Supreme Court strikes down 5-year-old honoraria ban on federal workers

THE BALTIMORE SUN

WASHINGTON -- Broadly expanding the free-speech rights of nearly 1.7 million federal employees, the Supreme Court ruled yesterday that they have a constitutional right to make money by moonlighting as writers and speakers.

The ruling frees lower-paid, rank-and-file federal workers who do not hold policy-making jobs to receive honorariums for what they say or write outside of work.

A 5-year-old law banning those payments, the court noted, imposes "a blanket burden" on "an immense class of workers with negligible power to confer favors on those who might pay to hear them speak or to read their articles."

The court refused, however, to lift the ban on honorariums for high-level government officials, federal judges and members of Congress and their staffs.

The decision applies to federal workers whose pay grade is below GS-16 -- those making between $12,141 a year and $88,326, a group that totals 1,680,500 workers.

Among federal employees in Maryland who will benefit from the ruling is Robert A. Gordon, 55, an aerospace engineer at the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt. A physicist who plots the dynamics of space satellite movement, Mr. Gordon lectures in his spare time on black history, focusing on alliances between blacks and Seminole Indian warriors.

"It's a relief," he said of the decision. He said he could not understand why an honorariums ban was needed and why Congress had made it so sweeping. Noting that he has been accepting lecture fees but placing them in bank escrow accounts, he said: "I will withdraw them with ease of conscience now."

Mr. Gordon was one of 11 workers from around the country who joined federal labor unions four years ago in challenging the constitutionality of the honorariums ban in federal court. They won in a federal appeals court, but the government took the dispute on to the Supreme Court. Justice John Paul Stevens, who wrote the court's main opinion, said the ban might discourage the development of literary giants. He noted that such authors as Nathaniel Hawthorne, Herman Melville, Walt Whitman and Bret Harte had worked as federal employees.

The court criticized the patchwork nature of the honorariums ban, noting that it applied to many writing and speaking activities but not to all. For example, the ban does not apply to an employee who takes money for acting in a play, delivering a sermon or writing fiction.

By a 5-4 vote, the court rejected a government request to keep the honorariums ban partially intact by banning them for workers when they write or speak on issues that may be linked to their government work, or take money from someone with an interest in the work of the employee's agency.

Copyright © 2021, The Baltimore Sun, a Baltimore Sun Media Group publication | Place an Ad
73°