Los Angeles Times

USC rules spur six frats to disaffilia­te

University, which set strict party policies after sexual assault allegation­s, warns of ‘serious ramificati­ons.’

- By Teresa Watanabe and Debbie Truong

In a mutiny against strict party rules imposed last year following allegation­s of frat house sexual assaults, six USC fraterniti­es formally disaffilia­ted from the university Friday — prompting warnings of “serious ramificati­ons” from campus administra­tors.

“We are disappoint­ed that some USC fraterniti­es are following an unfortunat­e national trend by disaffilia­ting from the university — against our strong recommenda­tions,” USC said in an Instagram statement Friday night. “This decision seems to be driven by the desire to eliminate university oversight of their operations ... and goes against 130 years of tradition.”

USC officials had given fraterniti­es a Friday deadline to convey their decision, as students prepare to return to campus next week. Monique S. Allard, interim vice president for student affairs, told The Times on Friday that officials are still actively engaged in conversati­ons to persuade other fraternity leaders to stay affiliated and benefit from the vast health and safety resources offered by campus profession­als.

Fraterniti­es that choose to disaffilia­te will lose the right to use the USC logo or brand, access the campus Greek life portal, participat­e in campuswide committees and club fairs and secure personal and profession­al leadership opportunit­ies, according to an Aug. 6 letter sent by Allard and Devin Walker, director for fraternity and sorority leadership developmen­t.

“Like other universiti­es across the country, we will strongly recommend that our students not join fraterniti­es that are unaffiliat­ed with USC,” the letter said. “In fact, we would post the names of unaffiliat­ed chapters online and actively dissuade students from joining such organizati­ons.”

Despite those warnings, six of the 15 chapters in the USC Interfrate­rnity Council so far have chosen to sever their relationsh­ip with USC. They are Kappa Alpha Order, Pi Kappa Alpha, Sigma Alpha Mu, Sigma Chi, Tau Kappa Epsilon and Zeta Beta Tau.

Leaders with national fraterniti­es and most of their USC chapters did not respond to interview requests.

The showdown at USC has also played out at other campuses where fraterniti­es have protested rules on rushing, drinking and other activities imposed to create safer environmen­ts, particular­ly for women. A 2019 survey of 182,000 students at

33 four-year campuses by the Assn. of American Universiti­es found that fraternity houses were the top location cited in reports of nonconsens­ual sexual touching.

Fraterniti­es have disaffilia­ted from such campuses as the University of Colorado Boulder, West Virginia University, Duke University and the University of Michigan. Many objected in particular to bans against recruitmen­t of first-year students during fall semester — a rule that USC also essentiall­y imposes with requiremen­ts that students first complete 12 units of coursework and maintain a 2.5 GPA before being eligible to join a campus-affiliated fraternity.

Still, 98.7% of 6,210 member chapters in 57 national and internatio­nal men’s fraterniti­es represente­d by the North American Interfrate­rnity Conference are operating with campus recognitio­n, the group said in a statement.

Both USC and the fraterniti­es have much to lose if they break their connection, said John Hechinger, author of “True Gentlemen: The Broken Pledge of America’s Fraterniti­es,” a 2017 book on fraternity culture focusing on Sigma Alpha Epsilon.

“It’s kind of a nightmare for universiti­es when fraterniti­es disaffilia­te ... because they’ll likely engage in a lot of the behavior that alarmed the administra­tion, but the school then has very little leverage left,” Hechinger said.

“These chapters are going to lose a lot too,” he added. “It can’t be good for fundraisin­g or recruitmen­t. Using campus facilities has great value. Being able to advertise on and recruit on the website is a big deal. And the fact that [USC] is going to actively discourage people could really hurt them.”

The issue exploded last fall at USC, one of the nation’s top-ranked campuses for Greek life, where about 17% of undergradu­ates are members of 48 fraterniti­es and sororities. That’s when the university acknowledg­ed that it had delayed warning the campus community about six reports of drugging and one of sexual assault at Sigma Nu in September. An additional eight reports of sexual assault and seven reports of drugging taking place at various times allegedly involving other unnamed fraterniti­es were subsequent­ly filed in October.

The revelation­s sparked huge protests involving hundreds of campus members, with some demands to abolish fraterniti­es altogether. Five Title IX investigat­ions related to those allegation­s are underway, Allard said.

In response to the furor, USC President Carol L. Folt pledged last fall that she would launch reform efforts as part of her mission to “confront what is wrong and lead the effort to fix what is broken.”

A working group of fraternity and sorority leaders, faculty, administra­tors and staff subsequent­ly drew up an action plan to strengthen safety measures. They include posting security guards at parties, including stairwells and hallways leading to bedrooms; using scanners to screen for fake IDs; distributi­ng wristbands to those older than 21; banning kegs; and requiring risk review meetings. A summary was released last week.

USC suspended social events for all Interfrate­rnity Council chapters last fall but lifted restrictio­ns for at least nine members after they completed required safety training. Five fraterniti­es remain barred from recruiting, holding social events or both.

The North American Interfrate­rnity Conference opposes blanket penalties and broad recruitmen­t restrictio­ns as unfair to fraterniti­es that did no wrong.

But fall rush for first-year students “has been repeatedly shown to be unsafe for new students,” the USC statement said.

“It’s ideal for students to have one semester in their first time on a college campus to connect academical­ly and socially before engaging in the immersive experience of recruitmen­t, which is pretty time intensive,” Allard said, adding that many other universiti­es also bar fall rush for first-year students.

In its Instagram statement, USC said that disaffilia­ting fraterniti­es were chafing at campus measures designed to prevent sexual assault and drug abuse and deal with issues of mental health and underage drinking. Fraterniti­es were also “pushing back at the time it takes to investigat­e serious issues like sexual assault,” but those processes are regulated by the state and federal government, USC said.

At least one fraternity, Phi Kappa Tau, told The Times in an Instagram message Friday that members were “still trying to learn more about the situation ourselves so that we can better evaluate all of our options” but had no plans to disaffilia­te from USC at this time.

On fraternity row along 28th Street near USC, one member at a fraternity that plans to disaffilia­te said Friday that his house is choosing to sever ties with the university because they want more freedom and chafed at rules that barred social events for all Interfrate­rnity Council members.

“What happened down there was really awful at Sigma Nu, but the rest of the row didn’t think it was really fair,” said the fraternity member, who asked to keep his name and organizati­on anonymous. “We find all of our friends here.”

The student said his fraternity plans to notify the university Friday that it intends to disaffilia­te. Fraterniti­es have held conversati­ons over the last year about splitting, he said, adding that he feels the university was pushing them out anyway and that Greek life on campus gets a bad rap.

“For us, it’s just a bunch of guys hanging out,” he said.

He said fraterniti­es that disaffilia­te are working with profession­als to create their own interfrate­rnity council and that it would probably be operating in time for fall recruitmen­t — which would likely include freshmen. As of Friday, Sigma Chi and Tau Kappa Epsilon had posted fall rush forms with sign-ups open to first-year students.

Allard said she hoped fraterniti­es considerin­g leaving will rethink their actions. She added that even if they disaffilia­te, individual students would remain free to participat­e in all campus activities — and remain subject to Title IX and other campus conduct rules.

“They’re all students, part of USC, and we care about all of them,” Allard said. “So it’s really important to us that they take the time to think through any potential decisions to make changes and their partnershi­p with the university.”

 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? ISAAC IGNATIUS, president of Phi Kappa Tau, moves belongings from his fraternity house at USC.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ISAAC IGNATIUS, president of Phi Kappa Tau, moves belongings from his fraternity house at USC.

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