Dear Mr. Taylor:
You requested an opinion of this office on whether a parish-wide elected official may legally provide, for the use of the local school board, report card covers that contain the elected official's name, and whether the school board may legally use those report card covers to send its public school students their progress reports. More specifically, you state that you have recently been providing the Livingston Parish School Board report card covers with a message stating that they are provided "compliments of Jeff Taylor, Livingston Parish Assessor."1 You further note that your office views the sponsorship of these report card covers as a form of advertising, similar to the purchase of ads in public school athletic programs and other school sponsorships, and accordingly use campaign funds to purchase these covers. Finally, you state that this practice of placing ads on report cards sent to public school children, albeit paid with campaign funds, has been recently questioned. For reasons stated below, it is the opinion of this office that, while no violation of state printing laws or election laws appears to have occurred, the practice you have described may be challenged as an implicit endorsement by the school board on a captive audience.
La. R.S.
No public funds shall be used in whole or in part for the payment of the cost of any advertisement containing therein the name of any public official whether elected or appointed; provided, however, that the *Page 2 provisions of this section shall in no case be construed to apply to advertisements or notices required or authorized by law to be published or to any advertisements placed by any public agency or body authorized by law to advertise in the furtherance of its functions and duties.
The statute prohibits the use of public funds toward the payment of advertisement costs incurred by a public official, subject to certain exceptions. This statute is inapplicable to the practice you describe involving the use of campaign funds, and not public funds. Therefore, no violation of La. R.S.
Also relevant to your issue is the Louisiana Election Code, La. R.S.
No person shall cause to be printed or assist in the distribution, transportation, or transmission by any means of any facsimile of an official ballot, or cause to be printed, distributed, transported, or transmitted any unofficial sample ballot containing a photograph, or likeness of any person which falsely alleges, with an intent to misrepresent, that any person or candidate, or group of candidates in an election is endorsed by or supported by another candidate, group of candidates or other person.
The legislature implemented La. R.S.
However, it is less clear whether the report covers officially sent by the school board to parents could be construed as the school board's endorsement for a specific candidate. The report cards sent home with public school children meet the jurisprudential standards for school-sponsored speech: they bear the imprimatur of the school and involve pedagogical interests of the school. See Fleming v. Jefferson County School Dist. R-1,
Another related issue is whether the grade report covers are an objectionable political message forced by the school board on a captive audience, i.e., parents who must receive the progress report, sign it, and return it to their child's school. Although the *Page 3
First Amendment protects free speech, even if offensive to some, courts have held that such expression may be proscribed when it intrudes upon a "captive audience." Frisby v. Schultz,
Another concern is whether the school board, by providing grade card cover space for advertising has created a nonpublic forum, which may not be subject to viewpoint discrimination. Where the government acts in a proprietary capacity to raise money or to facilitate the conduct of its internal business, the Supreme Court generally has found a nonpublic forum, subject to the requirements of reasonableness and viewpoint neutrality. SeeLehman v. City of Shaker Heights,
Courts have recognized the possibility that political advertisements placed on spaces leased for advertisements by a governmental body may be misconstrued as that public body's endorsement of a candidate imposed on the public.3 For instance, a city government's ban on political advertisements on its buses has been upheld as a reasonable measure to "minimize chances of abuse, the appearance of favoritism, and the risk of imposing upon a captive audience." See Lehman,
For the reasons stated above, it is the opinion of this Office that the grade card covers distributed by public schools bearing your name and title, paid with campaign funds, do not violate any state printing laws or the Election Code.5
We hope that this sufficiently answers your inquiry, but if we can be of further assistance, please do not hesitate to contact us.
Yours very truly,
CHARLES C. FOTI, JR. ATTORNEY GENERAL
By: ____________________________ Uma M. Subramanian Assistant Attorney General
