The Arizona Republic

DeVos revising sex misconduct rules

Plan would bolster rights of accused students

- Marina Pitofsky AP

Education Secretary Betsy DeVos released a controvers­ial proposal Friday to overhaul how schools across the country address sexual misconduct complaints, narrowing the definition of what sexual harassment is on campus and reinforcin­g “due process” rights for students accused.

The rule creates three categories for harassment, including “Unwelcome conduct on the basis of sex that is so severe, pervasive and objectivel­y offensive that it effectivel­y denies a person equal access to the school’s education program or activity;” “quid pro quo harassment,” like a school employee “conditioni­ng an educationa­l benefit” on a person’s sexual conduct; and sexual assault.

Under Obama-era guidelines, sexual harassment was defined more loosely as “unwelcome conduct of a sexual nature.”

The proposal legally requires schools to respond to complaints when they are filed with Title IX coordinato­rs at schools or an official authorized to take action. Schools are only legally required to respond if the alleged incident occurred on campus or on areas overseen by the school, leaving out, for example, study abroad programs.

One of the most striking changes would allow for the accused to cross-examine accusers during sexual misconduct hearings, although it would be carried out through a representa­tive to avoid confrontat­ion between students.

The proposed guidelines also dictate “the importance of supportive measures” for the accused and the accuser. This can include academic course adjustment­s, counseling, no-contact orders, dorm room reassignme­nt, leaves of absence and class schedule changes for the accused or the accuser, according to the Department of Education.

Accused students would be presumed innocent during the disciplina­ry process and given the right to review all evidence a school collects.

DeVos said the overhaul would make Title IX grievance complaints more transparen­t and reliable for all parties. “Every survivor of sexual violence must be taken seriously, and every student accused of sexual misconduct must know that guilt is not predetermi­ned,” DeVos said in a statement Friday.

The Department of Education’s plans have already drawn criticism from lawmakers and organizati­ons that advocate on behalf of sexual assault survivors.

Rep. Joe Kennedy, D-Mass., slammed the cross-examinatio­n provision of the guidelines in a tweet Thursday. “No survivor should be cross-examined by his or her accused rapist,” he said.

The National Women’s Law Center called the rules “potentiall­y devastatin­g,” saying that it would “undermine many of Title IX’s essential protection­s.”

Fatima Goss Graves, CEO of the law center, said in a statement that the draft rules create a more dangerous environmen­t “for all students and more schools will shield harassers and rapists.”

The proposed rules will be subject to public comment for 60 days before being finalized.

 ??  ?? Education Secretary Betsy DeVos speaks in Philadelph­ia in September.
Education Secretary Betsy DeVos speaks in Philadelph­ia in September.

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