Phoenix 4/25

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News

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THURSDAY, APRIL 25, 2013

The Phoenix

‘Clery Complaint,’ continued from page 1 “Students’ rights are being violated consistently by these administrators,” said Ferguson. “There are administrators who have done wrong that we didn’t include on this list. These are people who have been consistent and even today are violating students’ rights and hurting them — emotionally traumatizing them.” The second demanded more education — making Acquaintance Sexual Assault Prevention (ASAP) workshops mandatory for every student, not excusing athletes from the workshop, and including Title IX and Clery Act education so that every student will know victims’ rights, the procedure for reporting sexual assault and the resources that are available to them. The third request was to look at sexual assault management, which includes creating a sexual assault management office, for which one individual would be hired for the express purpose of representing and supporting victims through the reporting process, and another would be hired parttime to represent and protect the rights of the perpetrator. This would allow the very specific legal issues regarding both victims and perpetrators to be accurately addressed and simultaneously prevent the burden of caring for both parties properly from falling on administrators who have other jobs to attend to. “[Having a person protect the perpetrator] is important because it is hard to decipher these cases. There isn’t a preponderance of evidence,” said Ferguson. “It’s really important to make sure that everyone’s rights are preserved.”

The office would also provide free legal assistance for victims, which according to Brinn, several colleges’ offices already do, the University of New Hampshire among them. “This is not revolutionary,” Brinn said. “There are other colleges that are already doing it.” Part of reforming sexual assault management also includes creating an anonymous student group that has funding to provide legal counsel, psychological counsel outside of the college and medical care. The group would also be responsible for autonomously administering a few “emergency singles” for victims. These would provide a safe living space for them after the assault and until new housing is found, if necessary. The fourth request was that the college publicly admit wrongdoing and reveal steps being taken as it moves forward with the changes. The letter with these requests was presented at the meeting with Chopp, where Nancy Nicely, secretary of the college and vice president for communications, was also present. According to Ferguson, the letter has already reached a number of the college’s Board of Managers. However, Chopp did not consent to its demands. In an e-mail after the meeting, Chopp told Ferguson that the administration would carefully consider their suggestions and share the concerns with the independent reviewer. She also said that “to further strengthen our efforts,” the college would be “pursuing an independent, external review of all of our sexual misconduct policies and

procedures,” which was not news to the complainant. Chopp did mention, though, that the suggestions regarding ASAP training and attendance were already in the process of being implemented. In an e-mail interview Chopp also said that the college would “[cooperate with] a possible review by the Department of Education.” This review will take place if the department accepts the complaint filed by Ferguson, Brinn and the other 17 survivors. “These are important opportunities for us to improve our processes in pursuit of a safer, stronger community that will not tolerate sexual misconduct,” she said. The OCR, which will respond to the complaint under Title IX, is the office with the power to withdraw Swarthmore’s federal aid, often awarded in the form of Pell Grants. According to the U.S. Department of Education’s Title IX Revised Sexual Harassment Guidance, if a college being accused of violations under the act has or agrees to disseminate “policy prohibiting sex discrimination under Title IX and effective grievance procedures,” effectively respond to “allegations of sexual harassment,” and take “immediate and effective corrective action responsive to the harassment, including effective actions to end the harassment, prevent its recurrence, and, as appropriate, remedy its effects,” the OCR will consider the complaint to be resolved. Essentially, the external review, combined with a few small steps to remedy the situation in violation of Title IX, will prevent Swarthmore’s funding from being taken away. The external review, in fact, would

be deemed like an appropriate solution by the Department of Education. The OCR will, however, monitor compliance with the agreement about proper courses of action between the office and the college. “If the college works with the external review board alone, Swarthmore then can choose to implement the policies it wants without the same pressure from the government to strictly adhere to the law,” said Brinn. According to the Huffington Post, Occidental College, which is facing similar accusations for Title IX and Clery Act violations, has hired Gina M. Smith and Leslie Gomez of the Philadelphia-based law firm Pepper Hamilton to review the college’s sexual violence policies. Smith worked with Amherst College and the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill (UNC) for similar reasons. At Amherst, policies are already going into effect based on the reports that surged from the review. Ferguson doesn’t think that a review is necessary to identify some basic and very obvious violations of both Title IX and the Clery Act. “What is the motivation? What is stopping them from taking action now?” she asked. “There’s no denying that [Swarthmore] broke the law ... I don’t understand why the administration won’t act now to protect our safety because I thought that was their priority.” If there’s a legal reason for waiting to act, Brinn and Ferguson would like to hear it. Unless they do though, the students stand by their proposal.

Today’s Events

The Many Centers of Gravity in Immigration Reform

A Poetry Reading by Eamon Grennan

When: Today, 4:30-6 p.m. Where: Scheuer Room What: Attorney Rick Swartz is a political strategist with 35 years of intense experience shaping immigration policy and other issues in Washington by opening conversations among unlikely partners. He will be speaking about the nature of comprehensive immigration reform and its importance. Why: “This lecture is important because President Obama campaigned on the basis of promising immigration reform; 11 million people are suffering fear of deportation, discrimination in many communities, and without legal status they may be subject to labor violations; immigration touches on many issues that define “American” identity and the relationship between this country and the rest of the world, but especially Latin America, and within Latin America, especially Mexico.” — Aurora Camacho de Schmidt, Professor of Spanish

When: Today, 7:30-9 p.m. Where: Scheuer Room What: Eamon Grennan has authored more than ten collections of poems, most recently “Out of Sight: New and Selected Poems” in 2010. Grennan has also written a book of essays, “Facing the Music: Irish Poetry in the 20th Century” (1999). He won the PEN Award for poetry in translation for “Selected Poems of Giacomo Leopardi” (1997), and the Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize from the Academy of American Poets for “Still Life with Waterfall” (2002). He has also won several Pushcart Prizes. Why: On awarding Grennan the Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize, Judge Robert Wrigley noted that “Grennan would have us know — no, would have us see, feel, hear, taste and smell — that the world, moment by ordinary or agonizing moment, lies chock-full with its own clarifications and rewards.” EVENT DESCRIPTIONS COURTESY OF SWARTHMORE’S EVENT CALENDAR


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