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INVESTIGATION: Portland鈥檚 Lewis & Clark College mandates racial segregation in orientation programming

An investigation by FIREreveals that Portland鈥檚 Lewis & Clark College engaged in mandatory racial segregation in its first-year orientation program.

PORTLAND, Ore., Oct. 27, 2020 鈥 Last week, two U.S. senators to investigate alleged racial segregation in American schools. Today, an investigation by the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education reveals that Portland鈥檚 Lewis & Clark College also engaged in mandatory racial segregation in its first-year orientation program this fall. Furthermore, college leadership failed to take this problem seriously even after FIREand one of the college鈥檚 own professors brought the unlawful program to their attention.

Lewis & Clark enlisted a Portland-based 鈥溾 group to run a mandatory orientation workshop Aug. 29 where, in the name of providing 鈥safe spaces鈥 for discussion, students were required to choose whether they most identified as one of three options: 鈥淏lack,鈥 鈥淚ndigenous, Person of Color,鈥 or 鈥淲hite.鈥 FIREwere then divided by race into different virtual Zoom breakout rooms for separate educational experiences, unlawfully limiting their ability within the program to engage with students of different races.

鈥淩acial segregation is not only morally wrong, it鈥檚 illegal on our nation鈥檚 college campuses,鈥 said FIREExecutive Director Robert Shibley. 鈥淟ewis & Clark must end this practice immediately and publicly commit to never again returning to that dark chapter of our nation鈥檚 history.鈥

TAKE ACTION: TELL LEWIS & CLARK COLLEGE TO END RACIAL SEGREGATION ON CAMPUS

If and prohibiting discrimination weren鈥檛 enough, Lewis & Clark鈥檚 also prohibit such conduct, expressly stating that treating students differently on account of race is a clear violation. 

Lewis & Clark Associate Professor of English Lyell Asher first raised concerns about the segregated event on a faculty email listserv Aug. 27, two days before it took place. He also forwarded the message to President Wim Wiewel and General Counsel David Reese, requesting that they look into it and suggesting that the segregated event should not be mandatory. Asher reports that he received no response, and he eventually contacted FIREwith his concerns. 

After investigating, FIREwrote to Lewis & Clark on Oct. 6, demanding that the private liberal arts college stop 鈥渞educing students to the sum of their blood and ancestry鈥 by mandating racial segregation at any college event.

Reese responded Oct. 14, attempting to minimize both the event and its unlawful nature. He stated that while the event was labeled mandatory, attendance was not taken, students would not have been punished for skipping it, and it was only a single event. He further argued that this episode of segregation was not 鈥渋nvidious鈥 and that 鈥淸s]tudents were not provided a different educational experience or outcome based on race, they simply had different individual conversations before coming back together as a larger group.鈥 Noting that the session was 鈥渙bjectionable to at least one of our faculty members,鈥 though, he stated in his conclusion that Lewis & Clark would in the future be 鈥渃learer that it is optional,鈥 and that it was 鈥渦ncertain鈥 that they would have similar sessions in future years.

But that鈥檚 an unacceptable response 鈥 legally and morally.

鈥淢andatory racial segregation isn鈥檛 wrong because FIREor a professor finds it objectionable 鈥 it鈥檚 wrong because it means that your ethnicity alone determines the education you receive,鈥 Shibley said. 鈥淭hat it was just a little segregation, that 鈥榤andatory鈥 actually means 鈥榦ptional,鈥 or that the college meant well is no defense.鈥 

TAKE ACTION: TELL LEWIS & CLARK COLLEGE TO END RACIAL SEGREGATION ON CAMPUS

鈥淚 find it hard to believe that Lewis & Clark鈥檚 top leadership didn鈥檛 know that segregation was wrong, and harder still to understand why they went right on subjecting students to this unlawful practice after Professor Asher flagged the issue,鈥 Shibley said. 鈥淵ou have to wonder what else might be going on at Lewis & Clark.鈥

The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to defending and sustaining the individual rights of students and faculty members at America鈥檚 colleges and universities. These rights include freedom of speech, freedom of association, due process, legal equality, religious liberty, and sanctity of conscience 鈥 the essential qualities of liberty.

CONTACT:

Daniel Burnett, Director of Communications, 果冻传媒app官方: 215-717-3473; media@thefire.org

Wim Wiewel, President, Lewis & Clark College: 503-768-7680; president@lclark.edu 

Tell Lewis & Clark to end its practice of racial segregation

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