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Department of Education鈥檚 Overreach Questioned by Senator Lamar Alexander

Last summer, Senator Lamar Alexander (R-TN), the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor & Pensions (HELP Committee), questioned Catherine Lhamon, the Department of Education鈥檚 (ED鈥檚) Assistant Secretary for the Office for Civil Rights (OCR), on the agency鈥檚 apparent overreach in how it is demanding compliance with its interpretation of Title IX. During that testimony, Lhamon testified that she expected institutions of higher education to fully comply with OCR鈥檚 guidance, despite arguing that the contents of the guidance were not regulatory.

Unsatisfied with the answers he received from Assistant Secretary Lhamon, last week, Senator Alexander joined of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee鈥檚 Subcommittee on Regulatory Affairs and Federal Management so that he could to ED鈥檚 deputy assistant secretary, Amy McIntosh.

During the exchange, first covered by , Senator Alexander, himself the former Secretary of the Department of Education under President George H.W. Bush, recapped his prior exchange with Assistant Secretary Lhamon during the 2014 HELP hearing and then asked the following:

Senator Alexander: Now Ms. McIntosh, do you believe that we gave Ms. Lhamon the authority to make Title IX guidance binding on 6,000 higher education institutions?

[...]

Ms.McIntosh: Let me assure you, I tried to be very clear in my opening statement that guidance that the Department issues does not have the force of law.

Senator Alexander: But this is the assistant secretary of the department, with Title IX, which affects 6,000 institutions, 100,000 public schools. And she apparently hadn鈥檛 gotten the word. Who鈥檚 going to tell her?

Ms. McIntosh: So鈥

Senator Alexander: Are you?

Ms. McIntosh: As she knows and as I know, Title IX is the binding law that applies in the cases that you are describing鈥

Senator Alexander: So guidance under Title IX is not binding鈥攊s that correct?

Ms. McIntosh: Guidance under Title IX is not binding. Guidance helps the many people who are subject to Title IX understand what they need to do to comply with the law.

Senator Alexander: Right. But who is going to tell Ms. Lhamon this?

The is worth the watch.

Senator Alexander is completely right that OCR has been . For example, as FIRE have been saying for years, OCR did not have the authority to demand that institutions of higher education use the low 鈥減reponderance of the evidence鈥 standard of proof when adjudicating campus sexual assault cases. OCR cannot cite any court cases requiring the preponderance of the evidence standard. Furthermore, because OCR skipped the notice-and-comment processes required under the federal Administrative Procedure Act, its guidance should not be taken as binding on institutions.

Despite McIntosh acknowledging under oath that guidance鈥攍ike that found in OCR鈥檚 April 4, 2011 鈥淒ear Colleague鈥 letter鈥攊s not binding on colleges and universities, OCR continues to place institutions of higher education under investigation for potential violations of Title IX, and it continues to insist that institutions use the preponderance standard in . OCR should stop this practice immediately. While OCR can always recommend that institutions use the preponderance of the evidence standard, it should clearly inform institutions that they are free to select a higher, and more appropriate, standard of evidence.

It is good to see the Senate questioning OCR鈥檚 overreach, since OCR has shown no inclination to rein itself in.

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