WASHINGTON, D.C. - The U.S. Senate voted 96-0 to pass the Higher Education
Reauthorization Act. A part of this bill, which was taken from the
Campus Right to Know Act, will require campus police to report incidents
of hate crimes on the basis of sexual orientation, disability, religion,
gender and ethnicity. The bill is an important step in providing
students access to information allowing them to choose a school in which
they will be safe, according to the Human Rights Campaign.
“This legislation sends the clear message that hate crimes are
serious offenses and should not be swept under the carpet. This open
policy allows gay and lesbian students to know if they may be at higher
risk by attending certain schools. This legislation also allows schools
with a high incidence of hate crimes to identify their problems and fix
them,” said HRC political director Winnie Stachelberg.
The House passed the bill by a voice vote and now it will go
to President Clinton who is expected to sign it into law. Before
this legislation, existing federal reporting requirements only mandated
colleges and universities to report hate crimes that result in murder,
rape, or aggravated assault. This was inadequate because the majority
of hate crimes on campuses are not this extreme. Most incidents come
in the form of assaults, or lesser crimes. Unfortunately, vandalism
and intimidation as incidents that campus police must report to the Department
of Education were not included in this bill.
In 1990, Congress enacted the Hate Crimes Statistics Act (HCSA) in
an effort to measure the extent of the hate crime problem in America.
In 1992, Congress enacted the Campus Security Act to require colleges and
universities to annually report crime statistics in an effort to measurecampus
crime and increase security awareness. With the passage of this section
of the Higher Education Reauthorization Act, campus police will now
also report incidents of hate crimes on the basis of sexual orientation,
disability, religion, gender and ethnicity.
“The first step to solving a problem is acknowledging it exists. This
bill will provide the necessary tools for college administrators to recognize
that their institutions may be incubators for hateful activity,” said HRC
senior policy advocate Kris Pratt.