Alaska legislators have voted to ban large signs in the state Capitol, a move that followed large protests over Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s decision to veto a multipart education bill earlier this year.
Under a new policy, visitors to the Capitol “are permitted to hand-carry a paper-based poster board or placard type sign up to 11×17 inches in the Capitol corridors and lobby.”
The policy prohibits signs on sticks and posts — all signs must be held by hand.
“A sign will be confiscated if it is used to disturb, or used in a manner that will imminently disturb, the Alaska State Legislature, one of its houses, a committee, a member, or a public employee in the performance of their duties,” the new policy states.
The new sign rules were approved Sept. 26 in a 9-0 vote of the Legislative Council, a joint House-Senate committee that makes decisions for the Legislature outside the normal session.
Large numbers of protesters crowded the Capitol in March, urging lawmakers to override the veto. That override failed by a single vote.
The nonpartisan Legislative Affairs Agency administers the state Capitol. Its director, Jessica Geary, told lawmakers that the policy came about because “during this past session, we had an incident with some protesters that carried signs into the Capitol and held them up and were somewhat disruptive during one of the committee hearings.”
By email, Geary said “protestors brought signs into the building and held them up, in some cases blocking the view down the hallway and of the security cameras, which was a concern to our security officers. Some of these protestors brought signs into a House Finance Committee meeting and held them up.”
Speaking to the Legislative Council, Geary said the new policy came together after legislative staff contacted officials at other capitals and asked about their policies.
“The 11-by-17 sign was what was standardly used, I think, because it’s large enough to display the message, but not too big to be able to cause too much of an obstruction of the visual field,” Geary told lawmakers.
Legislative Affairs Agency attorney Emily Nauman said that in order to comply with the First Amendment, the policy has to be “content-neutral” — signs can’t be limited based on what they say.
An early draft of the sign rules included a ban on “vulgar language,” but that was removed because of First Amendment concerns.
Juneau Sen. Jesse Kiehl asked whether the restrictions extend to messages on T-shirts and buttons, and Fairbanks Sen. Click Bishop asked whether a message on “a Superman cape” would also run afoul of the new rule.
Nauman said that in a committee room, enforcement of the rule is up to the chair of the committee.
“I think there’s — as we’re all aware through other discussions we’ve had here — there’s a balance of people being able to speak to their government in a way that’s meaningful to them and be heard, versus impeding work of the Legislature,” she said.
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