By Jane Porter
Town leaders pulled the ad briefly because it didnât say who paid for it, but now the church that sponsored it has revised it and put it back up.
Carrboro resident Megan Hucks is headed home. Sheâs noticed a lot of Church ads on the bus recently, but this is the first time sheâs seen the one calling for the end of U.S. Military aid to Israel.
âI think thatâs really a bit too intense for the bus,â Hucks says. âThey pay to advertise, so itâs their right. Itâs their freedom of speech, but there should be lines, I guess, for what can be advertised on public transit.â
The Presbyterian Church of Reconciliation paid for the ads on 98 buses. The pastor of the 350-member Church, Mark Davidson, says the adâs message has become an important issue to his congregation.
âWe are a church that takes very seriously our vocation to be peacemakers and the name of our church in the Church of Reconciliation,â Davidson says. âWeâve always been involved in reconciliation from our founding days as a church and committed to racial reconciliation in the South.â
Davidson says the church decided to run the ad on Chapel Hill buses because itâs an inexpensive way to reach a lot of people.
âItâs a public space for ads that can be used as, we hope, to be a catalyst for conversation on this issue, for education, and informing the public,â Davidson says.
So far, some of that conversation has been negative.
Executive Director of the Durham-Chapel Hill Jewish Federation, Steven Schauder, wants the town to consider banning politically divisive ads.
âIsrael has deep meaning for members of the Jewish community and we donât feel that the ads are really serving Chapel Hill well,â Schauder says.
He feels that commuters make up a captive audience, and that they canât escape the messages of advertisements once theyâre on the bus- and thatâs a violation of passengersâ rights.
âOther communities have seen that when you start allowing political ads, then whatâs to prevent someone from saying that anti-gay ads, ads against gay people, or ads against planned parenthood,â Schauder says.
Some cities, including Raleigh, already ban non-commercial advertising. UNC Media Law Instructor Elizabeth Woolery says such bans COULD violate the First Amendment, but there ARE ways for cities to enact bans legally.
âIf Chapel Hill were to institute a policy where they banned any advertisement that was not commercial in nature, they could do that,â Woolery says. âThey would just need to consider that the restrictions be reasonable, and be viewpoint-neutral. Thatâs how those regulations would pass muster.â
According to town council member Penny Rich, the Jewish community will petition the council to change the current policy to accept commercial ads only, and not political ads.
For Megan Hucks, the answer seems clear.
âIf thereâs anything like, you know, on a free public bus thatâs going to offend people, they should probably take it down,â Hucks says.
Be the first to comment