San Diego Union-Tribune

ED DEPARTMENT REVIEWING CAMPUS SEX ASSAULT RULES

Trump-era policy failed to protect survivors, critics say

- BY COLLIN BINKLEY

The Education Department on Tuesday moved forward with plans to revise federal rules around campus sexual assault, paving the way for an overhaul of a polarizing Trump-era policy that President Joe Biden has vowed to reverse.

In a letter to the nation’s colleges and schools, the department said it will formally begin the process to amend federal rules around Title IX, the federal law that forbids sexual discrimina­tion in education. The department is planning a public hearing on the issue and afterward will issue official notice that the rules are under review.

Biden called for a broad review of sexual discrimina­tion policies in March, and his executive order specifical­ly requested scrutiny of rules finalized last year by then-Education Secretary Betsy DeVos. Biden and other critics have said the rules fail to protect survivors of sexual assault and go too far in protecting the accused.

As a presidenti­al candidate in May 2020, Biden vowed a “quick end” to the rules, saying they guarantee that “college campuses will be less safe for our nation’s young people.”

DeVos saw the rules as one of her most significan­t achievemen­ts. She said they balanced the scales in college discipline systems that had become stacked against the accused. Her rules gave accused students the right to cross-examine their accusers through representa­tives at live hearings, among other protection­s for the accused.

Her rules also narrowed the definition of sexual harassment, limited colleges’ authority to investigat­e claims arising beyond campus and reduced schools’ legal liability as they address claims of misconduct.

Advocates for the accused applauded the policy while critics said it would deter victims from reporting misconduct. College leaders complained that the rules were overly complex and burdensome.

In its Tuesday letter, the Education Department said it will ensure that school grievance processes “provide for the fair, prompt, and equitable” resolution of claims. It did not identify which parts of the rules it intends to revise.

Any change is unlikely to come quickly — it took DeVos three years to finalize her rules through the same process. In the meantime, the agency said it plans to issue a document clarifying its interpreta­tion of the 2020 rules. It will address colleges’ obligation­s, “including the areas in which schools have discretion” in responding to claims, it said.

Survivor advocacy groups have urged Biden to take quick action to rewrite the rules. Some want the administra­tion to issue interim guidance that loosens DeVos’ rules and adds protection­s for survivors. Others have said Biden should rescind the 2020 rules entirely.

DeVos’ rules replaced Obama-era guidance that instructed schools how to handle claims of sexual misconduct. By using the federal rulemaking process, DeVos gave her rules the weight of law and made them more difficult to reverse.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK AP FILE ?? Education Secretary Miguel Cardona’s department announced Tuesday it is taking the next step to revise federal rules around campus sexual assault.
ANDREW HARNIK AP FILE Education Secretary Miguel Cardona’s department announced Tuesday it is taking the next step to revise federal rules around campus sexual assault.

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