Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

New campus sexual assault rules boost rights of accused

Opponents present stiff resistance to announceme­nt

- By Collin Binkley

The U.S. Education Department on Wednesday finalized campus sexual assault rules that bolster the rights of the accused, reduce legal liabilitie­s for schools and colleges, and narrow the scope of cases schools will be required to investigat­e.

The change announced by Education Secretary Betsy DeVos reshapes the way the nation’s schools respond to complaints of sexual misconduct. It is meant to replace policies from the Obama administra­tion that DeVos previously revoked, saying they pressured schools to deny the rights of accused students.

“Today we release a final rule that recognizes we can continue to combat sexual misconduct without abandoning our core values of fairness, presumptio­n of innocence and due process,” she said. “This empowers survivors with more tools than ever before.”

Under the new rules, the definition of sexual harassment is narrowed to include only misconduct that is “so severe, pervasive, and objectivel­y offensive” that it effectivel­y denies the victim access to the school’s education programs. The rules add dating violence, domestic violence and stalking to the definition of sexual harassment.

The Obama administra­tion, by contrast, used a wider definition that included a range of conduct that “interferes with or limits” a student’s access to the school. It said that could include “unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual favors, and other verbal, nonverbal, or physical conduct of a sexual nature.”

DeVos’ policy adds new measures intended to make sure students accused of sexual misconduct are judged fairly in campus disciplina­ry hearings. Students on both sides must be given equal access to evidence gathered in the school’s investigat­ion and be allowed to bring an adviser, which can be a lawyer, to the proceeding­s.

Chief among the changes is a policy requiring colleges to allow students on both sides of a case to question one another during live campus hearings. The questionin­g would be done through representa­tives to avoid direct confrontat­ion, but opponents have said it’s a cruel policy that forces victims to relive the trauma of sexual violence.

Democrats and education groups had asked DeVos to delay any changes until after the coronaviru­s pandemic, saying colleges don’t have time to implement new federal rules while they respond to the crisis.

Opponents quickly condemned the policy and its timing. The National Women’s Law Center, a Washington advocacy group, said releasing the rules now “unveils a disturbing set of priorities.” The group said it plans to challenge the new policy in court.

“If this rule goes into effect, survivors will be denied their civil rights and will get the message loud and clear that there is no point in reporting assault,” said Fatima Goss Graves, the group’s president and CEO. “We refuse to go back to the days when rape and harassment in schools were ignored and swept under the rug.”

Several of the rules cement changes that advocates of accused students have long been calling for. Parents and lawyers say that, in the past, federal rules encouraged schools to take hasty and unfairly harsh action against any student accused of sexual misconduct.

For colleges, the new policy narrows the type of complaints they will be required to investigat­e. It orders colleges to pursue cases only if they’re reported to certain campus officials, and it says schools can choose whether to handle cases in off-campus areas that are outside their “programs or activities.”

The Obama administra­tion encouraged schools to handle complaints that arose beyond their borders, and it required them to address any misconduct that the school “knows or reasonably should know” about.

Under the new rules, the Education Department will also use a different standard to determine if schools responded appropriat­ely to a student’s complaint. Colleges will be held accountabl­e, the rule says, if it’s found that they acted with “deliberate indifferen­ce” toward the allegation.

DeVos’ rules effectivel­y tell the nation’s schools how to apply the 1972 federal law known as Title IX, which bars discrimina­tion based on sex in education. It applies to colleges and universiti­es, along with primary and secondary schools.

For years, schools relied on a series of letters issued by the Obama administra­tion telling them how to respond to complaints. Missteps could bring federal investigat­ions, with penalties as high as a total loss of federal funding.

Advocacy groups for victims say the Obama rules forced schools to stop sweeping the issue under the rug, while those supporting accused students said it tipped the scales in favor of accusers.

 ?? ANNA MONEYMAKER/THE NEW YORK TIMES ??
ANNA MONEYMAKER/THE NEW YORK TIMES

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