THEATRE
DIVERSITY
SPORTS
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“Everybody” explores themes of life, death and everything in between
Ellensburg High School students sign to athletic career at CWU
The art of protest in Iran
Vol. 123 NO. 9
November 22, 2022
President Wohlpart responds in wake of Title IX protests President Wohlpart at his installation. Photo courtesy of CWU Flickr
Katherine Camarata Lead Editor President Wohlpart responded to local movements regarding Title IX allegations on campus in an interview with The Observer, offering insight into the motivations for his administration’s current actions and goals projecting into the future. Wohlpart said Interim Vice President of Public Affairs Andrew Morse has met 2-3 times with the Board of Directors of student government regarding gender-based violence on campus. He said conversations among administrators and stu-
dents regarding the handling of Title IX cases are taking place. “There’s a whole range of ways that we reach out,” Wohlpart said. “I’ve talked with faculty and staff, sometimes it’s a hallway conversation, sometimes it’s after a meeting; sometimes it’s an email.” Wohlpart characterized these conversations generally, and said: “Folks have said that they appreciate the direction we’re going, the transparency, that we have had the willingness to take all of this work very seriously, to recognize that perhaps in the past we have not done things as well as we might have.” “We are absolutely committed to going in the right direction,” Wohlpart said, adding that these conversations will eventually channel into the Gender-Based Violence Prevention workgroups announced via email (see side story). According to Wohlpart, the workgroups, also referred to as committees, will set the groundwork for the university to investigate their policies, procedures and practices. “Those committees really will be charged with thinking about how they will investigate best practices, learn about what we have done and then make a series of recommendations, so I’m really going to try and turn it over to them.” Wohlpart said he asked for nominations for the workgroups from shared governance leaders by the end of November and will continue communicating about these efforts in early December. The Observer requested access to report or sit in on the workgroup meetings, however Wohlpart said he believes this would affect the committee’s willingness to authentically discuss certain topics. Wohlpart mentioned major shifts coming up at CWU as a result of the reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act, changes in the Clery Act and shifts in Title IX implemented by the Biden Administration. According to a White House press release, the reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act is supposed to involve “increasing services and support for survivors from underserved and marginalized communities. Specifically, the LGBTQ+ communities, survivors of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual harassment, stalking, funding survivor-centered com-
munity-based restorative practice services and increasing support for culturally specific services.” Wohlpart suggested that Trump reduced the individuals protected by Title IX, while Biden is seeking to expand this coverage again. “The Trump final rules were characterized as being less amenable to victims and more amenable to the alleged perpetrator,” Wohlpart said. “I think the Biden administration will shift that back, to give more rights back to the victims.” “There’s more expansive embrace of different groups than has existed in the past,” he added. When asked how he intends to support these shifts going forward, Wohlpart said it would require a change in culture which needs to happen from the bottom-up as opposed to only top-down. “The reason that I’m taking this through shared governance is that what we need to do is not just check boxes, but change the culture,” Wohlpart said. “The way you change the culture is not by deciding things top down, but by making sure that the university community comes together to learn about this … so that it becomes part of our practice. Long term, I want this to be sustainable. I want to make sure that this exists way beyond me.” According to Wohlpart, it is important for CWU to approach investigations in a “trauma-informed” manner. “Being trauma-informed is one of the hardest pieces, because unless you’re the person who has been traumatized in that kind of way, you don’t necessarily know what that feels like or looks like,” Wohlpart said. “The question is always how do you completely investigate in a way that is objective, but that also recognizes the trauma?” Cats Against Assault, owners of the Instagram account and group of advocates, has organized two campus protests this fall concerning alleged mishandling of Title IX cases on campus (see “Cats Against Assault offers updates about campus response.”) Wohlpart has not attended these protests. Wohlpart said he was present at protests in spring demanding a Multicultural Center, but that students politely told him they did not want him to be part of the demonstrations. “I said, ‘I agree with your effort here. I’m on your side, but I recognize that you want space,’” Wohlpart explained. “So, I am giving students space when they do protests.”
Cats Against Assault responds to actions of administration Second campus protest held The Observer spoke exclusively to representatives from the Cats Against Assault (CAA) team, who have asked to continue to stay anonymous for fear of retaliation from perpetrators and administration. The CAA team claimed people on campus have accused them of lying since creating their Instagram account. Despite this backlash, the team said they have higher expectations beyond what they’ve already achieved. “We’re happy that there’s a response and that’s definitely a result of the protests and all this student and community involvement,” a CAA team representative said. “However, it’s not a concrete response and there’s no real timeline to it.” The CAA team said they hope victims of Title IX cases will have a say in future policy reformation. They said despite the support they’ve received, they worry people will become prematurely relaxed. They expressed concern that communications from President Wohlpart have “made it seem like he was doing more than he actually is.” Cats Against Assault held a first campus protest on Nov. 3 and a second on Nov. 21 from 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. with groups of up to 25 making rounds from the SURC around Samuelson Hall and back past Black Hall according to the organizers, as chants of indignation toward CWU echoing through the air. Various groups and clubs led loops of protests scheduled at specific times, including MEChA de CWU, Douglas Honors College, Cross Country, SWAP and Her Campus. “There seem to be a lot of people excited for future protests after the last protest,” a CAA representative said. “It was really cool to see that many people engaged and that many people really caring. It was very much a strong community moment.”
See pg. 2 for “Gender-based Violence Prevention workgroup to review policies, procedure and practices.”