Texarkana Gazette

Biden to revisit Trump rules on campus sexual assaults

- By Katie Rogers and Erica L. Green

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden on Monday directed the Education Department to conduct an expansive review of all policies on sex and gender discrimina­tion and violence in schools, effectivel­y beginning his promised effort to dismantle Trump-era rules on sexual misconduct that afforded greater protection­s to students accused of assault.

With two executive orders — one ordering the new Education secretary to review those policies, and the other establishi­ng a gender-focused White House policy council — Biden, an author of the Violence Against Women Act, waded into an area that has been important to him but has been politicall­y charged for more than a decade.

The Obama administra­tion issued guidance to schools, colleges and universiti­es that critics in and out of academia said leaned too heavily toward accusers and offered scant protection­s or due process for students and faculty accused of sexual harassment, assault or other misconduct. The Trump administra­tion swept those aside and delivered the first-ever regulation­s on sexual misconduct, which many saw as swinging too far the other way, offering the accused too much power through guaranteed courtlike tribunals and cross-examinatio­n of accusers.

It is unclear whether Biden’s review of all policies under Title IX, a 1972 law that prohibits sex-based discrimina­tion in federally funded schools, will return the rules to the Obama administra­tion’s approach or find some middle ground that incorporat­es lessons from the last two administra­tions. When asked what direction Biden might take, a White House official said Monday that the executive order “speaks for itself.”

“We’re looking for a process that does not turn us into courts, that allows us to treat both sides fairly and equally, and does not attempt to micromanag­e campus proceeding­s,” said Terry W. Hartle, a senior vice president of the American Council on Education, which represents 1,700 college and university presidents and executives in higher education.

However the process proceeds, it is sure to illustrate just how much Title IX has become a political cudgel in the culture wars over sex, gender and education.

As vice president, Biden was integral to President Barack Obama’s efforts to overhaul Title IX, in part by issuing guidance that led to aggressive investigat­ions of schools that had mishandled sexual assault complaints and threatened them with funding cuts. Rules proposed in 2018 by Betsy DeVos, the Education secretary under President Donald Trump, wiped those out and cemented procedures that bolstered the due process rights of accused students.

Because DeVos went through the formal regulatory process with a draft rule, comment period and final rule, her successor, Miguel A. Cardona, must go through another regulatory procedure to replace the Trump rule with his own, which will take a year or more.

The Trump administra­tion’s rules have been in effect since August, and lawsuits that sought to overturn them — including one to delay them as colleges grappled with the coronaviru­s pandemic — have failed.

“It’s not to say that they couldn’t loosen some of the Trump-era rules,” said R. Shep Melnick, a politics professor at Boston College and the author of “The Transforma­tion of Title IX: Regulating Gender Equality in Education.” “But if they try to go back to the Obama-era rules, I’m pretty sure that they would lose in court.”

Jennifer Klein, who will lead the re-establishe­d White House Gender Policy Council with Julissa Reynoso, the chief of staff to Jill Biden, the first lady, told reporters Monday that “everybody involved” in a sexual complaint, “accused and accuser,” was entitled to due process.

“The policy of this administra­tion is that every individual, every student, is entitled to a free — a fair education free of sexual violence, and that people — all involved — have access to a fair process,” said Klein, a former senior adviser to Hillary Clinton when she was the first lady.

The DeVos rules lean heavily on legal precedent, including U.S. Supreme Court decisions, to narrow the definition of sexual harassment, tighten reporting requiremen­ts and detail the steps that schools must take to provide support for accusers. They also require colleges to hold a live hearing with cross-examinatio­n by a third party and offer schools the flexibilit­y to choose their evidentiar­y standard. The rules also require that cases be investigat­ed under a presumptio­n of innocence and that parties have equal access to evidence and appeals processes.

Joe Cohn, the legislativ­e and policy director at the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, a nonprofit civil liberties group, said the new regulation­s reflected “a good-faith effort to try to make this process work for all students.”

“There are students who are raped on college campuses, and there are students who are wrongly accused, and we should not be choosing between which of those groups we wish to give justice,” Cohn said. “The one-sided rhetoric doesn’t lead us to have confidence at this point that the rights of the accused will seriously be taken into account.”

Sage Carson, the manager of Know Your IX, a survivor advocacy group, said that since the Trump rules took effect in August, victims had reached out to the organizati­on either confused about their rights under the new regulation or concerned that their schools were weaponizin­g it. The group has called on the Biden administra­tion to write a new rule, issue new guidance and conduct a listening tour.

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