May 7, 2019

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After Class Podcast

May 7, 2019

COLLEGIATETIMES

An independent, student-run newspaper serving the Virginia Tech community since 1903

ETHAN CANDELARIO / COLLEGIATE TIMES

University Commencement Ceremony, May 11, 2018.

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Despite promises of safety and community, the university tolerates racism, sexism and bigotry, leaving minorities feeling unwelcome.

The Walkout for Survivors of Sexual Assault rally was in part a response to a Virginia Tech student’s experience with Title IX.

For my entire life, I just knew Virginia Tech was home,” junior Juan Pacheco described his family’s long history with Virginia Tech, stating that his mom and most of her sisters are all Hokies. “As long as I’ve had an understanding of words, I knew I was a Hokie and I knew I was going to go here.” It’s what brought him f rom Columbia, South Carolina, to study psychology with a minor in diversity and community engagement. “Ever y home ha s dysfunction,” Pacheco said, “but most homes don’t cause anxiety, worry, fear or an environment that is not conducive to growth.” It was during his freshman year that he realized that “This Is Home” doesn’t apply to a wide swath of Virginia Tech students, including himself. Pacheco described the moment during his freshman year in 2016, as the only Latino student on his hall, where someone posted a photo of Donald Trump on his door. He reminded me that the fall of 2016 was a scary time for minority students on campus, where a number of targeted attacks against ma rginalized students increased as the nation prepared for Trump to assume the Oval Office. Pacheco added, “I remember that students were being called slurs out of pickup trucks and I remember getting sexual assault email after sexual assault email.” “This Is Home,” the marketing ploy enticing students to come to Virginia

MACKENZIE WILLIAMS news staff writer

For marginalized groups, Community marches for Virginia Tech is not home sexual assault survivors

Tech, is a genius move. Many prospective college students are nervous about leaving the life they knew behind to begin a journey elsewhere without proximity to parents, longstanding friends and the comforts of the place they called home for years. The security of knowing that there is a home to be found here in the New River Valley is reassuring for many students. “Virginia Tech isn’t the place we all thought it was at one point,” Pacheco added. For an alarming number of us, we face experiences that bring the realization that this place is not, has never been, and will never feel like home for us. Twitter recently erupted with stories of women, racia l a nd rel igious minorities, members of the LGBTQ+ community and people with disabilities sharing experiences where they first realized that Virginia Tech was not home for them. Their stories were moving, heartbreaking and reaffirming. In all the emotions I felt reading these stories, after my four years here at Tech, surprise was certainly not among them. “It wouldn’t have been as devastating to me if Virginia Tech didn’t go out of its way to create the facade that it was a more accepting place than it is,” Pacheco said. Virginia Tech was founded as an all-male, all-military institution and holds firmly onto this tradition. Tech admitted its first female students in 1921 as civilians who were only permitted to take

day classes, meaning they did not live on campus. In 1964, enrollment in the Corps became optional and although the civilian population skyrocketed, the university remained predominantly male and predominantly white. As this remains true to this day, a lack of substantial change to the institution’s decision-making structures and the lackluster efforts to increase diversity without substantive initiatives to make the university more inclusive and supportive to its women, students of color, LGBTQ+ students, religious minorities and students with disabilities has reinforced the university’s role as a haven for some, but a constant struggle reinforced by consistently delivered traumas for others. Tech is proud to be the first predominantly white institution in the former Confederacy to admit black students. The university is also proud to host the first Corps of Cadets in the nation to admit women, even beating out the prestigious service academies. But the university only pays lip service to ideas of diversity and inclusion, and while many students feel comfortable calling this place home, others are quite uncomfortable simply crossing the street on the way to class based on how they look, worship, dress or otherwise present. Students from many different backgrounds spoke about being called racial slurs, homophobic HOME / page 2

Hundreds of students chanted “Title IX excuses crime” throughout Virginia Tech’s campus during the Walkout for Survivors Against Sexual Assault on April 30, where protestors asked for reform on sexual assault proceedings and new Title IX at Virginia Tech. Testimonies of sexual assault survivors — some of which were spoken about for the first time at the walkout — revealed students’ personal interaction with the Title IX office, Cook Counseling Center and other nearby resources. Students voiced concern over university tools and policies like Schiffert Health Center not being able to conduct a Physical Evidence Recovery Kit (PERK) exams. Rachel Bailey, a sophomo r e m aj o r i ng in

international business and applied economics and management, and a student advocate against sexual violence, noted that the walkout intended to raise students’ voices as a whole to further change the Title IX process at the rally. On April 23, Bailey tweeted, “Shoutout to Virginia Tech for finding my rapist not guilty and for putting me on deferred suspension for Self Defense. I’ve never been more disappointed to be a Hokie,” creating a viral message that gained the attention of Juan Pacheco, a junior majoring in psychology, and one of the co-organizers of the walkout. Pacheco acknowledged there was a “culmination of things” for the walkout taking place with Bailey’s tweet being the catalyst of the movement. According to the Virginia Tech Office for Equity and Accessibility, there were

214 reports of genderbased violence and sexual ha ra ssment i nvolvi ng students in the 2017-2018 academic year. Of the 214 reports filed, 83 incidents occurred on campus and 51 occurred specifically in residence halls. Gender-based harassments consisted of 70 reports while 88 reports were sexual assault. Predominant challenges victims face in finding their alleged assailant guilty is little or insufficient physical evidence during the trials. Additionally, many cases do not proceed following questioning based on the discretion of the Title IX Advisory Group arranged by the Title IX coordinator. These cases are referred to as inquiry-only resolutions which consist of the 23% of reports received in 20172018. Long durations of time and demanding hours WALKOUT / page 3

CAT PIPER / COLLEGIATE TIMES Students, community members and Virginia Tech faculty march from War Memorial Chapel to the North End Center, April 30, 2019.


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