Subject: Discussion List for campus-based and allied personnel working to end gender-based violence on campus.
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- From: "Handeyside, Anne" <>
- To: "''" <>, "" <>, "" <>, "" <>
- Subject: RE: Sexual Assault Timely Warnings for universities
- Date: Fri, 10 Dec 2010 16:06:22 -0500
- Accept-language: en-US
- Acceptlanguage: en-US
Hello all, I just thought I’d add my two cents to the conversation. We use the approach described by Brett in his email here at the University of Michigan and we have found that it works pretty effectively. In our case, RAs are required to report information to their hall director and then the hall director will make a report and withhold personally identifiable information regarding the victim and perp. During our trainings, we recommend that RAs share this policy and procedure with their residents in the very beginning of the term (during the first hall meeting, for example), so that everyone knows AHEAD OF TIME what would happen if they decide to disclose something to their RA. In theory, this would allow survivors to make informed decisions about disclosures. We provide a script for RAs to use when explaining these policies and procedures to their residents during this beginning-of-the-semester hall meeting. Part of this script includes confidential resources on campus as well. Hope this helps! Anne Anne (Handeyside) Huhman, LLMSW Program Manager for Education and Prevention University of Michigan Division of Student Affairs Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center 715 N. University, Suite 202 Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Office (734) 998-9368 Crisis (734) 936-3333 www.umich.edu/~sapac Please consider donating to SAPAC. No amount is too small. From: [mailto:] Yes, we deal with it all the time, Mike. There are three options to take in policy/training with RAs. One is to declare them to be non-confidential sources, who are mandated to report what they learn. This has the potential to shut down victim reporting to RAs, who are a valuable and frequent reporting resource. Too cold. The other extreme is to consider RAs completely confidential, and mandate no reporting from them of what they learn from victims or 3rd parties, unless there is consent from the victim. This is too hot. RAs have no legal confidentiality, so it's just a policy-based fiction. And, RAs might learn of a danger to campus, and keeping it confidential could be negligence (in terms of Adriane's timely warning inquiry). So which bowl of porridge is just right? We've had great success with one domino at a time approach, which is to use policy to make RAs mandated reporters of sexual assaults, but to allow them to push over only one domino, by withholding personally identifiable information regarding the victim/perp, etc. In that way, supervisors are on notice, Clery is satisfied, and an investigation (tho, limited) can occur. If supervisors or campus law enforcement, based on the report, then determine they need more information, or need to talk to the victim, that domino can then and only then be pushed over, knowing that action may then cause other dominos to start falling without the victim having control. While the RA might then pass along personally identifiable information, our experience is that forms the exception, not the rule. In almost all cases, the victim's privacy is preserved, and actions disempowering the victim are avoided. Where the victim's information is disclosed, she's had forewarning of this (hopefully the RA used their training to know to explain the boundaries to the victim when disclosure first occurred), and still has the right to refuse to share details with the directort/dean/LE. Since legal obligations begin for the institution once personally identifiable details are shared with officials, protocols should clearly spell out what happens next and how, with a balance between campus safety and respecting the victim's needs. How are others managing this effectively? Regards, In a message dated 12/10/2010 9:48:55 A.M. Eastern Standard Time, writes:
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- Sexual Assault Timely Warnings for universities, Adriane Bang, 12/09/2010
- Re: Sexual Assault Timely Warnings for universities, Chad Keoni Sniffen, 12/09/2010
- Re: Sexual Assault Timely Warnings for universities, S. Daniel Carter, 12/10/2010
- Re: Sexual Assault Timely Warnings for universities, S. Daniel Carter, 12/10/2010
- Re: Sexual Assault Timely Warnings for universities, Adriane Bang, 12/13/2010
- <Possible follow-up(s)>
- Re: Sexual Assault Timely Warnings for universities, BASokolow, 12/10/2010
- Re: Sexual Assault Timely Warnings for universities, MIKE DOMITRZ, 12/10/2010
- Re: Sexual Assault Timely Warnings for universities, BASokolow, 12/10/2010
- RE: Sexual Assault Timely Warnings for universities, Handeyside, Anne, 12/10/2010
- Re: Sexual Assault Timely Warnings for universities, Chad Keoni Sniffen, 12/09/2010
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