I. OVERVIEW
In 1977, the Renton School District in Renton, Washington, adopted a policy requiring its high school students to submit to school officials for approval all student-written material before any such material could be distributed on school premises or at official school functions. The policy was *1150 directed at student writings that were not contained in official school publications.
On May 20, 1988, students at Lindbergh High School distributed copies of an unauthorized student-written newspaper called Bad Astra at a school-sponsored senior class barbecue on school grounds without submitting the material for predistribution review. In addition, a parent, the president of the Lindbergh High P.T.A., placed copies of the newspaper in faculty and staff mailboxes. The school principal reprimanded the students for violating the review policy, but did not find any particular passage or article objectionable.
The parents and the students filed this action in district court pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claiming that the predistribution review policy violated their right to freedom of speech guaranteed by the first and fourteenth amendments. The district court held that, with procedural safeguards not relevant to this appeal, the policy of prior review of student-written materials did not invade the students’ first amendment rights.
We review the district court’s decision in light of the recent Supreme Court decision in
Hazelwood Sch. Dist. v. Kuhlmeier,
— U.S. -,
II. BACKGROUND
In 1983, five students at Lindbergh High School in Renton, Washington, wrote a four-page newspaper entitled Bad Astra. They did so at their own expense, off school property, and without the knowledge of school authorities. The content of Bad Astra included articles written by the five students and which were generally critical of school administration policies concerning student activities, student service card requirements and enforcement of student attendance. The newspaper also included a mock teacher evaluation poll, and poetry written by Stephen Crane, Edgar Lee Masters and Langston Hughes. The paper did not include any profanity, religious epithets or any material which could be considered obscene, defamatory or commercial. Students distributed approximately 350 copies of Bad Astra at a senior class barbecue; the president of the Lindbergh High School Parent Teacher Association, mother of one of the students, placed copies in school faculty and staff mailboxes.
The school principal censured the students for not submitting Bad Astra for predistribution review pursuant to existing school board policy. The principal placed *1151 letters of reprimand in the students’ files, where they remain.
The five students, joined by their parents as guardians, commenced this action under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983, 1985 and 1988. They sought injunctive and declaratory relief holding the predistribution review policy unconstitutional under the first and fourteenth amendments, and asked that the students’ reprimands be expunged from their records. The defendants included Brian Barker, Principal of Lindbergh High School, Gary Kohlwes, the school superintendent, and members of the school board of Renton School District No. 403.
The policy in effect when the students were reprimanded (“old policy”) was adopted by the Renton School District in 1977 and required prior approval by school officials of any material written by students enrolled in the school and which students wished to distribute on school premises. The material had to be free from “libel, slander, obscurity (sic), personal attacks or incitement to illegal action(s),” and free from “unauthorized solicitation.” In addition, student authors were required to be identified on all materials. The school principal was authorized to direct the manner of distribution so as not to “interfere with or disrupt the normal educational process.”
After the students’ unauthorized distribution of Bad Astra, but prior to this lawsuit, the school board decided to revise its predistribution review policy. The “new policy”, which included an administrative review procedure, stated that prior approval was necessary for distribution of ten or more copies of written material. While the policy stated that distribution of materials would usually be allowed, the material in order to be approved had to be written by students currently enrolled in the school district, be free from advertisements for cigarettes, liquor, drugs or drug paraphernalia, and be distributed in a manner that would not materially and substantially interfere with the normal operation of the school.
In addition, under the new policy, principals were authorized to ban distribution if the expression was “inappropriate to the maturity level of the students” or was obscene, libelous, or invaded the privacy of others. Principals could also ban materials when there was evidence “which [would reasonably support] a judgment that significant or substantial disruption of the normal operation of the school” could result. The policy provided that such evidence could include expression criticizing school officials or advocating violation of school rules, or expression attacking or promoting discrimination against ethnic, religious, social or handicapped groups or females and males as a group.
For purposes of this appeal, the parties agree the plaintiffs would have been reprimanded under either policy, and that the “new policy” has effectively superseded the old. We refer to them collectively as “the board policy.” Under both versions, all student-written communications had to be submitted for prior approval before being distributed on school property; under both versions, students would be formally censured for failure to make such submission, and under neither version was this material objectionable. Also, under neither version did the school attempt to narrow or define the subject matter it wished to scrutinize in order to avoid subjecting all communication to possible censorship.
The case came before the district court for trial on plaintiffs’ application for a permanent injunction enjoining enforcement of the policy. There was no evidence that Bad Astra had interfered with the operation of the high school or impinged upon other students’ rights. It was distributed at a school barbecue at which a rock band was playing and at which the students were already socializing. Defendants showed that a few teachers who had been mocked in the newspaper became emotionally upset, but the distribution caused no violence or physical damage, nor did it interfere with classes. Defendants admitted that if the students had submitted Bad Astra for prior review, the defendants would have allowed distribution without change. We thus are confronted with a unique and ironic situation in which a *1152 school has punished students for distribution of material which both sides acknowledge could not be suppressed under the first amendment.
In support of its policy, the defendants offered evidence that a prior publication in a different school in the Renton School District had once harmed a student cheerleader because it contained a story concerning her alleged promiscuity. In addition, they offered evidence that other publications in another school district had caused some disruption of classes. However, only one other “underground” student publication had ever been distributed at Lindbergh High and that paper had created no disturbance.
The defendants’ expert admitted that he knew of no studies nor any statistics showing that school districts without a system of predistribution review and censorship of student-written communication experience educational disruption as a result of underground newspapers. He also acknowledged that the Seattle School District, the largest in the state, does not have any requirement of prior approval. There was evidence that the distribution of student-written materials in the Seattle School District has caused no problems.
The defendants themselves testified that in their view a predistribution censorship policy was necessary for the safe operation of the school, to avoid distractions, hurt feelings and career damage to the faculty, to further parental and community expectations and to avoid potential school liability. There was, however, no evidence that anyone familiar with Bad Astra confused it with any school-sponsored publication or believed its contents reflected the view of the school administration.
Although the district court found that the distribution of
Bad Astra
did not disturb school discipline or harm others, it found that “uncensored student writings have been published in other high schools that did cause, or had the potential for causing, much disruption because they were distributed without prior approval.” Based on its finding that student-written materials could possibly cause disruption at some time, in some school, it held that the requirement of prior school approval in this case did not offend the first amendment.
1
The court relied upon the Second Circuit’s 1971 decision upholding a school policy requiring prior approval of all student-written material distributed on school premises.
Eisner v. Stamford Bd. of Educ.,
III. DISCUSSION
The relevant history of the first amendment in American high schools began with the Vietnam War and the Supreme Court’s decision in
Tinker v. Des Moines Ind. Community Sch. Dist.,
The Supreme Court recognized the comprehensive authority of school officials over the educational environment but held, in now famous language, that the first amendment protects students’ freedom of expression. The Court said that it could “hardly be argued that either students or teachers shed their constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the schoolhouse gate.”
Id.
at 506,
Tinker swept broadly in its protection of students’ first amendment rights while its description of exceptional situations justifying interference was narrow. Tinker cautioned that before deciding that school interference is warranted courts should look to concrete evidence of disturbance or disruption resulting or potentially resulting from specific expression.
Illustrating its fact-specific test, the Court in
Tinker
cited two earlier Fifth Circuit cases, each involving students wearing and distributing “freedom buttons” depicting clasped black and white hands, each involving school prohibitions against students wearing such buttons, and each reaching the diametrically opposite result from the other.
Compare Burnside v. Byars,
the record [did] not demonstrate any facts which might reasonably have led school authorities to forecast substantial disruption of or material interference with school activities, and no disturbances or disorders on the school premises in fact occurred.
Id.
at 514,
The Supreme Court in
Tinker
characterized the students’ plan to wear armbands as “closely akin to ‘pure speech’ which, we have repeatedly held, is entitled to comprehensive protection under the First Amendment.”
Id.
at 505-06,
[Ujndifferentiated fear or apprehension of disturbance is not enough to overcome the right to freedom of expression. Any departure from absolute regimentation may cause trouble. Any variation from the majority’s opinion may inspire fear. Any word spoken, in class, in the lunchroom, or on the campus, that deviates from the views of another person may start an argument or cause a disturbance. But our Constitution says we *1154 must take this risk ... and our history says that it is this sort of hazardous freedom — this kind of openness — that is the basis of our national strength and of the independence and vigor of those Americans who grow up and live in this relatively permissive, often disputatious, society.
Id.
at 508-09,
The record in this case shows that this policy, with its censure of students for failing to present unobjectionable material for review, is the product of just such an “undifferentiated fear” of disruption. Indeed, this policy appears to be based upon far less justification than the action of the school principals in Tinker, which was directed at specific expression in an atmosphere of political turmoil. The school’s action in this case is contrary to the principles laid down in Tinker.
A decision upholding the school’s actions in this case would also be contrary to circuit decisions after Tinker involving situations in which student expression came into conflict with school discipline. The courts of appeals after Tinker were sensitive to the need to examine whether interference with student expression was justified in a given case, and sensitive to the competing interests of the school in maintaining discipline and of the students in expressing their views.
The Sixth Circuit in
Guzick v. Drebus,
Complementing the Sixth Circuit decision in
Guzick
was the Seventh Circuit’s decision in
Scoville v. Bd. of Educ. of Joliet High Sch. Dist,
Of course these cases, like
Tinker,
did not deal with a general policy of prepubli-cation or predistribution review of student expression. In the wake of anti-Vietnam protests, however, many schools did adopt censorship policies similar to those involved in this case. While this circuit did not have the opportunity to scrutinize such policies, several circuits other than our own struggled, with varying results, to determine to what extent, if at all, such policies could be justified under the first amendment.
See Nitzberg v. Parks,
The problem recognized in nearly all of these censorship cases is that a regulation of expression aimed at suppressing speech before it is uttered, as opposed to punishment of individuals after the expression has occurred, is a prior restraint, which generally comes before a court bearing a “heavy presumption” of unconstitutionality.
Bantam Books, Inc. v. Sullivan,
*1155 A system of prior restraint is in many ways more inhibiting than a system of subsequent punishment: It is likely to bring under government scrutiny a far wider range of expression; it shuts off communication before it takes place; suppression by a stroke of the pen is more likely to be applied than suppression through a criminal process; the procedures do not require attention to the safeguards of the criminal process; the system allows less opportunity for public appraisal and criticism; the dynamics of the system drive toward excesses, as the history of all censorship shows.
Emerson, The System of Freedom of Expression 506 (1970), quoted in Lockhart, Kamisar, Choper and Shiffrin, Constitutional Law (6th ed. 1986).
The presumption against prior restraints has been enshrined in our law for more than 50 years.
See Near v. Minnesota,
In dealing with high school censorship policies after
Tinker,
the courts of appeals recognized that a state policy subjecting all written communications to prior review for possible censorship would be invalid outside the school context.
See, e.g., Eisner v. Stamford Bd. of Educ.,
The majority of the courts of appeals considering policies similar to the one at issue here found them violative of the first amendment because they were overly broad and inadequately focused on avoidance of disruption and interference with school discipline.
See Riseman,
For example, the First Circuit in
Rise-man
granted a preliminary injunction prohibiting a policy which banned “advertising or promoting the interests of any community or non-school agency or organization without the approval of the School Committee.”
Riseman,
The Fourth Circuit’s decision in
Baugh-man
also struck down as overly broad a high school policy requiring prior approval of all materials and censorship of those which, in the view of the school administrator, were “obscene” or “libelous.”
Baugh-man,
If there were no contemplated prior restraint but instead merely post-publica *1156 tion sanction, the problem of vagueness would not be intolerable.... [w]e think that a regulation imposing prior restraint must be much more precise than a regulation imposing post-publication sanctions.
Id. at 1349. Both Riseman and Baugh-man suggested that more narrowly drawn regulations might pass constitutional muster, but gave little indication as to what acceptable guidelines might be.
The Fifth Circuit in
Shanley
was a bit more explicit, holding that while a policy requiring that materials be submitted is not unconstitutional “per se,” a valid regulation would have to “include guidelines stating the relationship between the prevention or curtailment of ‘distribution’ and the prevention of material and substantial disruption of school activities that the ‘policy’ seeks to remedy.”
Shanley,
In an effort to find a policy formulation that might survive scrutiny after Tinker, the school officials in Nitzberg looked to the language of Tinker itself. They adopted a policy providing that all material was to be submitted for prior review, but censorship could occur only when the literature reasonably led the principal to “forecast substantial disruption of or material interference with school activities.” Nitz-berg, 525 F.2d at 381. This policy standard is remarkably similar to a portion of the policy involved in this case, which states that material may be censored
[w]hen there is evidence which reasonably supports a judgment that significant or substantial disruption of the normal operation of the school or injury or damage to persons or property may result.
The Fourth Circuit, in an opinion by former Justice Tom Clark, rejected that approach, pointing out that the Tinker standard was designed to apply when the precise acts giving rise to the potential disturbance were known. In Nitzberg the court held that such language was not an appropriate standard for guiding administrators and students so that they could determine in advance what might or might not be prohibited. Id. at 383. The court quoted the opinion of a respected judge:
It does not at all follow that the phrasing of a constitutional standard by which to decide whether a regulation infringes upon rights protected by the first amendment is sufficiently specific in a regulation to convey notice to students or people in general of what is prohibited.
Id.
(quoting Judge Fairchild’s opinion in
Jacobs v. Bd. of Sch. Comm’rs,
Perhaps because it found formulation of an acceptable regulation impossible, the Seventh Circuit in
Fujishima
held that no system of prior review contemplating content-based censorship could validly be imposed under the first amendment.
Fujishima,
In proper context, Mr. Justice Fortas’ use of the word “forecast” in Tinker means a prediction by school officials that existing conduct, such as the wearing of arm bands — if allowed to continue —will probably interfere with school discipline. Tinker in no way suggests that students may be required to announce their intentions of engaging in certain conduct beforehand so school authorities may decide whether to prohibit the conduct.
Id. (citation omitted).
In the years immediately following
Tinker,
the only circuit to approve a regulation allowing broad review and censorship of non-school-sponsored publications was the Second Circuit in
Eisner v. Stamford Bd. of Educ.,
All of these decisions in the post-Vietnam era involving prior restraints dealt with non-school-sponsored, or what were commonly referred to as “underground” publications, like the Bad Astra with which we are concerned here. These decisions, however, did not focus upon any distinction between school-sponsored as opposed to non-school-sponsored expression.
The Supreme Court did focus on that distinction, however, beginning with its decision in
Bd. of Educ., Island Trees Union Free Sch. Dist. v. Pico,
In
Pico,
the Supreme Court grappled with a school board’s decision to remove certain books from the school library because of content objectionable to the board. The school board in
Pico
had ordered certain books, which it characterized as anti-American, anti-Semitic and “just plain filthy,” removed from high school and junior high school libraries.
Pico,
Chief Justice Burger’s dissent, on the other hand, viewed the library as part of the school’s curricular environment and the selection of library materials as part and parcel of the school officials’ obligation to establish the school curriculum.
Id.
at 889,
Implicit in both these opinions in Pico is the premise that control over the educational curriculum requires control by administrators over the content of what is taught; this is a premise made more explicit in Kuhlmeier. The corollary of this premise is that no similar content control is justified for communication among students which is not part of the educational program. The Court in Pico, however, addressed no unified voice to the question of how far educators’ authority to control the curriculum reaches into the educational environ *1158 ment. The Supreme Court clarified this issue to some extent in Fraser.
In
Fraser,
the Court dealt with school punishment of a student’s use of sexual vulgarity in a school assembly campaign speech. The power of schools to impose standards not merely on the formal curriculum, but upon student conduct in school-sponsored forums, was the theme of the Court’s decision. It held that the school could punish a student for giving a speech during a school assembly that was offensive and, while not obscene, fell below the standards of decency the school reasonably wished to advance. The Court upheld the student’s punishment based on the school’s responsibility to teach students “socially appropriate behavior,” and its concomitant desire to “disassociate” the school from inappropriate behavior.
Fraser,
In the Court’s subsequent decision in
Kuhlmeier
it dealt with a school’s prepubli-cation control of the content of a school newspaper. In
Kuhlmeier,
a school principal had banned from a school newspaper an article concerning divorce and pregnancy, and the Eighth Circuit had held that the suppression violated the first amendment. The Supreme Court disagreed with the Eighth Circuit’s essentially factual determination that the school had created a public forum. The Supreme Court held that the school had reserved to itself the responsibility to regulate the conduct of the school newspaper in accordance with its perception of the proper function of education. “[E]ducators do not offend the First Amendment by exercising editorial control over the style and content of student speech in
school-sponsored
expressive activities so long as their actions are reasonably related to legitimate pedagogical concerns.”
Kuhlmeier,
In initially phrasing the issue, Justice White’s opinion for the Court stressed that the issue was “the extent to which educators may exercise editorial control over the contents of a high school newspaper produced
as part of the school’s journalism curriculum."
Accordingly, we conclude that the standard articulated in Tinker for determining when a school may punish student expression need not also be the standard for determining when a school may refuse to lend its name and resources to the dissemination of student expression.
Kuhlmeier at 570.
Pointing to the need of educators to maintain control over the school curriculum, the Court in Kuhlmeier used a broad definition of curriculum, which it said encompassed “school-sponsored publications, theatrical productions, and other expressive activities that students, parents and members of the public might reasonably perceive to bear the imprimatur of the school.” Kuhlmeier at 569. It expressly described the distinction it was drawing between speech protected by the standards of Tinker and speech which the educators could regulate as the distinction “between speech that is sponsored by the school and speech that is not.” Id. at 570 n. 3. 3
*1159 In this case the communications, like Bad Astra, which the school policy targets for review for censorship purposes are in no sense “school-sponsored.” They are therefore not within the purview of the school’s exercise of reasonable editorial control. The student distribution of non-school-sponsored material under the Supreme Court’s decisions in Tinker and Kuhlmeier cannot be subjected to regulation on the basis of undifferentiated fears of possible disturbances or embarrassment to school officials, and no more than undifferentiated fear appears as a basis for regulation in this case. There is therefore no justification for this policy, which conditions all distribution of student writings on school premises upon prior school approval. Interstudent communication does not interfere with what the school teaches; it enriches the school environment for the students.
Renton’s policy conditions distribution of all written materials on school premises upon prior school review for censorship purposes, and is directed at communications lacking any element of school support or endorsement. It is a blanket policy of unlimited scope and duration. For that reason, we do not need to decide under what more limited circumstances, if any, a school may impose a policy of predistribution review. We hold that Renton’s policy is overbroad and violates the appellants’ first amendment rights. Our holding is limited to school distribution policies which are content based, and does not pertain to regulations of time, place, and manner of distribution.
Cf. Grayned v. Rockford,
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the case remanded with instructions to enter an order enjoining further enforcement of the review policy and directing the school to purge the plaintiff-students’ records of reprimands for violating the policy.
Notes
. While the district court found that the policy was “substantially constitutional,” the court in rulings not pertinent to this appeal found portions of the “new policy” unconstitutional because of vague terms or inadequate administrative review. First, the court held that review of material "reasonably calculated to arrive on school premises” was unconstitutional because school officials have no authority outside the school premises. In addition, the court held that a prohibition of material that "encourages actions which endanger the health and safety of students" was unconstitutionally vague. Finally, the court held that the procedural due process was insufficient because it did not specify the number of days within which the school board had to answer the appeal.
The school district did not appeal these rulings. Rather, it revised its predistribution policy to include the district court’s suggested modifications (“revised policy”). The "revised policy" is not formally before this court, but it contains the same ban on distribution of non-approved writings which plaintiffs challenge in this appeal, and provides for censorship under essentially the same standards.
. Following
Fraser's
broad language concerning the school’s responsibility for promoting socially appropriate behavior, the Eighth Circuit in
Bystrom v. Fridley High Sch.,
.
Kuhlmeier
finds resonant support in this circuit’s decision in
Nicholson v. Bd. of Educ. Torrance Unified Sch. Dist.,
