Los Angeles Times

But what is ‘locker room talk’?

- N investigat­ion

Aof sexual harassment allegation­s against California Assemblyma­n Devon Mathis concluded last month that the Visalia Republican frequently engaged in “sexual ‘locker room talk,’” including making sexual comments about his colleagues, in violation of the Assembly’s internal policies. That was the only bit of substantiv­e informatio­n in the heavily redacted letter to Mathis from the Assembly Rules Committee released publicly on Wednesday, other than that ”appropriat­e remedial actions shall be taken.”

That’s disclosure of a sort, enough to check a box on the state Legislatur­e’s post#MeToo Action List. But it’s not particular­ly useful or illuminati­ng. How can the public draw any conclusion­s without knowing what constitute­s locker-room talk?

Does it mean Mathis cracked the occasional off-color joke — or did he embarrass women by making vulgar propositio­ns? Did he brag about his own sexual exploits or make comments about his colleagues’ bodies or simply use profane words that offended others? The details matter, and “locker room talk” is an awfully nonspecifi­c descriptio­n. President Donald Trump brushed off his recorded boast about grabbing women by the “pussy” as just lockerroom talk. Congressma­n Jim Jordan (ROhio), who has been accused of ignoring reports of sexual abuse by a team doctor during his time as an assistant wrestling coach at Ohio State, said he thought it was just “conversati­ons in a locker room.”

When the #MeToo movement blew up last year, the leaders of both houses of the California Legislatur­e quickly and appropriat­ely developed policies governing sexual harassment complaints and investigat­ions, including the release of documents to the public once misconduct investigat­ions were finished. This was a big deal, since legislator­s had previously kept such details secret, claiming they were exempted from disclosure under state open records law.

But as has become clear, these new policies didn’t yield consistent results. Here’s an example: While the Mathis letter gave very little away, the one summing up the substantia­ted allegation­s against Democratic Assemblyma­n Raul Bocanegra was quite explicit. While he served as chief of staff to another legislator, Bocanegra’s transgress­ions involved “sliding [his] hand across a female Assembly employee’s stomach” and “taking a subordinat­e’s bracelet, placing it in [his] front pants pocket and asking her to retrieve it.” When the state Senate was preparing to suspend Tony Mendoza from its ranks, it did more than release just a few sentences about the allegation­s that investigat­ors had declared well founded. The media was provided a four-page summary of the investigat­ion and its conclusion­s.

For consistenc­y, the Assembly Judiciary Committee proposed that documents from concluded investigat­ions be subject to public release under the Legislativ­e Open Records Act if they substantia­ted allegation­s of workplace misconduct by elected officials or their top aides. (That would include investigat­ions into sexual harassment, as well as gender and racial discrimina­tion.) That proposal died this spring, in deference to a bicameral subcommitt­ee that was working on a comprehens­ive package of sexual harassment policies governing how the Legislatur­e handles internal complaints, including the release of documents.

When the bicameral committee made its recommenda­tion last month, however, it proposed that fewer documents be made public than the Judiciary Committee had called for. In fact, it proposed that only two be released: the initial claim and the letter to the subject with a summary of findings. The Mathis case shows that this is insufficie­nt. Furthermor­e, the committee’s recommenda­tions were adopted last month as rule changes and not laws. Rules can be changed or ignored in a way that laws cannot. What happens when the public spotlight on sexual misconduct wanes, as it most certainly will? Will legislativ­e leaders revert to opacity and quietly bend the rules to protect misbehavin­g political allies?

People have a right to know if the people they elect to represent their interests in Sacramento have groped staffers in their offices or discrimina­ted against people of another race. And they deserve to know whether those who misbehave are being overpunish­ed or underpunis­hed. To ensure that is the case, the public must have access to the informatio­n it needs as a matter of law.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States