The Denver Post

DeVos set to rewrite guidance on sex assaults

- By Laura Meckler

WASHINGTON» Education Secretary Betsy DeVos is set to release a sweeping overhaul of how colleges and universiti­es must handle allegation­s of sexual assault and harassment, giving new rights to the accused, including the ability to cross-examine their accusers, people familiar with the matter said.

The proposal is set for release before Thanksgivi­ng, possibly this week, and replaces less formal guidance issued by the Obama administra­tion in 2011. The new rules would reduce liability for universi- ties, tighten the definition of sexual harassment and allow schools to use a higher standard in evaluating claims of sexual harassment and assault.

The rules stem from a 1972 law known as Title IX that bars sex discrimina­tion at schools that receive federal funding. Most of the attention is on higher education, but the rules also apply to elementary and secondary schools. Once published in the Federal Register, the proposal will be open for public comment before being finalized.

The regulation lands amid a national debate over sexual assault, including whether Brett Kavanaugh should have been elevated to the Supreme Court after allegation­s surfaced that as a teenagerhe sexually assaulted a girl. He denied the accusation and was confirmed. Defending Kavanaugh, President Donald Trump declared it “a very scary time for young men in America” who faced the possibilit­y of false claims.

Last year, DeVos rescinded the 2011 Obama guidance, denouncing it as overly prescripti­ve and lacking due process for the accused. She promised to write a regulation to replace it.

In a 2017 speech, she offered several examples of students she said were wrongly accused of wrongdoing under the old rules. She also said the rules poorly served survi-

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States