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West Virginia University attempts to claim sanctions are not sanctions and disciplinary proceedings are not disciplinary proceedings
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West Virginia University Dean of FIREG. Corey Farris responded on Dec. 21 to a FIRE letter, which called on the university to rescind sanctions placed on five WVU fraternities without due process.
The sanctions 鈥 ranging from mandatory educational programs to loss of official university recognition 鈥 were a result of the 鈥淩eaching the Summit鈥 initiative, a system-wide program that re-punished Greek organizations for previously adjudicated issues, or issues that had not been adjudicated at all. When students expressed concern, a WVU administrator insisted to students, falsely, that 鈥渟tudent organizations do not have due process rights.鈥
Farris claimed that FIREmisunderstood the facts of this case, but his letter shows that the only misunderstanding is WVU鈥檚 willful blindness to basic due process rights.
On Jan. 16, FIRE again wrote to WVU to reiterate our initial concerns and inform WVU of rudimentary constitutional rights and fundamental fairness. The letter demanded that WVU relieve the five fraternities of the sanctions and ensure that it will uphold constitutional due process protections in the future.
The central claim of Farris鈥檚 response is that the initiative was somehow not a disciplinary process, but rather a 鈥渞ecognition review process separate and apart from any student conduct process.鈥 This claim, which mirrors what another WVU official told , shows either pitiful ignorance about what constitutes a conduct hearing or a deliberate willingness to mischaracterize the outcomes of Reaching the Summit to excuse administrators鈥 willful violations of student rights. In either case, a simple review of the facts demonstrates why Farris鈥檚 claim is wrong.
When WVU the Reaching the Summit initiative, it charged a working group with the task of, among other things, reviewing the 鈥渏udicial history of all chapters.鈥 The working group did just that (as noted in its final and in WVU鈥檚 ) and issued 鈥渞ecommendations鈥 for each fraternity, ranging from mandatory educational programming and social event restrictions, to loss of recognition. What the initiative calls recommendations are exactly the same as what calls 鈥淪anctions Applicable to Student Organizations.鈥
How a process that issues sanctions based on judicial incidents is not 鈥渄isciplinary鈥 is incomprehensible. WVU's position appears to be that relabeling sanctions as mandatory recommendations means they are not disciplinary. But make no mistake: these are consequences that the university describes as "sanctions" when it's being honest. The only missing element of a disciplinary process in Reaching the Summit was due process.
Farris goes on to claim that FIREwas also incorrect to suggest there was a lack of notice and hearings in Reaching the Summit. He notes: 鈥淎ll fraternity and sorority organizations had adequate notice of the recommendations鈥 and 鈥渆ach organization then had the opportunity to be heard through the appeals process.鈥 In other words, Farris claims that groups were given proper notice because they were notified of sanctions after they had been issued, and the groups had adequate opportunity to be heard because they could appeal the sanctions.
Witness the sleight of hand: students supposedly have due process because they can argue their innocence after being found responsible. While one might assume the administrators of a large public university 鈥 which is bound by the Constitution 鈥 would understand the basic principles underlying due process, WVU鈥檚 letter shows that they apparently do not. Thus, FIREmade sure our response explained due process in the simplest terms possible:
It would be a mockery of due process if those facing deprivations of their rights were first told of their transgressions after receiving the penalty. Under your logic, it would be no issue at all to imprison individuals prior to telling them what crimes they committed, or expect individuals to pay fines before informing them of their infraction.
The end of Farris鈥檚 response letter attempts to assure FIREthat WVU does protect the due process rights of student organizations, and he points to the , which promises groups notice of allegations in writing and the opportunity to be heard prior to the issuance of sanctions. It is puzzling that Farris includes this point because 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 original letter argued that Reaching the Summit explicitly ignored this promise. A policy only serves its purpose if it鈥檚 followed.
And finally, WVU鈥檚 response tries to excuse Director of Fraternity and Sorority Life Matthew Richardson, who, in front of a meeting of student leaders, : 鈥渟tudent organizations do not have due process rights; they don鈥檛.鈥 Instead of conceding that Richardson was wrong, WVU鈥檚 letter claims that he was trying to explain that 鈥渋ndividuals have different due process rights than student organizations鈥 and that he merely 鈥渄id not convey that understanding.鈥
Richardson made his understanding of due process abundantly clear in that meeting, and WVU鈥檚 disingenuous attempt to cover for him speaks volumes about how the institution as a whole appears to feel about such issues. An institution that refuses to recognize when its leaders do not understand fundamental rights has little hope of protecting those rights.
We again call upon WVU to take the first step by recognizing that it violated its students鈥 rights and rescinding the sanctions imposed by the Reaching the Summit working group.
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