Protect Student Survivors of Sexual Assault in HEB ISD & NTX Against DeVos' Title IX Rule

Protect Student Survivors of Sexual Assault in HEB ISD & NTX Against DeVos' Title IX Rule

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Phoebe O started this petition to HEB ISD and

THIS PETITION WAS STARTED BY STUDENTS OF HEB:

On May 6th during a GLOBAL PANDEMIC, the Department of Education issued its Final Rule changing the Title IX, which focuses on how ELEMENTARY, MIDDLE, HIGH SCHOOL and COLLEGES handle SEXUAL ASSAULT cases. The Rule contains dangerous provisions that go against best practices, tip the scales AGAINST survivors, and jeopardize tens of thousands of K-12 students’ civil right to an education free from discrimination.


    This rule will have devastating consequences for K-12 students and their families. Specifically, the rule will require schools to only investigate the most EXTREME forms of harassment and assault, require schools to IGNORE violence that occurs off campus, and allow needless delays in the completion of Title IX investigations. Altogether, these changes will discourage survivors from coming forward and utilizing the Title IX process at their schools, resulting in rampant sexual violence going unaddressed.


    We, as students and community members, are calling on HEB ISD to uphold the rights of all K-12 students in your district. Multiple sections within the rule give SCHOOLS discretion to CHOOSE how policies are implemented. We urge HEB ISD to commit to taking sexual violence seriously by choosing the options that would create the least harm for student survivors.

We call on the school district to issue a written public statement declaring its commitment to these seven policies by August 7th.

We, students and alumni HEB ISD call on the District to commit to:


Establishing the preponderance of the evidence as the standard of evidence in all sexual misconduct, harassment, and discrimination cases. Preponderance of the evidence is the only standard that values the education of both complainants and respondents equally.

Establishing a time limit of sixty calendar days for the completion of sexual misconduct, harassment, and discrimination case adjudications, with exceptions only for substantial extenuating circumstances. Lengthy investigations are emotionally taxing on survivors, often causing students to drop-out before their cases are complete.  Drawn-out timelines are bad for complainants and respondents alike, leaving them uncertain of where things stand with their schools. 

Continuing to respond promptly to reports of sexual misconduct and carrying out existing investigations into sexual misconduct during the global health crisis. The new rule makes clear that Title IX processes may continue remotely in the face of the COVID-19 Pandemic, and the rights of student complainants and respondents alike hinge on schools’ maintaining their commitment to prompt and equitable investigations even during these unprecedented times.

Guaranteeing all students access to reasonable interim measures regardless of where or when the violence or discrimination they faced took place. Students need access to accomodations as the effects of violence and discrimination are serious whether a student was harmed at school, at a weekend social event, or on their walk home. 

Creating and following sexual misconduct procedures for investigating instances of otherwise not covered off-campus violence and violence that occurs outside of the country. While the rule does not allow formal Title IX investigations of some off campus violence, schools can still create separate sexual misconduct policies that ensure students can report off campus violence. Whether you are raped in your on-campus classroom or at a weekend birthday party, having to see your rapist in the hallway at school equally interrupts your education.

Barring the use of informal resolution mechanisms including but not limited to mediation in cases of sexual assault, rape, dating and domestic violence, and stalking that is an extension of such violence. It is widely agreed upon that mediation is an inappropriate and even unsafe measure in these types of situations.

Following the Department of Education’s rescinded 2016 guidance on protecting LGBTQ+ students in order to ensure all students have equal access to a safe learning environment, regardless of gender identity or sexual orientation.

 We call on the school district to issue a written public statement declaring its commitment to these seven policies by August 7th.


As dedicated members of this community, we believe in holding our schools to the highest standards. With a federal government that is failing students, it is up to school districts to assume leadership in protecting the civil rights of K-12 students. We look forward to seeing HEB ISD issue its public statement in the coming days.


With power,

The Undersigned

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