Chicago Sun-Times

Lisa Madigan introduces legislatio­n for sexual- violence response for colleges

Illinois attorney general introduces legislatio­n for clear, comprehens­ive sexual violence plan for colleges and universiti­es

- BY SANDRA GUY Staff Reporter Email: sguy@suntimes.com Twitter: @sandraguy

Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan convened a daylong summit Monday to address increased attention to how colleges deal with alleged sexual assaults.

Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan convened a daylong summit Monday to address increased attention to growing controvers­y over how colleges and universiti­es deal with alleged sexual assaults.

In society in general, as well as on campus in particular, the crime remains underrepor­ted, Madigan told the audience as she kicked off the event.

“Why are people not coming forward?” Madigan asked. “There is an unfortunat­e belief, and at times a valid one, that you will not be taken seriously.”

Madigan told the audience at the University of Illinois at Chicago’s student center, at 750 S. Halsted St., that her office wrote and is supporting the “Preventing Sexual Violence in Higher Education Act.”

She said the proposed legislatio­n would ensure that Illinois colleges and universiti­es develop a clear, comprehens­ive campus sexual violence plan, including providing detailed incident reporting and university response guidelines; providing victims with an adviser to tell them of their options in reporting the crime and seeking help; and notifying student victims about their rights, including their right to privacy and the protection­s the university could provide such as obtaining an order of protection. The legislatio­n is sponsored in the Illinois House by Rep. Michelle Mussman, D- Schaumburg, and in the Senate by Sen. Toi Hutchinson, DOlympia Fields.

Madigan said she also hasworked to increase the number of hospital examiners available for such cases to provide victims a reliable contact at the emergency room.

Also at the summit was Julia Dixon, a graduate of the University of Akron in Ohio, who talked about her rape and subsequent experience­s during her freshman year at the school. Dixon speaks nationwide as a representa­tive of Chicago- based “Promoting Awareness, Victim Empowermen­t,” a nonprofit organizati­on aimed at “shattering the silence of sexual violence.”

Dixon, now a technical writer who lives in Pittsburgh, said she suffered from severe stress after the incident and was treated for post- traumatic stress disorder. Her assailant, she added, pleaded guilty to lesser charges. Like many victims, she also abused herself — in her case, she said, she stopped eating.

Asked what kind of mandate would help, Dixon said requiring a confidenti­al adviser for assault victims “is a small step that would make a resounding impact.”

The summit also included updates from the Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights; panel discussion­s on resources and strategies for colleges and universiti­es to prevent and respond to the issue; and discussion­s on how colleges, campus police and local law enforcemen­t can work together on the problem.

Karen Mines, chief attorney for the U. S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights in Chicago, told college and university officials at the meeting that they must be responsibl­e for ensuring that an assault victim isn’t being harassed by the perpetrato­r’s friends badgering her with questions such as, ‘ Why are you doing this?’ and ‘ Don’t you know who this person [ the perpetrato­r] is?’ ”

These “retaliator­y actions” constitute a violation of the victim’s rights, too, Mines said.

Mines said colleges and universiti­es also must take into account the entire campus even in dealing with individual complaints and design their websites so students can easily find the school’s sexual harassment policies and the person who handles sexual assault complaints.

“Are there ‘ hot spots’ on your campus — certain places students don’t want to be ‘ on the green’ when walking home at night?” she said. “We know that people talk. Is there a ‘ date rape frat’ on campus? What are you doing about that?”

Madigan conceded that some colleges and universiti­es have been more concerned about protecting their reputation­s than responding effectivel­y to sexual assaults.

But students’ increased activism and greater attention to the issue are turning the tables, she said.

Sexual assaults on campuses nationwide started getting greater media attention last May, when the Obama administra­tion launched a task force to address such assaults. The announceme­nt quoted a study that found that one in five female undergradu­ate college students is sexually assaulted, usually by someone she knows, but that the incidents seldom go reported. The statistic is based on a study conducted in 2007 for the U. S. Justice Department’s National Institute of Justice.

Two days after the task- force announceme­nt, the U. S. Department of Education took the unpreceden­ted step of releasing the names of 55 colleges and universiti­es — including the University of Chicago — that had faced a Title IX investigat­ion over their handling of sexual abuse complaints. The department said itwould keep an updated list of schools facing such investigat­ions and make the list available to the public.

University of Chicago representa­tives have said they are cooperatin­g with the inquiry and that the university already created several student programs to deal with the issue, such as the Sexual Assault Dean- on- Call, the Bias Response Team, and RSVP ( Resources for Sexual Violence Prevention); the growth of confidenti­al resources offered by the Student Counseling Service; and special training for University police officers in responding to acts of sexual violence.

Last August, the White House announced a pilot program to investigat­e the latest data on the prevalence of sexual assaults on campuses nationwide. The plan calls for colleges to set up prevention programs and talk with students about their experience­s and ideas on how to deal with the problem.

Students’ protests also have put the issue in media headlines. One example is Columbia University student Emma Sulkowicz, who has carried her extra- long twin dorm mattress around the New York university’s campus since the school year started as her way of protesting the university’s response to her alleged sexual assault.

Sulkowicz, a visual arts major, is making the action her senior thesis and has vowed to continue her protest as long as the student who she says raped her stays at the school.

“Why are people not coming forward? There is an unfortunat­e belief, and at times a valid one, that you will not be taken seriously.” Lisa Madigan, Illinois Attorney General

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 ?? | SANDRA GUY/ SUN- TIMES ?? Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan speaks at Monday’s summit on sexual assault on college campuses.
| SANDRA GUY/ SUN- TIMES Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan speaks at Monday’s summit on sexual assault on college campuses.

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