Can you blame them? There are so many nutty codes and laws, their lives must be hell.

Ashe Schow of the Washington Examiner reports.

No more campus sexual assault legislation, begs national group of college administrators

Colleges don’t need any more sexual assault laws or policies, says Kevin Kruger, president of NASPA — Student Affairs Administrators in Higher Education.

I would only disagree in that legislation might be needed to guarantee basic due process rights to students who are accused — sadly, the current campus culture ignores such constitutional rights.

Kruger, in an op-ed for the Washington Post, has taken issue with the notion that colleges were not previously taking campus sexual assault seriously.

“Advancing half-truths and twisting statistics for political gain does nothing to prevent incidents of sexual assault, help victims or make campuses stronger,” Kruger wrote. “Public and private college and university administrators, advocates and other experts are working together proactively and students are safer now than they have ever been.”

Kruger added that multiple laws on the books for campus sexual assault are creating confusion. New York, which recently passed a “yes means yes” consent policy, now has three different definitions of consent.

“No student is going to ask themselves, ‘What state am I in? What definition of consent do I have to apply here?’ Which means the patchwork approach will ultimately fail to meet the needs of students and become a bureaucratic mess for institutions,” Kruger wrote.


 
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