Oregon Code § 350.260·Enacted ·Last updated March 01, 2026
Statute Text
Student journalists; student expression; civil action.
(1) For the purposes of this
section:
(a) Public
institution of higher education means:
(A) A community
college;
(B) A public
university listed in ORS 352.002; and
(C) The Oregon Health
and Science University.
(b) School-sponsored
media means materials that are prepared, substantially written, published or
broadcast by student journalists, that are distributed or generally made
available, either free of charge or for a fee, to members of the student body
and that are prepared under the direction of a student media adviser. School-sponsored
media does not include media intended for distribution or transmission solely
in the classrooms in which they are produced.
(c) Student
journalist means a student who gathers, compiles, writes, edits, photographs,
records or prepares information for dissemination in school-sponsored media.
(d) Student
media adviser means a person who is employed, appointed or designated by a
public institution of higher education to supervise, or provide instruction
relating to, school-sponsored media.
(2) Student
journalists are responsible for determining the news, opinion, feature and
advertising content of school-sponsored media. This subsection does not prevent
a student media adviser from teaching professional standards of journalism to
the student journalists.
(3) Nothing in
this section may be interpreted to authorize expression by students that:
(a) Is libelous
or slanderous;
(b) Constitutes
an unwarranted invasion of privacy;
(c) Violates
federal or state statutes, rules or regulations or state common law; or
(d) So incites
students as to create a clear and present danger of:
(A) The
commission of unlawful acts on or off school premises;
(B) The violation
of school policies; or
(C) The material
and substantial disruption of the orderly operation of the school. A school
official must base a forecast of material and substantial disruption on
specific facts, including past experience in the school and current events
influencing student behavior, and not on undifferentiated fear or apprehension.
(4) Any student
enrolled in a public institution of higher education may commence a civil
action to obtain damages under this subsection and appropriate injunctive or
declaratory relief as determined by a court for a violation of subsection (2)
of this section, the First Amendment to the United States Constitution or
Article I, section 8, of the Oregon Constitution. Upon a motion, a court may
award $100 in damages and injunctive and declaratory relief to a prevailing
plaintiff in a civil action brought under this subsection. [Formerly 351.649;
2021 c.178 §11]