Do You Have a Right To Run Subway Ads Criticizing High Subway Fares?
A rider advocacy group says the Montreal's transit agency violated its free speech rights by refusing to run ads critical of recent fare hikes.

Montreal's public transit agency is proving to be a prickly pear by refusing to allow a local rider advocacy group to post ads criticizing recent fare hikes at bus stops and rail stations. Those riders are now challenging the agency's decision in court, arguing that it violates Canada's free speech protections.
The ads, proposed by the rider advocacy nonprofit ATCRS, criticized Metropolitan Regional Transportation Authority's (ARTM, in French) decision to raise fares starting this month.
"Logical? Not to us. Let us denounce the rate hike imposed by ARTM" reads an English translation of the ads.
ATCRS proposed the ads in early June. A few weeks later, the Montreal Transit Company (in French, STM), which operates transit in the region, rejected them on the grounds that they "denigrated public transit."
In response, ATCRS filed an application for judicial review in the Montreal Division of the Superior Court of Quebec against STM and two third-party companies.
"This is a blatant violation of our freedom of expression," said Axel Fournier, a spokesman for the group. They're being represented by attorney Samuel Bachand and the Alberta-based Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms, a public interest law firm.
Their application argues that the agency's rejection of their ads is "illegal and unreasonable."
"The purpose of the advertisement is to defend the affordability of public transit, which is far from denigrating it," reads the application. It also argues that STM's rejection of the ads is unconstitutional. They cite a previous case out of British Columbia, where the Vancouver transit agency's policy of rejecting ads with political content was ruled an unconstitutional restriction on expression.
That precedent might give them more of a fighting chance than if the same case were playing out in the U.S.
American courts have generally given transit agencies wide latitude to reject ads. The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that ads on buses and trains are "nonpublic forums." That means public transit agencies can exclude whole categories of ads, including political ads, provided they're acting reasonably. Courts have also given transit agencies a huge amount of discretion when deciding what counts as a reasonable rejection of an ad.
In 2017, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) sued D.C.'s regional transit agency WMATA for rejecting ads from right-wing provocateur Milo Yiannopoulos, animal rights group PETA, an abortion provider, and the ACLU itself (which had tried to run ads featuring the plain text of the First Amendment).
A district court rejected the ACLU's request for a preliminary injunction* in 2018, saying that WMATA, in rejecting ads for Yiannopoulos' book Dangerous, acted "reasonably in excluding those advertisements, in view of its stated objective to reduce community and employee opposition, to diminish security risks, and to avoid vandalism and the burdens of administrative review." The case is ongoing.
PETA has two separate ongoing lawsuits against transit agencies in Maryland and Los Angeles for rejecting its ads.
In addition to the free speech concerns raised by public transit agencies' rejection of ads, it doesn't seem like a good business practice currently. From Montreal to Maryland, transit ridership took a nosedive during COVID-19. Commuters haven't returned to pre-pandemic levels yet, nor have the fares they paid.
Transit agencies are trying to fill the fiscal hole that's left with fare hikes, service cuts, and asks for more subsidies. Ad sales are one way that transit agencies could try to shore up their budget without hitting up taxpayers for more money.
But in Montreal at least, STM appears more interested in protecting itself from criticism.
*CORRECTION: The district court had not rejected the ACLU's request for a summary judgment; they had requested a preliminary injunction.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Canada's free speech protections are notoriously weak.
By "notoriously weak" you mean "It doesn't have them"?
Canada's Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees free speech, same as the Constitution of the Soviet Union did.
What you did there, I saw it and approve.
Joke's on you -- it doesn't have any free speech rights to be weak.
I’m surprised a sandwich company would engage in this sort of advocacy.
Canadian have no free speech protections at all. The amount of speech the government currently controls is small compared to other, more authoritarian, countries, but its never been 'free'.
Well, if the courts decide against the Transit Authority, Trudeau can invoke his Emergency Powers to shut down the advertisements. Easy-peasy.
Just seize their bank accounts.
It's cute how people still talk about Canada as if it's PM isn't a dictatorial piece of shit who has made it clear that he won't tolerate political dissent.
The more I see of the world, the more I think that despite our current massive political and social malfunctions in the US we have pretty strong institutions which are dealing well with stuff. I think we cannot underappreciate the transformation of the courts over the last 40 years or so.
I hope so. I was paying a lot of attention to Canada for a while and still follow some of the trucker protest aftermath. It's pretty scary what the courts will go along with there. And most Canadian media gets money directly from the government, so they are worse than useless.
Free speech protections are strong. Free assembly and religion - not so much.
We're moving back towards a government tolerate of us defending ourselves - and we've always been off the charts there compared to other countries though.
No one's every violated the 3rd amendment!
The 4th Amendment is to tattered its only about on par with the more liberal Western countries though.
And its only the changed composition of the current courts that is moving the needle from 'centralize all power in the federal government' - basically a fluke and I expect it will be reversed with the current justice's retirement.
Our biggest strength is the ability of flyover country to mostly ignore the coasts (and their own largest cities). I don't expect that to hold much longer though.
FYI, I'm not sure the transit authority's ad-selection process is a free speech hill I want to die on. I agree it's messy in that it's an ostensibly government-run institution, ie "public" and not a private industry, but it's taking paid advertising... does the public have a right to advertise anything on the trains? In other words, should there be no limits whatsoever?
If it were a private business, freedom of association says they can accept or reject any ads they want, but I expect you believe that too.
Being a government agency, my hardcore attitude is they must accept all comers, regardless of the distaste of others -- obscenities, abortion gore, I don't care: their choices are no ads, or all ads. The moment the government starts choosing, corruption sets in.
My legal / pragmatic understanding in the US is that discrimination in choosing ads has to be content-neutral, with exceptions for obscenities or illegal matter; I don't know how that applies to abortion gore, for instance. I doubt the agency would be able to get away with banning these ads.
Canada has no right to free speech that matters, far as I know, and I will be surprised if any court goes against the agency. They should; the ads are probably exactly what the founders and framers considered vital public political speech.
Canada has no right to free speech that matters, far as I know, and I will be surprised if any court goes against the agency. They should; the ads are probably exactly what the founders and framers considered vital public political speech.
Right, whinging about free speech in Canada is like whinging about the lack of fresh lobster in Nebraska.
As for the rest of your comment, I generally agree. It seems that the government gets itself into a pickle once it accepts advertising, then declares itself NOT content-neutral.
I'm inclined to think that these public agencies should simply stop accepting advertising if they can't remain content-neutral.
I'm inclined to agree on the same principle as the license plate cases - if the government wants to control the content, make it completely government speech. If, on the other hand, they want to make money off their "space", they must take all comers.
Take the money and tolerate the content or get out of that line of business entirely. No middle ground.
The founders and framers of what? The Canada Act 1982?
Of course, then you run into the issue of the difference between a government agency, and a private business with government ownership.
(Amtrak, after all, is legally a for-profit corporation . . . where the 109 million shares of preferred stock are all owned by the Department of Transportation, but four private companies own the 9 million shares of common stock.)
In other words, should there be no limits whatsoever?
No limits on advertising porn to kids.
/jeffy
Not a fair summary. He does want Ulysses banned for kindergarten.
Sure. If they don't like it, they can stop running ads.
The whole *point* of having stuff run by the government is that it doesn't need to make a profit - its taxpayer funded. So let the taxpayers fund it.
IMO all government spaces should be complete ad free - including from government PSA's. Its the one part of the free market I can't stand anymore. Its just become the done thing to plaster every flat surface with a company logo or ad.
I can see allowing a transit authority to ban ads that are offensive to the general public, but "Denigrating (a government agency)" is precisely the sort of speech that should be most protected from the government agency. If you allow the government to interfere with speech directed at it, you are allowing it to interfere with election campaigns hoping to change the government. Allow that, and you have neither a democracy nor a republic.
Do you have the right to honk your horn in Ottawa?
Nope
Can’t even shout.
Why you can't and will never win.
"....arguing that it violates Canada's free speech protections."
[In French] va te faire foutre
To accommodate ATCRS, Trudeau has added boxcars to the subway system, but you may arrive at a destination you didn't expect.
Hey if I get on a stop in taranto and want to go to Montreal, but I end up in Saskatchewan it's okay as long as the stop identifies as a Montreal station
the right to advertise is truly inherent.
Free Speech? in Canada? lol
Joke's on us, the article says there's more leeway for subway ad censorship in the USA.
Yes and no. Obscene and offensive ads can be banned, but criticism of a government agency is political speech, which is the category of speech most protected by the Supreme Court. I can only fault the protection granted to speech in cases like this in that the SC only overturns the censorship, with no major _personal_ consequences for officials who censored speech criticizing themselves. An SC that really protected speech would require those officials to reimburse the plaintiffs, court, and the government for all costs out of their own pockets, resign their jobs, and never accept another government job again.
https://twitter.com/davenewworld_2/status/1551597629485744133?t=NvCLo30XIx53Sd95mno09g&s=19
Congressional staffers are staging a sit-in right now at @SenSchumer's office to protest on behalf of climate legislation
[Video]
https://twitter.com/greg_price11/status/1551984522685829120?t=847kCqjH-qmiq1uGvWVPLQ&s=19
VP: "I am Kamala Harris, my pronouns are she and her, and I am a woman sitting at the table wearing a blue suit."
Literally all of the guests at Kamala's event are introducing themselves by saying their pronouns and what they are wearing.
Wtf lol.
Why are they doing this lmfao.
This is literally the weirdest thing I have ever seen.
[Videos]
This is the party who captured universities and public schools. It is insane.
My name is I, Woodchipper and my pronouns are "fuck/yourself", and I am sitting at the table with my dick out. Thanks.
Being inclusive of the blind, I'm guessing.
What a bizarre ritual.
They are still leaving out the people born with no sight at all who don't know what blue is.
https://twitter.com/ConceptualJames/status/1552017764025618434?t=hCSR4ZbtovdmQ5qrq8JR_A&s=19
The point of Communist absurdity is to humiliate in order to force compliance.
"Toby. My name is Toby."
How does that explain stating their preferred pronouns? Sighted people wouldn’t know that.
It doesn't. But we already knew about that bit of absurdity.
How is telling them the color of your suit or what clothes you're wearing helping a blind person?
"My pronouns are..." is pure PC BS, but "I am wearing a blue suit" helps viewers with too small of a screen tell the panel members apart. Even the biggest and highest pixel-count cell phone is too small to clearly show a half dozen or more people at once.
If there's anyone still using broadcast TV, it may also help when the picture is degraded due to poor reception. I'm not very familiar with the digital broadcast formats used now, but my understanding is that when the signal is partially lost, it pixelates the images. Harris might turn into a blue square, but still be identifiable as a blob of blue.
It is interesting that the article has the "First Amendment" tag on it though. This is definitely not a first amendment issue as it's not the US.
Article 2(b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
2(b) or not 2(b)
It's not a first amendment issue when Twitstagramfacechatbooktok bans a sitting president of the united states-- even when it was a first amendment issue when the president blocked a Twitstagramfacechatbooktok user from their personal Twitstagramfacechatbooktok account.
It's a first amendment issue when a foreign nation's train system doesn't take your advertisement.
Section 230 is the First Amendment of the internet, which didn't apply to the internet so they needed a section 230 to make sure that the amendment that didn't apply to the internet applied but with different language about liability and good faith moderating. And section 230 magically applies to The Internet, including the Internet in Canada, the former Soviet Union, North Korea, Denmark, France, Spain etc.
There are layers of nuance here that are clearly flying over your head.
LOL
https://www.zerohedge.com/political/ukraine-issues-blacklist-russian-propagandists-includes-us-senator-prominent-journalists
The Ukrainian government has published a list of politicians, academics, and activists who it claims promote "Russian propaganda". Absurdly, it includes high American officials - even a sitting US senator - and a Pulitzer Price winning journalist.
A Kiev government-linked agency called the Ukrainian Center for Countering Disinformation released the list earlier this month, identifying figures such as Republican Senator Rand Paul, former Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (D-HI), military analyst Edward Luttwak, University of Chicago professor and international relations theorist John Mearsheimer, and award-winning journalist Glenn Greenwald, formerly of The Intercept, among many others.
A number of notable international names are on the list as well, such as French populist political leader Marine Le Pen, or even an Italian General named General Leonardo Tricarico, who blames Ukraine for Russia's invasion and has urged immediate negotiations to end the war.
Some of those on the list, such as Edward Luttwak, have actually loudly supported sending Western arms to Ukraine's military. In Luttwak's case, he was apparently deemed by Ukrainian officials a 'pro-Russian propagandist' merely for proposing a war-time compromise of allowing referendums in the breakaway Donetsk and Luhansk regions.
The walls are closing in on Russia. The Ruble will be rubble!
So Canada's transit advertising merits a story here but not the destruction of ESG policies in Sri Lanka, Ghana, Netherlands, Scotland, and now Panama?
Subway systems should all be privately owned anyway. And then, yes, they can prohibit you from putting up ads on their property criticizing their prices.
https://twitter.com/Comic_Con/status/1550269418953125888?t=QyRo6R6tHuX13Dc_ScZ5lA&s=19
The Filipinx Voices in Pop Culture was a fun and educational all Filipinx panel discussing Filipinx influences behind your favorite media!
Why is it the Philippines, but the demonym is Filipino?
PS: don’t encourage through capitulation.
The DNC memo was to stop using Latinx, it said nothing about Filipinx. So this is a go.
If we were consistent, we'd use "F" or "P" rather than "Ph" for everything to do with that island group, because it's spelled "F" in Spanish and "P" in Tagalog. The Spanish explorer who named the islands [1] named them _Las Islas Filipinas_ in honor of king _Felipe_ II, which for some reason is rendered in English as "Philip". The native dialect with the most speakers (Tagalog) doesn't have anything like an "F" sound, so they changed it to "P".
[1] The namer of the islands was Ruy López de Villalobos, rather than Magellan the original discover. Magellan got involved in a local war and died there with most of his men. This left the few survivors too busy surviving and getting home to bother with naming things.
The government is a PRIVATE COMPANY.
China is its biggest shareholder!
Britschgi - Canadian government does recognize human rights. Canadians have not 'right' to free speech. Never had. They have government-granted privileges to say certain things. They even had government-imposed *duties* to say certain things.
Why not instead just go to another sub shop? I haven't went to a Subway since we got a Jimmy Johns here. Better bread, more meat, more extras and better delivery.
I don't understand people trying to change a business when we have so much completion in this country. If enough people go somewhere else the prices will come down if unreasonably high, if not they will go out of business. That is how a free economy works.
Given that they only exist due to government largesse, in the US, no.
Canada does not have free speech so it does not matter there.