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		YouTube yanks school board meeting from site over COVID-19 comments, 
		later restores it
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		 [September 23, 2021] 
		By Greg Bishop 
		(The Center Square) – YouTube removed 
		videos of an Illinois school board's meetings because of public comments 
		challenging COVID-19 policies, a problem one state lawmaker wants to fix 
		with a bill that he said would reduce social media censorship.
 Springfield District 186 representatives said the district's June 21 
		meeting was removed by the Google-owned video platform for violating 
		it’s “medical misinformation policy, presumably due to the public 
		comment portion.”
 
 
		
		 
		On Monday, Board President Anthony Mares said the school board 
		encourages public comments “but we also desire that the public business 
		we conduct at board meetings be widely available through YouTube.
 
		“Therefore we will no longer include public comment in our YouTube 
		meeting videos so that public business is available to distant 
		families,” Mares said.
 District spokesperson Bree Hankins said the district appealed YouTube’s 
		decision to remove the video, but that was denied.
 
		“This counted as a warning, but further violations could result in an 
		official strike and we would be unable to upload, post or live stream to 
		YouTube for any purpose for at least one week upon another infraction,” 
		Hankins said. “This has happened to other school districts in Illinois 
		and elsewhere.”
 “We never regained access to the removed video via YouTube,” Hankins 
		said. “However, we do have the full versions of the board meeting 
		video.”
 
 
		 
		The district is working on an on-demand option of full board meetings, 
		including public comments, she said.
 
 After this article was published Wednesday afternoon, a YouTube 
		spokesperson said the video had been restored and no strike against the 
		channel was issued.
 
 "Upon further review, we’re reinstating the Springfield School 
		District's meeting video," the spokesperson said in a statement. "We 
		have policies in place to allow content that might otherwise violate our 
		COVID-19 misinformation policies as long as it includes educational, 
		documentary, scientific, or artistic (EDSA) context. In line with our 
		EDSA policies, the video is available again on YouTube."
 
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			Springfield District 186 School Board President Anthony Mares Monday 
			explains a new policy for YouTube videos. State Rep. Chris Miller, 
			R-Oakland, explains his House Bill 4145.  
            
			
			 
		District parent Ryan Jugan said one of his public comments about 
		COVID-19 policies to the Springfield school board was censored by 
		YouTube. In a statement, he said “as a parent [and] concerned citizen, 
		witnessing censorship, suppression of medical professionals, science and 
		data is appalling.” 
		State Rep. Chris Miller, R-Oakland, filed a bill at the statehouse that 
		he said would empower taxpayers to challenge social media censorship.
 “This bill would give just the regular citizens a way to push back,” 
		Miller said.
 
 
		
		 
		House Bill 4145 would make social media companies liable with punitive 
		damages for censoring someone’s religious or political speech.
 
 “YouTube censuring the school districts and the responses to the school 
		board meetings, this would be an example of where they could have a 
		vehicle to push back against the censorship of their thoughts,” Miller 
		said.
 
 Miller’s bill would allow a minimum of $75,000 in damages per purposeful 
		deletion or censorship of the social media user’s speech, with the 
		exception of, among other things, calls for immediate acts of violence, 
		messages from a fake user or bullying of minors.
 
 The measure has yet to be assigned to a committee.
 
		
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