This March 3 letter from four state senators went to UC President Mark G. Yudof and five chancellors, Robert J. Birgeneau of Berkeley, Linda P.B. Katehi of Davis, Michael V. Drake or Irvine, Marye Anne Fox of San Diego and George Blumenthal or Santa Cruz, in regard to recent acts of intolerance on their campuses.
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Dear President Yudof and Chancellors,
We are writing to share your outrage at the recent acts of racism and hateful vandalism committed by students at five UC campuses. Like you, we were shocked and mortified. Thus, we were pleased to read that leaders of the UC community have publicly denounced and condemned these and all acts of racism, intolerance and incivility. We were also pleased to read of the efforts at some of the affected schools to investigate the despicable acts as hate crimes.
However, we do not wish to rely on press accounts to ascertain UC’s responses to the despicable acts. We therefore are writing to inquire what policies UC and its campuses have in place to deter such abhorrent acts; what UC and its campuses have done to enforce those policies; and what policy changes UC may be considering to ensure that these vile acts do not recur. Specifically:
• What policies does UC have in place with respect to prohibiting the vandalism of school property with hate speech (such as the painting or carving of swastikas or other hateful graffiti on the property)? Is there a uniform UC policy or do individual campuses set their own policies? (To the extent that individual campuses set individual policies, please note and elaborate in the following questions as well.)
• What penalties or disciplinary sanctions do the UC policies impose for the vandalism of school property with such hate speech?
• How does UC make its students aware of its policies?
• In the past five years, how many incidents of these and similar forms of vandalism have been reported to UC campus officials?
• What is UC’s policy with respect to the investigation of these acts and how many of these incidents in the past five years were investigated?
• What is UC’s policy with respect to the disciplining or prosecution of the offender? How many disciplinary actions or prosecutions have been taken in the past five years?
• What discipline or corrective actions have UC taken in response to the recent incidents on the five UC campuses? What policy changes, if any, will be made?
Unquestionably, these vicious acts create a hostile atmosphere for the affected students, making their student experience unnecessarily more challenging than it already is. News articles have reported on students’ perception of pervasive racism on several campuses.
We know you share our concern that this problem must be addressed, at all campuses, so the educational opportunities and experiences of a UC student are not compromised by a hostile environment that is not conducive to higher learning. We also know all of us are concerned about what these incidents say to prospective students, who may decide to turn away from UC in favor of other, less hostile academic settings.
We all share the goal that our universities should be training tomorrow’s future leaders to recognize and celebrate our multi-racial, multi-ethnic, multi-cultural, multi-religious, and LGBT diversity, and not be harbors for racism or hate of any kind.
• What deficiencies have been identified in UC policies that could enable a racist or hateful climate to exist on any UC campus? And what improvements to those policies have been or are being considered?
We look forward to hearing your responses to these concerns and working together to address them. Our budget and policy committees will be monitoring your progress.
Sincerely,
Sen. Darrell Steinberg
Senate President Pro Tempore
Sen. Gloria Romero
Chair, Senate Education Committee
Sen. Denise Ducheny
Chair, Senate Budget Committee
Sen. Carol Liu
Chair, Senate Budget Committee, Subcommittee 1
Media Resources
Dave Jones, Dateline, 530-752-6556, dljones@ucdavis.edu