Group Pushes Department Of Education To Get Tougher On Colleges Mishandling Sexual Misconduct

Group To Feds On Sexual Misconduct At Colleges: Do Your Job
WASHINGTON, DC - APRIL 18: A portion of the future site of a memorial to Dwight D. Eisenhower is seen in front of the U.S. Department of Education on Wednesday April 18, 2012 in Washington, DC. Famed architecht, Frank Gehry has created a design for the memorial. The Eisenhower family has spoken out against his design. (Photo by Matt McClain for The Washington Post via Getty Images)
WASHINGTON, DC - APRIL 18: A portion of the future site of a memorial to Dwight D. Eisenhower is seen in front of the U.S. Department of Education on Wednesday April 18, 2012 in Washington, DC. Famed architecht, Frank Gehry has created a design for the memorial. The Eisenhower family has spoken out against his design. (Photo by Matt McClain for The Washington Post via Getty Images)

A group pressuring the U.S. Department of Education to enforce federal rules on prosecuting sexual misconduct on college campuses, plans to stage a demonstration outside the agency's Washington headquarters on July 15.

The protest will feature some of the students who have filed complaints against their schools with the department's Office of Civil Rights talking about their disappointment in the agency's response to their grievances. They will deliver a petition calling on the DOE to enforce their "civil right to freedom from sexual violence."

The petition and demonstration are organized by women involved in the Know Your IX, a campaign, aimed at educating college students on their rights under the gender equality law Title IX.

Alexandra Brodsky, an alumna of Yale University who was one of 16 complainants against her Ivy League institution, said she's helping to organize the protest in part because of her disappointment in how OCR concluded its investigation of her school.

In June 2012, OCR did not find Yale non-compliant with federal laws regarding sexual misconduct, but the agency didn't find the school compliant either. OCR and Yale instead announced a voluntary agreement to policy reforms, and the department fined the Connecticut university $165,000 in May 2013 for violations in reporting sexual assaults on campus.

"The complaint definitely resulted in some important policy changes -- including the complete restructuring of the grievance procedure -- but I've heard from survivors still on campus that little has changed in practice," Brodsky said. "I've heard stories of administrators trivializing victims' experiences and discouraging them from reporting -- eerily similar trends to my own experience in 2009 that led me to sign the complaint in the first place."

Had the OCR labeled Yale non-compliant and turned the case over to the Department of Justice, Brodsky feels the investigation would have had more impact, instead of merely creating a public relations problem for the school, she said.

The DOE did not immediately return a request for comment from The Huffington Post.

Earlier this year, students filed complaints with OCR against several schools, including Dartmouth and Swarthmore colleges, the University of Southern California and University of California, Berkeley.

The DOE has shown some concern about enforcing laws governing sexual misconduct in higher education. It issued letters in 2011 and 2013 warning colleges about retaliating against whistleblowers and reminding them that they're responsible for prosecuting reports of assaults on campus.

The OCR is currently investigating complaints that sexual misconduct cases were mishandled at Occidental College and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In May, it completed a joint investigation with the DOJ into the University of Montana. The agencies found Montana botched the handling of rape reports and laid out a set of policy reforms in a resolution agreement, but the findings drew criticism by conservatives and free-speech advocates who said they defined sexual harassment too broadly.

Brodsky said she'd like to see the DOJ more involved in investigations, but was disappointed that in the Montana case "the feds yet again took a school at its word that things would improve rather than holding the administration accountable."

Brodsky and the other women organizing the protest want the DOE to proactively investigate colleges' mishandling of sexual assaults, rather than waiting for survivors to file complaints, and to allow survivor-complainants at the negotiating table to ensure resolutions with universities. They also want schools to "provide redress for individual victims," said Brodsky.

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