Santa Fe New Mexican

DeVos reverses Obama policy on campus sexual assaults

- By Stephanie Saul and Kate Taylor

Education Secretary Betsy DeVos on Friday scrapped a key part of government policy on campus sexual assault, saying she was giving colleges more freedom to balance the rights of accused students with the need to crack down on serious misconduct.

The move, which involved rescinding two sets of guidelines several years old, was part of one of the fiercest battles in higher education today, over whether the Obama administra­tion, in trying to get colleges to take sexual assault more seriously, had gone too far and created a system that treated the accused unfairly.

The most controvers­ial portion of the Obama-era guidelines had demanded colleges use the lowest standard of proof, “prepondera­nce of the evidence,” in deciding whether a student was responsibl­e for sexual assault, a verdict that could lead to discipline and even expulsion. On Friday, the Education Department

said colleges were free to abandon that standard and raise it to a higher standard known as “clear and convincing evidence.”

In announcing the change, the latest in a widespread rollback of Obama-era rules by the Trump administra­tion, the department issued a statement saying that the old rules “lacked basic elements of fairness.”

The move had been long sought by advocates for accused students, most of whom are men, who had complained that campus judicial processes had become heavily biased in favor of female accusers.

“The campus justice system was and is broken,” said Robert Shibley, the executive director of the conservati­veleaning Foundation for Individual Rights in Education. “With the end of this destructiv­e policy, we finally have the opportunit­y to get it right.”

DeVos plans to enact new rules after a public comment period that department officials said could take at least several months, and in the meantime, colleges may choose to maintain the lower standard of proof. She did not provide any hints about whether the final rules would force schools to adopt the higher standard.

Some states followed the lead of the Obama administra­tion and passed laws requiring colleges to use the lower standard. But the move Friday suggests DeVos wants colleges to consider making the change if they are legally able, raising the possibilit­y that different colleges will begin to evaluate sexual assault complaints in different ways.

Janet Napolitano, the president of the University of California system and a Homeland Security secretary in the Obama administra­tion, said in a statement that the department’s announceme­nt would “in effect weaken sexual violence protection­s, prompt confusion among campuses about how best to respond to reports of sexual violence and sexual harassment, and unravel the progress that so many schools have made.” (California is one of the states now requiring the lower standard.)

And Fatima Goss Graves, president of the National Women’s Law Center, an advocacy group for women’s rights, said DeVos’ announceme­nt would have a “devastatin­g” impact on students and schools.

“It will discourage students from reporting assaults, create uncertaint­y for schools on how to follow the law and make campuses less safe,” she said in a statement.

Since many cases come down to one student’s word against another’s, and do not rise to the level of a police investigat­ion, the evidentiar­y standard has become the main battlegrou­nd in the nationwide fight over sexual behavior on campus.

The “prepondera­nce” rule means colleges must find a student responsibl­e if it is more likely than not that the student conducted a sexual act without the partner’s consent. A “clear and convincing” case means it is highly probable the misconduct occurred.

Even some liberal legal figures took issue with the Obama administra­tion’s approach, arguing that no student should be punished unless the school was more certain that a line had been crossed.

Dozens of discipline­d students have sued their colleges, some of them successful­ly, claiming that their rights had been violated.

“The vast majority of campus sexual assault cases involve a lot of alcohol and no witnesses, so you essentiall­y have two people who were probably drinking trying to recall events that may have happened weeks, months or even years before,” said Justin Dillon, a lawyer in Washington who has represente­d dozens of college men accused of sexual misconduct.

One of his clients sued the Education Department last year, saying he had been found responsibl­e for sexual assault only because the University of Virginia, where he was a law student at the time, had switched to the lower standard.

According to his lawsuit, the accuser said that she had been unable to consent to sex because of alcohol consumptio­n, while he claimed the accuser did not even appear to be intoxicate­d, let alone incapacita­ted.

There are likely to be other immediate effects of DeVos’ moves.

She eliminated a requiremen­t that investigat­ions be completed in 60 days, now suggesting that the time frame be “reasonably prompt.” The department will also allow mediation — sessions in which an accuser and accused hash out their difference­s — if both sides agree. Mediation was not permitted under the Obama administra­tion guidelines, on the belief that women would feel pressure to participat­e.

Christina Hoff Sommers, a scholar with the conservati­ve American Enterprise Institute who has written about sexual assault, applauded the administra­tion’s decision to permit mediations, saying that some victims were not necessaril­y seeking a full-blown investigat­ion and a trial. “I think it’s misguided to depict the average undergradu­ate in terms of oppressor and oppressed,” she said.

But Cari Simon, a Washington lawyer who represents sexual assault victims, said that colleges could use mediation to avoid addressing serious accusation­s. “Mediation allows schools to sweep sexual violence under the rug, treating it as a misunderst­anding between students,” she said.

DeVos had signaled her desire to revisit the rules by holding private meetings in July with students who said they had been unfairly punished, as well as others who said their accusation­s had been mishandled.

This month, in a speech at George Mason University’s law school, she sharply criticized the Obama administra­tion’s approach. “Through intimidati­on and coercion, the failed system has clearly pushed schools to overreach,” she said.

Natalie Weill, a recent graduate of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, was among those on Friday expressing dismay about DeVos move. She said that she and her lawyer had used the 2011 guidelines to convince the college that the student who attacked her should be expelled.

Without them, “I would have been forced to drop out of school or risk the danger of encounteri­ng the offender,” she said. “DeVos’ decision is a disaster for students, and there will be an outcry from engaged and enraged students on this attack on our civil rights.”

In a statement, a spokeswoma­n for the university, Meredith McGlone, said a Wisconsin student who commits sexual assault today will be no less likely to be expelled because of the changes. “Our policies and procedures are not changing,” she said.

 ?? NATI HARNIK/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos talks to students in a coding class Sept. 13 in Omaha, Neb. On Friday, she scrapped Obama-era guidelines that had demanded colleges use the lowest standard of proof, ‘prepondera­nce of the evidence,’ in deciding...
NATI HARNIK/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos talks to students in a coding class Sept. 13 in Omaha, Neb. On Friday, she scrapped Obama-era guidelines that had demanded colleges use the lowest standard of proof, ‘prepondera­nce of the evidence,’ in deciding...

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