clarify the circumstances in which that case
arose. Under an Establishment Clause analysis, Widmar
held that there is no constitutional problem if a school,
with a “generally open” forum, allows a religious group
to use a room on a basis open to every other group.
Widmar, 454 U.S. at 274-75. In Widmar, the Court empha-
sized the University’s creation of a “generally open”
forum, id. at 267-68, and specifically stated that the
basis for its decision was “narrow,” id. at 276. Because
it viewed the forum as being akin to a public park, it
applied a strict scrutiny analysis in finding that the
state’s interest was not sufficiently compelling to
exclude religious groups where all other student
groups had access. Id. at 269-70. The Widmar Court did
refer to the university-created forum as a “limited public
forum” in passing, id. at 272, but the Court confirmed
that it was a case involving restricted access to a public
forum in the next year, Perry Educ. Ass’n v. Perry Local
Educators’ Ass’n, 460 U.S. 37, 45-46, 49 n.9 (1983). The
Supreme Court’s forum analysis has evolved greatly
since then, and now, governmental entities can block
access to a limited public forum as long as the neutral
barrier is viewpoint neutral. Christian Legal Society, 130
S. Ct. at 2983.
The panel reaches its conclusion that the University is
engaging in viewpoint discrimination by stating that
purely religious activities have “little meaning on their
own” and cannot be meaningfully distinguished from
the categories of “dialog, discussion or debate from a
religious perspective” funded by the University. Op. at 3.
Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112 21
This conclusion degrades religion and the practice
of religion. See Bronx Household of Faith v. Bd of Educ., 492
F.3d 89, 102 (2d Cir. 2007) (Calabresi, J., concurring)
(“Prayer and worship services are not religious view-
points on the subjects addressed in Boy Scout Rituals or
in Elks Club ceremonies. Worship is adoration, not
ritual; and any other characterization of it is both pro-
foundly demeaning and false.”). If religion, and the
practice of one’s religion, can be described as merely
dialog or debate from a religious perspective, what
work does the Free Exercise clause of the First Amend-
ment do? The Free Speech clause, which provides con-
stitutional protection of the right to discuss and debate
views, would sufficiently protect the right of people to
have “dialog, discussion or debate from a religious per-
spective.” That cannot be right, and that religion is not
set apart from other forms of dialog or discussion has
never been the position of the Supreme Court. See Sch.
Dist. of Abington Township v. Schemmp, 374 U.S. 203, 217-
218 (1963) (discussing the importance of the First Amend-
ment’s Free Exercise clause); Everson v. Board of Educa-
tion, 330 U.S. 1, 9-13 (1947) (discussing the history of the
First Amendment and religious liberty in America).
Moreover, there is no need to get into a theological
debate about what worship means and whether there
is truly a secular equivalent to worship. The University
does not deny money to Badger Catholic for expressing
the Catholic version of worship; it denies money to any
group to practice its version of worship. If, as Badger
Catholic claimed at oral argument, a secular form of
worship is possible (for example, a group self-identifies
22 Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112
as “worshipping” the Yankees), then the University
would have the same neutral basis for declining to
fund that specific worship activity. As should be clear
by now, I have no argument and agree wholeheartedly
with the Supreme Court’s understanding and view that
religion can be a perspective or lens for discussing per-
missible topics. Good News Club, 533 U.S. at 111 (“[W]hat
matters for purposes of the Free Speech Clause is that
we can see no logical difference in kind between the
invocation of Christianity by the Club and the invoca-
tion of teamwork, loyalty or patriotism by other associa-
tions to provide a foundation for their lessons.”) (emphasis
added); Rosenberger, 515 U.S. at 831 (“Religion may be
a vast area of inquiry, but it also provides, as it did here,
a specific premise, a perspective, a standpoint from
which a variety of subjects may be discussed and consid-
ered. The prohibited perspective, not the general subject
matter, resulted in the refusal to make third-party pay-
ments, for the subject discussed were otherwise within
the approved category of publications.”).
The constitutional question, however, is whether the
University is disallowing groups to express a particular
view on a permissible forum topic or whether it is dis-
allowing groups to express any view on a particular
topic. The former is unconstitutional viewpoint discrim-
ination, the latter is constitutionally-permitted content
discrimination. And content discrimination is what
the University is engaging in here by not funding any
worship. The category can be discussed and considered
from many standpoints and perspectives, as it always
has been. See, e.g, Zelman v. Simmons-Harris, 536 U.S. 639,
Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112 23
723 (2002) (Breyer, J., dissenting) (observing that this
country boasts more than 55 different religious groups
with a significant number of members); Sch. Dist. of
Abington Township v. Schemmp, 374 U.S. 203, 214 (1963)
(“Today authorities list 83 separate religious bodies . . . .”).
The University is not withholding benefits from Badger
Catholic because it has a religious perspective. Badger
Catholic would only have a claim of viewpoint discrimina-
tion if the University was choosing to allocate funding
for Presbyterian or Baptist or Jewish religious services
but declining to fund Catholic worship services, for
example, but that is not the case here.
Of course, excluding purely religious practices as a
permissible use in the forum has a disparate impact on
religious groups, as they may be the only groups who
would wish to use the forum for worship. But, it is a
“basic tenet of First Amendment law” that disparate
impact does not, in itself, constitute viewpoint discrim-
ination. Christian Legal Society, 130 S. Ct. at 2971. And
forcing the forum to be open to purely religious activities
would have the converse effect of disparately impacting
non-religious student groups. As the panel states, this
is what the Constitution forbids: “withholding support
of religious speech when equivalent secular speech is
funded is a form of forbidden viewpoint discrimination.”
Op. at 6-7 (citing Rosenberger, 515 U.S. at 828-30) (emphasis
added). Here, there is no equivalent secular speech
funded. To exclude purely religious activities is a cate-
gorical, neutral exclusion.
The limited forum here is meant to further the educa-
tional and extracurricular experience of students, and
24 Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112
the forum is limited by the amount of money in the
fund. The University has the discretion to decide that
certain activities are worth funding over others, so long
as its decision-making criteria is viewpoint neutral. As
its funds are limited, it is forced to make these decisions
all the time, and generally, these decisions do not take
on a constitutional dimension even if one group is
denied funding. Cf. Widmar, 454 U.S. at 278-79 (Stevens, J.,
concurring) (“[I]f two groups of 25 students requested
the use of a room at a particular time—one to view
Mickey Mouse cartoons and the other to rehearse an
amateur performance of Hamlet—the First Amendment
would not require that the room be reserved for the
group that submitted its application first.”). Although a
University cannot systematically deny or discriminate
against any group for its views, it can draw lines and
make hard decisions about funding. Given the limits
and goals of the forum, the University’s decision to
draw that line at a category such as purely religious
activity is not unconstitutional. Our task is merely to
decide whether that decision was viewpoint neutral, and
it was. As Justice Stevens stated when discussing the
registered student organization program at Hastings:
The RSO forum is no different. It is not an open
commons that Hastings happens to maintain. It is
a mechanism through which Hastings confers
certain benefits and pursues certain aspects of its
educational mission. Having exercised its discre-
tion to establish an RSO program, a university
must treat all participants evenhandedly. But
the university need not remain neutral—indeed
Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112 25
it could not remain neutral—in determining
which goals the program will serve and which
rules are best suited to facilitate those goals. There
are not legal questions but policy questions; they
are not for the Court but for the university to make.
Christian Legal Society, 130 S. Ct. at 2998 (Stevens, J., con-
curring).
The problem, if any, with excluding worship as a cate-
gory of speech from its forum would lie in how the Uni-
versity and its fund administrators decide which ac-
tivities constitute “purely religious activity” and which
activities use a religious perspective to approach a more
generally accessible purpose. See Faith Ctr. Church Evange-
listic Ministries v. Glover, 480 F.3d 891, 918 n.18 (9th Cir.
2007) (discussing the “specter of inevitable government
entanglement” when the county “encounters some
future application who is less than candid” about its
reasons for accessing the forum). The University must
allow religious student organizations to tackle issues
and debates from their religious perspective, and it rec-
ognizes the difficulty in trying to decide which activities
include prayer and proselytizing and worship and
which activities are pure religious practice. But, contrary
to the panel’s repeated assertion that the University
itself has labeled certain activities as off-limits, the Uni-
versity plays no role in labeling activities. Nor has
it refused to pay for activities simply because they
“feature prayer.” Op. at 8. It instead asks the student
groups to self-identify those activities that are worship,
proselytizing, and prayer and then it only declines to
26 Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112
fund such activities. There is no dispute here that the
only funds Badger Catholic argues it should have received
are those it described to the University when it first
requested funding as involving worship, proselytizing,
and prayer. The University even acknowledges that
Badger Catholic could describe Catholic Mass as “Catholic
perspectives on the world,” and that would probably be
funded, because the University does not test or push
the group when it self-defines an activity. But, when a
group self-identifies an act and elevates it as worship,
then the University rightly respects that.
The funding in dispute is not money that is being used
to program events for the campus, for the organization’s
members, or for overhead costs of keeping the group
running or recruiting new members. This is money
for items self-described as including Mass, the purchase
and distribution of rosary booklets, a retreat described
as an Evangelical Catholic Institute to train attendees
how to evangelize, and private sessions with visiting
priests and nuns from Italy.
The self-identification also takes care of a problem
that the panel sees with Quakers, Buddhists, and other
religions that see no line between religion and daily life.
If the campus Quakers put in a request to have their
worship reimbursed, the University would decline to
fund that request. If on the other hand, the Quakers
described their activity as a discussion with the hopes
of coming to a consensus (see Op. at 11-12), they would
have access to the forum. This decision is left to the group,
and thus, respects the ability of groups to define and
practice their religions. Under the panel’s view, once a
Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112 27
public university has created a forum, there is no way
for it to constitutionally limit its forum to anything; it
becomes a generally open forum. It must now fund the
worship activities of every group, which opens the
forum to funding requests for the day-to-day activities
of those groups who believe day-to-day activities consti-
tute worship. The panel has effectively commanded
the University to enlarge its forum to include the
worship and other purely religious activities of every
student group.
My belief that the category of “purely religious activity”
is viewpoint neutral is not a call for return to a strict
separation between church and state. See John Witte, Jr.,
That Serpentine Wall of Separation, 101 Mich. L. Rev. 1869,
1903 (2003) (remarking on the Supreme Court shift from
a “wall of separation” between church and state to
other principles of religious liberty such as neutrality
and accommodations). It instead reflects an under-
standing that the University has made a choice to limit
its forum, in a constitutionally acceptable matter, by not
allowing a group access to the fund in a way that is not
accessible to every group. The Supreme Court has stated
that when access barriers are viewpoint neutral, it is
significant that “other available avenues for the group to
exercise its First Amendment rights lessen the burden
created by those barriers.” Christian Legal Society, 130 S. Ct.
at 2991. Here, the barrier does not create any barrier
for Badger Catholic and other student groups to exercise
their First Amendment rights. And contrary to the
panel’s suggestion that it may not be able to believe the
University when it tells us it will fund discussions with
28 Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112
religious components, Op. at 11, we can, because the
University does, and it generously does so. The vast
majority of the services and educational opportunities
that Badger Catholic, for example, provides are funded
by the University, to the tune of some $200,000 per year.
The forum the University has created is viewpoint
neutral and reasonable, and that satisfies its constitu-
tional obligations. As Justice Ginsburg pointed out in
Christian Legal Society, “[o]ur inquiry is shaped by the
educational context in which it arises” and judges
should “resist substituting their own notions of sound
educational policy for those of the school authorities
which they review.” 130 S. Ct. at 2988 (internal quota-
tions and citations omitted). She continues, “Schools,
we have emphasized, enjoy a significant measure of
authority over the type of officially recognized activities
in which their students participate.” Id. at 2989. With
deference to the school’s attempt to distribute limited
funds from a student body restless with the continu-
ously increasing tuition and fees, it is reasonable that
the school in this case decided that if a group self-
identifies activities as worship, the University will not
inquire further. It will simply not fund, gift or contribute
to that which the group has self-identified as being
outside the limits of the public forum the school has
created.
III.
The panel also states that the University would not
violate the Establishment Clause by funding Badger
Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112 29
Catholic’s purely religious activities. Op. at 9. I agree
with the panel that this is true, because a state can
choose to create an unlimited public forum, Pleasant
Grove City v. Summum, 129 S. Ct. 1125 (2009), and this
would pass the well-known test from Lemon v.
Kurtzman, 403 U.S. 602 (1971). Generally speaking, a
state would not violate the Establishment Clause by
opening such a forum because the forum would have
the secular purpose of enhancing the educational experi-
ence of its students, it would not have the primary effect
of advancing or inhibiting religion, and it would not
result in excessive government entanglement with reli-
gion. See Zelman v. Simmons-Harris, 536 U.S. 639, 649
(2002); Lemon, 403 U.S. at 612-13. But, this conclusion
does not help us decide whether or not the University’s
limited forum is viewpoint neutral and reasonable. That a
state can choose to fund this category of speech does not
create an obligation for it to do so. Locke v. Davey, 540
U.S. 712, 719 (2004) (“There are some state actions per-
mitted by the Establishment Clause but not required by
the Free Exercise Clause.”). The Lemon test is, after all, a
test of exclusion—it determines whether a state action
violates the Establishment Clause, and holds no position
on state inaction.
The Establishment Clause cases referenced by the
panel do nothing but support this reading. For example,
Zelman holds that “states may allow school vouchers to
be used at religious schools without violating the Con-
stitution.” Op. at 9 (emphasis added). This holding does
not have any bearing on the initial question of whether
a school district must provide parents with vouchers.
30 Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112
It also does not stand for the proposition that a
school district which does provide vouchers must allow
vouchers to be used at religious schools. Its limited
holding states that such a program, with such a choice,
does not violate the Establishment Clause. Zelman, 536
U.S. at 653.
Locke v. Davey offers even more support to this read-
ing. 540 U.S. at 719. Locke reaffirmed that the Free
Exercise Clause does not impose an affirmative obliga-
tion on the state to fund all religious activities of an
organization simply because it has chosen to fund
activities of its secular counterparts. Locke, 540 U.S. at
721. The panel may criticize the state’s decision to
engage in this type of selective funding, Op. at 9, but it is
a permissible constitutional choice. The University had
done nothing to block Badger Catholic’s or any
other group’s right to practice its religion. It has chosen
instead to take a neutral stance on that core constitu-
tional right, which preserves the purpose of the forum
(enhancing educational and extracurricular experiences)
without providing additional benefits to those who
choose to engage in religious practices as opposed to
those who do not.
Though the Establishment Clause might allow the
University to fund the activities in dispute if it chose to
neutrally fund all such purely religious practices by all
groups, it does not require the University to do so
merely because it has created a forum. And, choosing to
have created a forum for the purpose of enhancing stu-
dents’ educational experience should not obligate the
Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112 31
University to directly fund religious institutions. The
University maintains the power and discretion to con-
trol the purposes and goals of its fund and to
designate the class of speech that is within the forum.
The broad category of purely religious practices, with
the endless number of perspectives with which to
view that category, is a viewpoint neutral access barrier,
and to find otherwise would be to hold that universities
have no power to limit their forums to further the
forum’s goals and purposes.
IV.
The University has acknowledged how difficult it
has been to delineate a line between funding all activities
and making sure to be viewpoint neutral. I commend
its efforts and believe the line it has drawn is a constitu-
tional one. It has drawn this line with an eye to its state
constitution and its educational mission. Our review
should only be of whether that line creates a neutral
barrier or if it discriminates based on viewpoint. Purely
religious practices, as self-defined by the student group,
is certainly a viewpoint neutral, category of speech. To
fund every group’s varying approaches to their core
religious practices would burden the forum and its pur-
poses to the point of making it impossible to administer.
Excluding this category of speech from the forum is a
neutral barrier as it restricts Badger Catholic’s ability
to access the forum on the same basis as it restricts the
ability of other religious and nonreligious student
groups, such as Sex Out Loud, Jewish Cultural Collec-
32 Nos. 09-1102 & 09-1112
tive, and MultiCultural Student Coalition to use the
forum. The University has created a neutral barrier in
precluding the use of its limited forum for purely
religious practice. This neutral barrier is reasonable in
light of the forum’s educational mission, and it, in my
view, is constitutional.
9-1-10