Placentia-Yorba Linda Unified School District makes extensive revisions to existing policies on nondiscrimination, sexual harassment
Extensive
revisions to two important school policies – one dealing with
nondiscrimination and harassment and the other addressing sexual
harassment of students – were approved on 5-0 votes by
Placentia-Yorba Linda school district trustees at their March
meeting.
Updates
to the “nondiscrimination and harassment” policy are part of a
fifth revision of a policy that was first adopted in 1975. Nine
paragraphs of new language were added to a 2012 revise.
Executive
Services Director Richard McAlindin told trustees the policy outlines
a “commitment to providing a safe school environment that allows
all students equal access and opportunities in...academic,
extracurricular and other educational support programs, services and
activities.”
And
the revision updates lawfully protected classes, with new wording
that adds “sexual orientation, gender, gender identity or gender
expression or association with a person or group with one or more of
these actual or perceived characteristics” to policy provisions.
Previously
existing language and other new wording also lists actual or
perceived race, color, ancestry, national origin, nationality,
ethnicity, ethnic group identification, age, religion, marital or
parental status, mental or physical disability and sex as among the
protected categories.
Revisions
also extend protection against unlawful discrimination, including
harassment, intimidation and bullying, which occurs “off campus or
outside of school-related or school-sponsored activities which may
have an impact or create a hostile environment at school.”
Disciplinary
action ranges to suspension or expulsion for students when offending
behavior is “severe or pervasive” and “up to and including
dismissal” for employees who violate the policy.
Revisions
to the “sexual harassment of students” policy are the first since
the document was adopted in 1993, and include new wording more than
doubling the count in the original policy.
One
new provision extends the policy's reach: “any student who feels
that he/she has been sexually harassed off-campus and is concerned
about or reports an impact on campus or school-related activity, even
if the off-campus misconduct did not occur in the context of a
school-related activity, should immediately report the incident....”
In
these cases, district officials will determine “whether there is a
hostile environment at school or in an off-campus school program or
activity.” Disciplinary action for grade 4-12 students will range
to suspension or expulsion, with employee penalties extending to
dismissal.
Also
new to policy language is the district's pledge to promptly
investigate every complaint of sexual harassment, “even if the
complainant requests that nothing be done or is anonymous.”
Both
policies require the district to maintain a record of all reported
cases “to enable the district to monitor, address and prevent”
repetition of prohibited behaviors.