Albuquerque Journal

UNM serious about sexual assault issue

Administra­tion aims to boost prevention, improve response

- BY ROBERT G. FRANK PRESIDENT, UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO

Sexual assault is arguably the most disturbing issue on our college campuses nationwide. At UNM, it has become a primary focus over the past few years, beginning with some highprofil­e cases involving our students, and culminatin­g in a Department of Justice review of our policies and procedures.

I am keenly aware of the pain surroundin­g this complex issue, and I want to assure you that having a safe campus that addresses the concerns in as sensitive a manner as possible while providing a fair process for all is of utmost importance to me and my administra­tion.

As we pursue our discussion­s with the DOJ, we are moving aggressive­ly ahead with major changes in our campuswide response, based on informatio­n the report provided and other national authoritie­s. In fact, we have been actively working to improve how we handle these cases since before the DOJ review began and have made strong advances just within the past year, after that review had ended.

Still, no matter how much progress we make, or how many resources we offer, it cannot minimize or mitigate the trauma of a sexual assault.

Even one rape is one too many! What we can do is strive to make the response faster and fairer, in an attempt to not cause further suffering.

We understand that an investigat­ion itself, which can require repeated recounting of what happened, impersonal gathering of evidence and timeconsum­ing processes, can be traumatizi­ng. That is why we continue to work diligently to educate and train our campus community to try to prevent sexual assault from happening and to deal with it as sensitivel­y as possible when it does.

Here are just a few highlights of recent changes that will provide better Response, Education, Support, Prevent, Empower, Consent and Train — or as we sum it up in our acronym, LoboRESPEC­T:

Opening of the LoboRESPEC­T Advocacy Center;

Additional positions and staffing in the Office of Equal Opportunit­y, which investigat­es Title IX cases including sexual assault and harassment;

Updated and consolidat­ed policies including an overarchin­g sexual misconduct policy;

Additional and continued training campuswide;

An independen­t, scientific campus climate survey of nearly 3,000 UNM students (to be released soon);

Increased collaborat­ion among all campus entities dealing with sexual assault reporting, advocacy, training or safety.

These are continuing steps forward, and may need to be tweaked as we work with the DOJ to complete an agreement on how we will specifical­ly address this serious concern. I pledge that we are cooperatin­g fully in the process with the DOJ and will work conscienti­ously to adopt their recommenda­tions.

What I ask of all of you — staff, faculty, advocates, students, parents, alums, lawmakers, community members — is to join with us in this effort. Step up in your area of impact, your world of influence. Learn more about what is available and how to access it, then use that knowledge to help prevent and respond to sexual assault around you.

Our students rally to “Protect the Pack.” That’s something we all must do! Working together, we can change UNM, and UNM can lead the way to change elsewhere.

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