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Proposed Title IX regulations would roll back essential free speech, due process protections for college students
WASHINGTON, June 23, 2022 鈥 Today, the Department of Education that, if implemented, would gut essential free speech and due process rights for college students facing sexual misconduct allegations on campus. As required by federal law, the department must now solicit public feedback before the pending rules are finalized.
The draft regulations are a significant departure from current Title IX regulations. Unlike the current regulations, adopted in 2020 after 18 months of review, the new regulations would roll back student rights by:
- eliminating students鈥 right to a live hearing;
- eliminating the right to cross-examination;
- weakening students鈥 right to active legal representation;
- allowing a single campus bureaucrat to serve as judge and jury;
- rejecting the Supreme Court鈥檚 definition of sexual harassment in favor of a definition that threatens free speech rights;
- requiring colleges and universities to use the weak 鈥減reponderance of the evidence鈥 standard to determine guilt, unless they use a higher standard for other alleged misconduct.
These changes authorize or require institutions to violate fundamental student and faculty civil liberties.
The FIREwill submit its formal objections to the proposed changes in the coming weeks. Moreover, FIREis committed to using all the resources at its disposal to ensure that core American freedoms, such as a student鈥檚 rights to free speech and due process, are not abandoned by the federal government.
鈥淭his new proposal is a non-starter for student and faculty rights,鈥 said FIRELegislative and Policy Director Joe Cohn. 鈥淭hese regulations eliminate the right to live hearings, eliminate the right to cross-examination, weaken protections for free speech, and authorize schools to deny students the right to have the active assistance of a lawyer. That鈥檚 a recipe for constitutional violations that courts are unlikely to ignore.鈥
鈥淭he current Title IX regulations are one of the biggest victories for student rights in memory. But as I predicted when they went into effect in 2020, our work is not over,鈥 said FIREExecutive Director Robert Shibley. 鈥淔IREwill fight to ensure all students are afforded the free speech and due process rights that they have every right to expect as Americans.鈥
For over a decade, FIREhas led the fight against the erosion of free speech and due process rights on campus through the abuse of Title IX, the that prohibits sex discrimination in federally funded educational programs. A 2011 鈥淒ear Colleague鈥 letter sent by the federal government to colleges and universities nationwide kicked off an era of vast Title IX overreach that led them to crack down on protected expression and eliminate vital protections 鈥 including the right to remain silent and even the right to a live hearing at all 鈥 in an effort to avoid federal investigation and the possible loss of federal funding.
The 鈥淒ear Colleague鈥 era led to more than 鈥 鈥 against colleges for conducting allegedly unfair disciplinary processes. What鈥檚 more, a 2019 study of top schools conducted by 果冻传媒app官方 found that college students were routinely denied even the most basic elements of a fair hearing. More than two-thirds of colleges surveyed did not even explicitly guarantee students that they would be presumed innocent until proven guilty.
In 2020, at the urging of FIREand other civil liberties advocates, the Department of Education finally addressed this overreach when it enacted new, balanced regulations that took the rights of all students into account. The 2020 Title IX regulations provided important protections for those reporting that they were victims of sexual misconduct while still ensuring that those accused were afforded basic due process protections, such as an express presumption of innocence, impartial investigators, and the right to a live hearing with cross-examination.
The 2020 regulations also protected free speech rights by defining 鈥渟exual harassment鈥 consistent with Supreme Court precedent. Previous federal guidance to colleges discouraged or otherwise failed to require these crucial protections.
In the years since their enactment, FIRE has defended the 2020 regulations in court against multiple legal challenges from outside groups and individuals.
The regulations proposed today, if allowed to go into effect in their current form, would undo many of the victories for student rights won in 2020. However, despite their hostility toward fair procedures, even today鈥檚 proposed regulations do not entirely roll back hard-won protections for students. Institutions are still required to provide an express presumption of innocence, which shockingly was neither required nor common until the 2020 regulations. Schools are also still required to turn over exculpatory evidence they may possess (albeit now upon request) 鈥 another long-overdue improvement made in the 2020 regulations.
The FIRE(FIRE) is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to defending and sustaining the individual rights of all Americans to free speech and free thought 鈥 the most essential qualities of liberty. FIRErecognizes that colleges and universities play a vital role in preserving free thought within a free society. To this end, we place a special emphasis on defending the individual rights of students and faculty members on our nation鈥檚 campuses, including freedom of speech, freedom of association, due process, legal equality, religious liberty, and sanctity of conscience.
CONTACT:
Katie Kortepeter, Media Relations Manager, 果冻传媒app官方: 215-717-3473; media@thefire.org
- Due Process
- Free Speech
- Freedom of Conscience
- Faculty Rights
- Title IX
- U.S. Department of Education enacts new Title IX regulations requiring procedural safeguards in campus disciplinary hearings, adopts Supreme Court sexual harassment definition
- The U.S. Department of Education Releases Title IX Regulations that Threaten Free Speech, Due Process - April 19, 2024
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