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University of Oregon on ā€˜Bias Response Teamā€™: Nothing to See Here

This month, a number of commentators the University of Oregonā€™s (UOā€™s) bias incident reporting systemā€”an online tool to report perceived incidents of ā€œbiasā€ to campus administratorsā€”and some of the universityā€™s ā€œā€ (BRTā€™s) responses to those reports. In March, FIREfiled a public records request with UO, seeking documents about studentsā€™ complaints and whether the BRTā€™s handling of those complaints has the potential to chill or infringe on First Amendment rights.

UO, however, is resisting public scrutiny.

In its response on April 1, 2016, the university told FIREthat it would not benefit the public to produce records relating to how they respond to what students perceive to be offensive speech. FIREhas asked UO to reverse its position and produce the records in a letter sent to the university this week.

Oregonā€™s BRT is like those of many universities, which are designed to create systems for students to report offensive speech or conduct directly to administrators. UOā€™s BRT ā€œseeks to create a just campus by providing resources for the university community to respond to incidents of bias and harassment.ā€ The scope of potential biases includes not only immutable traitsā€”race, ethnicity, and so onā€”but also beliefs, such as ā€œpolitical or religious ideology.ā€ In many, maybe most, contexts, these biases may be part of speech or opinion unquestionably protected by the First Amendment.

As Reason , some of the BRTā€™s responses to reported incidentsā€”vaguely described in ā€”are concerning, particularly where administrators intervene with offending speakers. One report, concerning a complaint that ā€œa newspaper gave less press coverage to trans students and students of color,ā€ resulted in a meeting between a BRT ā€œCase Managerā€ and a reporter and editor of the newspaper. That university administrators intervened with student journalists concerning whether they were providing enough coverage of a topicā€”regardless of what that topic might beā€”is questionable, at best.

Another report a student who ā€œreported feeling unsafe due to other students expressing anger about oppression.ā€ How did UO respond to students who discussed how they feel oppressed? By dispatching a case manager to dictate ā€œcommunity standards and expectations toā€ those involved.

A previous annual report, no longer linked from the BRT website (but still on UOā€™s website), includes similar student reports. Unlike the summary reviewed by Reason, this document doesnā€™t disclose what the universityā€™s response was to these and other reports:

  • ā€œThree separate students reported that a faculty member gave relationship advice that was sexist and heterosexist.ā€
  • ā€œA student reported that an email marketed a program by praising Columbus and Lewis & Clark as role models.ā€
  • ā€œAn anonymous person reported that sorority members wore offensive themed costumes at an event.ā€
  • ā€œA student reported that an emcee of an event made racist and sexist remarks.ā€
  • ā€œA student of color reported that a faculty member belittled her request for trigger warnings.ā€
  • ā€œA student reported that a faculty member made a comment stereotyping people of a certain race and religion.ā€

Based on the information provided, these all sound like instances of speech protected by the First Amendment. So, too, are the studentsā€™ complaints that these incidents are offensive to them. So what role do UOā€™s administrators have in intervening, and what specifically did they do? Are the BRTā€™s responses likely to chill protected expression, or are they valuable tools to get students to engage one another in greater dialogue? And should administrators play this role at all, or are they simply providing a tool for students to silence one another? As with the studentā€™s (apparent) complaint that other students were complaining about feeling oppressed, mechanisms of administrative intervention can and will be used to target the very students that administrators believe theyā€™re helping.

Criticism of bias reporting systems is widespread and comes from across the ideological spectrum. In the New Republic, two professors varying bias incident reporting systemsā€”including UOā€™sā€”and concluded that the initiatives may make it less likely that students will directly engage the speaker, and more likely to instead seek administrative intervention to punish:

BRTs are fatally flawed. Adjudicating ā€œhe said, she saidā€ incidents is a logistical nightmare, if not downright impossible for thinly stretched administrators. There will no doubt be examples of injustice where the ā€œaccusedā€ are investigatedā€”even penalizedā€”over paltry evidence, or where the discipline meted out is far too harsh for the alleged ā€œcrime.ā€ Whatā€™s more, BRTs will result in a troubling silence: ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½, staff, and faculty will be afraid to speak their minds, and individuals or groups will be able to leverage bias reporting policies to shut down unpopular or minority viewpoints. BRTs will substitute diktats for debate when what we need most is constant, frank conversation. By almost any measure, colleges and universities are more diverse today than they have ever been, and thatā€™s the paradox: BRTs will turn the genuine, transformative educational power of diverse voices into a farce.

FIRE largely agrees. Schools can minimize the potential that Bias Response Teams will chill protected speech by making clear that speech protected by the First Amendment wonā€™t be acted uponā€”and even then, administrators must actually adhere to those policies. For example, the University of Virginia and the University of Chicago both have systems which make clear that no action will be taken against speakers whose expression is protected by the First Amendment. Nonetheless, encouraging students to report on one anotherā€”if you hear something, say something (to administrators)ā€”may not be conducive to the free and open debate that makes higher education valuable. Moreover, subjecting students and faculty to investigations can have a chilling effect on speech, even where no official punishment is ultimately meted out.

The question, then, is how universities actually implement their systems and how they respond to bias reports. This can be broken into a number of other questions:

  • Are they encouraging complaining students to use their own voices to respond to offensive speech, and using reports to better understand studentsā€™ views? Or are they requiring offending speakers to meet with administrators to defend their statements?
  • Are they suggesting to students or faculty members that they may be disciplined, or, worse, actually disciplining students or faculty members for protected speech?
  • Can the BRTsā€™ conversations with students be credibly characterized as the university exercising its right to engage in ā€œmore speechā€?
  • How are members of the response teams trained on approaching incidents of protected speech?
  • To what extent does the response team refer incidents to law enforcement, security, or other rule-enforcement bodies?

Thatā€™s why ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½, in March, filed a request under Oregonā€™s , the state equivalent to the Freedom of Information Act, seeking records relating to UOā€™s BRT.

Under Oregon law, a government agency may charge fees for producing public records, but may waive fees if it first determines that disclosure ā€œprimarily benefits the general public.ā€ At that point, the agency has the discretion of whether to charge these fees, charge only some of the fees, or charge no fees at all.

UO could have simply determined that the request was of public interest, yet still exercised its discretion to charge fees because of the complexity of the request. UO, rather, told FIREthat producing these records would not primarily benefit the public.

UOā€™s position is contradictory. Even without the recent media attention to the schoolā€™s BRT, UO apparently believes that itā€™s important to share details about its responses to such incidentsā€”thatā€™s presumably why it publishes annual reports about the incidents and UOā€™s responses. The BRT is, ultimately, a government program that guides official responses to what often turns out to be protected speech by students, faculty, and media.

Thatā€™s worth public scrutiny, and the University of Oregonā€™s determination that sunlight cast upon its responses to what students perceive as racist, sexist, or offensive speech is not in the public interest is perplexing. Thatā€™s why weā€™ve written to the University of Oregon, requesting that they reconsider their position. If FIREultimately receives these public records, weā€™ll keep you posted on what they reveal.

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