A Natrona County High School senior trying to launch a Turning Point USA Club America chapter believes her school principal may be infringing on her First Amendment rights and treating her club differently than others.
Kylie Wall, 17, who belongs to several extracurricular clubs and the high schoolâs student council, said she approached Natrona County High School Principal Aaron Wilson three weeks ago about starting a TPUSA Club America chapter at the school. The national organization was founded by slain conservative political leader Charlie Kirk.
Wilson initially hesitated and said he did not know if he would allow the club to be associated with Turning Point, she said. After allowing her to start one, he told her, âWe have to be careful about this,â Wall said.
In an email response to Cowboy State Daily, Wilson did not directly answer some questions related to his discussions with Wall but said, that âan individual student can attend events outside of school at their choosing.â
âSchool-based activities, athletic groups, or school clubs may participate in community service,â he wrote.
Wall said plans for a joint public meeting with the Kelly Walsh High School chapter were nixed by Wilson and when Wyoming Family Alliance invited representatives from Natrona County TPUSA groups to a dinner to celebrate the chapters, again Wilson refused to allow her club to participate.
âHeâs like itâs not a public club,â he said. âItâs not open to the public, so the public canât be involved with it in any sense.â
Wyoming Family Alliance Director of Educational Resources Sarah Bieber confirmed that the group had reached out to all the chapters in Natrona County including both high school student leaders, as well as the Casper College, and University of Wyoming student leaders to invite them to the event set for Nov. 4.
Celebration Event
âItâs an event to kind of celebrate and bring them into the community,â Bieber said. âTo bring recognition to them and all the work that they are doing. Just kind of a recognition, celebration, launch event.â
Bieber said the Kelly Walsh High School Club America student leader has confirmed he will be there.
Bieber said Wilson informed her via email, that Natrona County High Schoolâs Club America would not participate.
âHe told me that all communications were to go directly through him, that the club was not a public club and that they couldnât participate in any outside events,â she said.
The email from Wilson also informed Bieber that: âIn the future, please send all inquiries, requests and any other communication for the NC Club America Chapter to me directly. Thank you.â Â
Yet, Wall said as a member of the high school Key Club, she and other students often attend meals at Kiwanis. She said the high school football team recently attended a breakfast at the Boys and Girls Club of Central Wyoming.
âAnd so, it just doesnât make sense to me,â she said.
In Wilsonâs email response, he did not directly answer a question posed about whether he refused to allow the Club America chapter to participate in the Wyoming Family Alliance event or if he had allowed the Key Club and football team to attend similar events.
When a reporter from the Oil City News reached out to Wall for an interview along with the president of the Kelly Walsh High School Club America chapter president, Wall went to Wilson about the request. Wilson refused to allow her to speak with him, Wall said.
She said she went and talked to him about the interview request and Wilson told her, âIf we even do this, Iâm going to be next to you the whole time, Iâm going to sit next to you.â
No Media Contact
Wall said he told her she could not speak to the reporter on her own time off school grounds. Wilson said his reasoning was that âhe doesnât want anything political associated with the school,â she said.
The article appeared in the Oil City News with only Kelly Walsh students.
In his written response, Wilson said that district media processes âidentify that reporters are to work throughâ the districtâs public relations office to set up school-based interviews with students and staff.â
Wilson did not answer a question posed about whether he had told the student she could not speak with the reporter without his being there with her.
Last Friday, Wall said she was putting up posters that were approved by Wilson around the high school to promote the groupâs upcoming meeting on Monday. She had heard talk that some teachers were taking them off the wall.
After she placed one poster on the wall in a certain location, she walked down a hall and heard someone ripping paper.
She retraced her steps to where she placed the poster, saw it was torn off the wall, and a teacher walking away down the hall. Wall said she took a photo of the teacher walking down the hall after the incident. She also went and reported it to the principal.
âI brought it to the principal, and he told me that he had already discussed (the posters) with a teacher once and this time he didnât know if it was the same teacher,â Wall said. âHe said he was going to send out a blanket email to all staff telling them that they canât do that and that they are approved.â
As of Monday morning, Wall said another teacher had told her that email had not gone out yet.
Wilson wrote that the incident with the poster was reported to administration and âall district processes were followed in responding to it.â
All flyers produced for clubs, activities, and announcements have to be reviewed by the high school administration, Wilson wrote. He said the TPUSA groupâs focus on civics education meets the criteria for starting a group at the high school.
Wall said as a member of the student council, not all of their posters have to get the principalâs approval.
Wall said the lesson she is learning from her Club Americaâs treatment at Natrona County High School so far is that âFirst Amendment Rightsâ are worth fighting for. She said the federal Equal Access Act that requires public schools not to discriminate against student clubs based on politics or religion is being violated.
In talks with Kelly Walsh Club America students, Wall said they are having a public meeting at a Casper-area church in the coming week and that students involved there say they have had no issues and strong support from their school administration and teacher advisors.
Wall said her club had an initial student meeting and is planning another on Monday night to go over some Club America videos that involve learning how to âcivically engage with one another.â
Wall said she understands that some teachers and others in her school may not agree with the Club Americaâs purpose or values, but she does not believe there should be a difference in the way her club and others are treated.Â
âIâm not going to say that the principal is trying to be negative or objective toward me,â she said. âMaybe he is following district protocol, but it seems really unfair. There are definitely teachers that are mad about it (the Club America chapter).â
In his written response to a question about whether the districtâs non-discrimination policies apply to TPUSA and students who want to form a chapter at the school, Wilson agreed ânon-discrimination policies apply to everyone.â
Asked if he has concerns about the Club America chapter in his school, Wilson wrote that he had ânone.â
âStudent-led clubs are positive and impactful parts of high school for our students,â he wrote.
Wall said her reasons for starting the chapter are all about helping young people understand how to civically engage with one another. The club can help students develop leadership skills and teach people how to âhave an open dialog without absolutely hating one another.â
The point of the club is to promote discourse and see each other as human beings, she said.
âFirst Amendment Rightsâ
Wall said the only way she has been allowed to promote the club is through the posters and there currently are about 15 students who have shown an interest in launching the chapter.
Wall understands that going public with her concerns about how the high schoolâs leadership has treated her club may bring repercussions to her and the club.
âIâve thought about it,â she said. âItâs worth it, because again I am fighting for my First Amendment Right, I am fighting for my God-given rights in the Constitution, and I am fighting for my right to the Equal Access Act.â
A Wyoming Turning Point USA representative for Wyoming said she was trying to contact the principal to set up a meeting to understand more about the situation before commenting.
The Turning Point USA website states that the Club America chapters are meant to âempower bold student leaders to promote free thinking, engage in grassroots activism, and bring their beliefs to lifeâboth on and off campus.â
Dale Killingbeck can be reached at dale@cowboystatedaily.com.





