10 Title IX Final Rule Changes That Affect K-12 Schools
With a required implementation date of Aug. 14, 2020, K-12 schools must quickly make changes to sexual harassment policies and procedures.
With a required implementation date of Aug. 14, 2020, K-12 schools must quickly make changes to sexual harassment policies and procedures.
The settlement comes after a six-year investigation by the Department of Education found “persistent failure” in its compiling of campus crime statistics.
A lawsuit filed after three students were sodomized by their teammates claims school leaders knew of the “culture of violence” within the football program.
George Floyd’s death has prompted calls for campuses to “defund the police” and/or sever ties with local law enforcement, but are those moves knee-jerk reactions that will backfire?
The lawsuit claims the final regulations narrow Title IX’s reach and will chill the reporting of sexual harassment due to extensive procedural requirements.
The cardiologist is accused of sexually assaulting three colleagues while he worked at the Los Angeles County-USC Medical Center.
Former University of Utah Officer Miguel Deras is now the subject of an internal affairs investigation by the Logan Police Department for showing off explicit photos of Lauren McCluskey.
The new regulations require colleges to allow cross-examination of accusers and eliminate the single-investigator models.
The student was interviewed by the ECU police chief who determined there was enough probable cause to arrest him for rape.
The settlement funds will be distributed by an independent special master who is trained in sex abuse trauma.