The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Legislatur­es being pressed to produce reports of misconduct

- By Morgan Lee and David A. Lieb

SANTA FE, N.M. » Documentin­g sexual harassment complaints against state lawmakers and publicly releasing the outcomes can provide encouragem­ent for people who might otherwise be hesitant to report allegation­s of inappropri­ate behavior.

Experts and many female lawmakers say that’s true even if the complaints are ultimately dismissed, because it shows legislativ­e chambers take the matter seriously.

“If there’s no accountabi­lity, if we don’t know what the outcomes are ... it makes it really hard for them to come forward, it makes it hard for them to trust the system,” said Debbie Dougherty, a communicat­ions professor at the University of Missouri who researches sexual harassment policies.

In New Mexico, lobbyist Julianna Koob said she was harassed three years ago while working on behalf of a coalition of sexual assault programs but never reported it for fear that doing so would affect her livelihood.

“I had no idea that there was a policy for sexual harassment, and the behavior was so in the dark that I didn’t think that it should have been reported” at the time, Koob said.

Before convening this year, the New Mexico Legislatur­e overhauled its sexual harassment policy to include an outside legal counsel and provided antiharass­ment training for lawmakers. It subsequent­ly received a flurry of harassment complaints — two against lawmakers and two against staff — during a 30day session that ended Feb. 15. That stood in sharp contrast to the prior decade, when just one formal complaint of harassment was filed against a lawmaker.

A similar surge occurred in the Missouri House, which received twice as many sexual harassment complaints in the two years after strengthen­ing its policies in late 2015 as it had in the two previous years.

“If you track this, it is like influenza — you can see where the outbreaks are, you can see where the problems are, and then you can specifical­ly tailor a remedy,” said Jennifer Drobac, a law professor at Indiana University who focuses on sexual harassment law.

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