President Obama signs the Campus Sexual Assault Presidential Memorandum |
As the perfect cap to Sexual Assault Awareness Month, the task force President Barack Obama created in January to work toward ending sexual assault on college campuses released its first report this week.
The 20-page document echoes many of the concerns women’s rights advocates have pressed the importance of for years. The horror stories from victims who are forced to see their attackers on campus on a daily basis, who were told by administrators they were to blame for the actions of their rapist because they were drinking or because of what they were wearing, aren’t exceptional. And while the words might never be written in an executive decision, Obama made it clear that it’s time for higher education to get its shit together, and fast.
For a 90-day project, the report is surprisingly thorough. For once, our government shut up and listened, and if the path outlined in the report is to be followed, there could be significant results on college campuses’ conduct within the next school year.
Here is a sampling of what the report lays out:
The task force will work to provide colleges with materials for effective trauma response, training for college conduct systems to investigate and properly sanction offenders, and guidelines for local law enforcement and campus police to work together for better security and prosecution.
Colleges WILL be held accountable:
Student’s rights need to be at the forefront of any college conduct process, and the way colleges treat their students will be monitored.
If students suffer, so will schools, in the form of federal funding. It’s No More Mr. Nice Government, and if anything kicks schools into gear, it’s the threat of budget cuts.
And schools will have trained staff to specifically deal with sexual assault:
The report makes it clear that sexual assault perpetrators are no longer to be treated on the same grounds as students who plagiarize or drink underage. And reporting sexual assault is no longer to be on the same level as reporting a stolen laptop.
Sexual assault victims need extensive aftercare to cope with the immediate and continuing effects of trauma. Schools will have to train responders and physical and mental health staff to be advocates and provide support systems.
Then there is this PSA:
I have to say that when James Bond tells you that one sexual assault is too many, while sitting at a table with a face that looks like it just returned from beating the shit out of a room full of frat boys, that is something that a lot of young men are going to hear loud and clear.
I come from an era when snapping bra straps and slapping girls on the ass was considered playful flirting, but those days are long gone. And even at our most misogynistic it was NEVER considered okay to have sex with a girl too drunk to know any better or force ourselves on a girl pleading with us to stop.
That did happen once to a female friend of mine, and it got handled.
I won't screw up your day by describing what happened to that POS but I will tell you that in a just world that would be the fate of EVERY person who took advantage of a young woman, or man, just because they were unable to defend themselves.
I look forward to the day when this kind of task force is no longer necessary and parents universally teach their sons that nothing that you take from another person against their will has value.
Until that day I am very glad that we have the President that we have, and that he is responding the way that he is.
Certainly a hell of a lot better than a certain Governor of Alaska recently responded to a similar problem with the National Guard.
If someone is convicted of sexual assault on campus or while under a scholarship, the scholarship must be revoked and the offender must be banned from the institution. Also if the perp enrolls in any college, he/she must register as a sex offender to campus police or the local law enforcement.
ReplyDeleteI graduated college in 1990 and I saw more than one drunk girl get raped during my 6 years in school. Yes, being absolutely shit-faced shouldn't get you raped but there is a little thing called personal responsibility. We watched one girl being passed up and down the hall of the football players dorm for about 2 hours before campus police arrived, and because she was drunk and didn't remember she was unable to press charges.
ReplyDeleteIn addition to the victim's personal responsibilities, I assume you are, of course referring to your personal responsibility not to stand by and watch "one girl being passed up and down the hall of the football players dorm for about 2 hours before campus police arrived"? Because, of course you are referring to your spectator status, aren't you. It often only takes one person to stop this kind of action. And since the victim was drunk and you witnessed the event, of course you are talking about your personal responsibility as a good human being to step in and tell authorities what you witnessed. Right? You are speaking of that sort of personal responsibility, aren't you?
DeleteNo way Jose! Sports is huge business at my school and a few of the players saw us in the hallway prior to entering the dorm room, so no, I was not going to get involved any further than calling campus police, who took almost two hours to show up. We told them that there was abuse happening and they interviewed us but we only heard her puking in the hall. We assumed rather than witnessed what was happening because the players were joking about "who's next" right outside of our door. Athletes were never disciplined for any of their bad behavior, coaches pulled lots of strings to keep them out of trouble.
DeleteYou're a prick, 1990.
DeleteYou watched and did nothing.
I've seen what it does to the victims. Having two daughters in College, I scanned the list to see if their schools were on it, after letting out a sigh of relief that they weren't, I kind of put myself in the shoes of a parent with a daughter in one of those listed and what it must feel like to be in their place.
ReplyDeleteThis President is a role model for all men, especially young men. We need to talk openly with our kids and make sure they at least know they'll be heard when something's reported.
That's why they hate him, Anita.
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