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Louisiana House of Representatives must act to stop unconstitutional campus sexual harassment bills passed by Senate
The Louisiana Senate has passed two bills applying to public institutions of higher education that contain unquestionably unconstitutional definitions of sexual harassment. As such, FIRErecommends that and be amended in the state鈥檚 House of Representatives or rejected entirely.
Currently, SB 230 and SB 232 define 鈥渟exual harassment鈥 as:
[U]nwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual favors, and other verbal, physical, or inappropriate conduct of a sexual nature when the conduct explicitly or implicitly affects an individual鈥檚 employment or education, unreasonably interferes with an individual鈥檚 work or educational performance, or creates an intimidating, hostile, or offensive work or educational environment and has no legitimate relationship to the subject matter of a course or academic research.
By allowing for the punishment of 鈥渦nwelcome鈥 verbal鈥 conduct鈥 that creates an 鈥渙ffensive鈥 environment, the definition puts protected expression at risk and represents a substantial departure from the definition of peer-on-peer sexual harassment required by the Supreme Court of the United States in Davis v. Monroe County Board of Education. In Davis, the Court defined peer-on-peer harassment in the educational context as conduct that is 鈥渟o severe, pervasive, and objectively offensive, and that so undermines and detracts from the victims鈥 educational experience, that the victim-students are effectively denied equal access to an institution鈥檚 resources and opportunities.鈥
The Louisiana legislature should amend the bills to comply with Davis or reject them.
Properly defining harassment is crucial. Although harassment, properly defined, may be disciplined, overbroad campus harassment policies are among the most prevalent tools used by college administrations to censor and punish students and faculty for protected expression. For example, the University of Oregon once charged a student with violating five provisions of the student code of conduct, including a harassment provision, for shouting a joke (鈥淚 hit it first!鈥) at a passing couple outside her dormitory.
The Davis standard gives institutions the authority they need to address conduct that is unprotected without infringing on free speech rights in the process. So far, the standard has been codified by nine states: Alabama, Arkansas, Montana, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Utah, and .
Moreover, the United States Department of Education also requires institutions to maintain a definition substantially similar to Davis for the adjudication of Title IX sexual harassment claims on campus. Should the Louisiana legislature require institutions to adopt the definition currently in these bills, schools would be forced to choose whether to risk federal funding by being out of compliance with what Title IX requires, or being compliant with state law.
Instead of adopting an overbroad definition of sexual harassment that will lead to censorship and litigation, the Louisiana legislature should amend the bills to comply with Davis or reject them.
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