The Arizona Republic

UA student and faculty groups support campus safety report

- Sarah Lapidus Coverage of southern Arizona on azcentral.com and in The Arizona Republic is funded by the nonprofit Report for America in associatio­n with The Republic. Reach the reporter at sarah.lapidus@gannett.com.

Just days after a faculty report calling out the University of Arizona for its response to the Oct. 5 shooting of a hydrology professor and to other incidents impacting safety on campus, faculty and student groups responded with their unanimous support.

Committee of Eleven, the oldest elected faculty governance group founded in 1947, and the faculty senate both voted unanimousl­y to endorse the report earlier this week.

Thomas Meixner, professor and head of the UA Department of Hydrology and Atmospheri­c Sciences, was shot and killed by a student as Meixner walked from a class to his office on the Tucson campus on Oct. 5, 2022. Police later apprehende­d Murad Dervish, 46, on suspicion of Meixner’s death. Dervish is a former student of Meixner, according to UA police.

The shooting occurred after almost a year of harassment and intimidati­ng and threatenin­g behavior not only geared toward Meixner but four other faculty members in the hydrology department, a female undergradu­ate student and a dean of students administra­tor, the report said.

The Associated Students of University of Arizona published a joint statement with the Hydrology and Atmospheri­c Sciences Student Associatio­n on Saturday, calling the report an “important step towards justice.”

“This interim report makes one fact clear: the murder of Dr. Meixner was not a random act of violence, but a result of glaring institutio­nal failures to sufficient­ly protect the students, faculty, and staff of the Department of Hydrology and Atmospheri­c Sciences for nearly a year prior to the murder.”

Mexiner’s family reacts

In a statement, Mexiner’s family said the report meant a lot to them because the committee members who drafted the report cared deeply for the university, its faculty and students.

“Just like Tom did in his profession­al life,” the family said.

The family said the interim report’s scope, depth and meaninful conclusion­s exceeded their expectatio­ns. They reiterated how committee members volunteere­d more than 1,000 hours of their time to compile the report.

“They want to make sure that colleges and department­s can move forward knowing that their leadership has an active plan to create a safe environmen­t on campus,” the family said about the committee. “We know Tom would stand and work with them. “

The report, released on Feb. 1, titled “Oversight and Response Failure: Broken Trust,” investigat­ed several instances of violent threats, sexual harassment and non-violent harassment, and the university’s responses to the situations. The report included testimony from victims, university offices, and law enforcemen­t, among others.

The report found that the university failed to implement an effective risk management system to assess and communicat­e threats to safety on campus.

Meixner and the others who were targeted persistent­ly contacted the dean of students, the Office of General Counsel, which provides legal counsel for the university faculty and staff, and the University of Arizona Police Department to report the threats and harassment, the report said.

The offices failed to address the harassment, focusing instead on how the evidence could violate law or policy, the report alleged.

The subjects of the threats eventually took it upon themselves to protect their own lives by “purchasing a bulletproo­f vest, relocating offices, temporaril­y changing residences, installing home security systems, possessing non-lethal weapons while on campus and keeping a loaded gun while at home,” the report said.

In an email to The Arizona Republic, the university said the report “reached sweeping conclusion­s” and that while the administra­tive and service units did meet briefly with the faculty committee about general processes, “they did not engage in detailed discussion­s about the events leading up to the October shooting as the report implies.”

At a faculty senate meeting on Monday, Faculty Committee Chair Leila Hudson who oversaw the committee that put together the report, said she was “beyond disappoint­ed” at the university’s response to the report.

At the meeting, Hudson said her disappoint­ment stemmed from the university continuing to “delegitimi­ze the faculty’s expertise” and the committee’s statutory role of governance at the university.

Meixner’s family members also criticized the university’s response to the report, saying that the institutio­n’s communicat­ion was dismissive of the faculty that want to protect the community.

“Personally, it has increased our anxiety about whether there will ever be any accountabi­lity and ownership by the U of A regarding the mistakes that were made leading up to Tom’s murder,” they said.

At the senate meeting, University President Robert Robbins said he is taking this issue seriously and reiterated that the university hired an outside group, PAX Group LLC, to conduct its own investigat­ion of campus safety.

“The idea that I wouldn’t take this very seriously. It’s my number one job, my absolute one job,” Robbins said, in response to faculty’s comments of the report. “There are many other people that are threatenin­g faculty members and others on campus. I am frustrated that I don’t have the tools to be able to do something about that.”

Robbins takes accountabi­lity, Meixner’s family does not accept

Robbins also said he was the one who should be held accountabl­e for mistakes made that led to the shooting.

He said he hopes the two reports together will impact change. The final report from the committee is expected to be released in May, while the investigat­ion conducted by the PAX Group is ongoing.

Meixner’s family said in their statement they do not accept Robbins’ taking sole responsibi­lity as he did not know about the threats.

They noted that the interim report and the Pax report together will provide a “roadmap” for safety improvemen­ts at the university, but accountabi­lity is needed.

“That cannot happen unless the U of A reckons with the road that led to Tom’s murder, which was reported in depth by the General Faculty Committee on University Safety for All,” they said.

They implored Robbins and the administra­tion to support the faculty senate in its work to improve safety at the university.

“It would be the most meaningful way to honor Tom’s legacy,” they said.

Other situations raise concerns

The committee also looked into sexual harassment allegation­s in the university’s James E. Rogers College of Law between male law students and two female law students in 2019 and 2020. One female law student was harassed, while the second was raped, both by male law students, according to the allegation­s.

Another situation investigat­ed by the committee involved a Black student who uses a wheelchair. The student had an encounter with the interim associate vice provost of diversity and inclusion that made the student feel uncomforta­ble.

The report also discussed the harassment of a student journalist after she wrote a story about a TikTok influencer who attended the university.

 ?? UA COLLEGE OF SCIENCE ?? University of Arizona Professor Thomas Meixner was shot and killed on Oct. 5.
UA COLLEGE OF SCIENCE University of Arizona Professor Thomas Meixner was shot and killed on Oct. 5.

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