Issue 29, Vol. 138

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THEVERMONTCYNIC ISSUE 29 - VOLUME 138 | MAY 3, 2022 | VTCYNIC.COM

NEW DEMANDS FOR ADMINISTRATION FOLLOW NATIONWIDE WALKOUT MARY MCLELLAN/The Vermont Cynic Junior speaker Reid Corliss stands next to junior Syd Partin and sophomore Emily Carr on the Waterman building steps during the Explain the Asterisk walkout April 27. Halsey McLaen News Editor

Hundreds gathered outside the Waterman building April 27 to participate in a nationwide walkout against campus sexual violence organized by Explain the Asterisk, an activism group originally founded at UVM. The protest resulted from continued frustration with UVM’s efforts to address its mishandling of campus sexual violence, said sophomore Sabine Love, survivor and lead coordinator of the protest. Following the protest, organizers sent a list of 20 demands to the administration centered around this issue. The organizers emailed their demands to UVM President Suresh Garimella; Patty Prelock, vice provost and senior vice president; Erica Caloiero, vice provost for student affairs; Gary Derr, vice president for operations and public safety; and the Title IX Office directly after the protest, Love said. Organizers included Love, juniors Syd Partin, Reid Corliss, Abigale Szlajen and sophomores Kat Wellborn, Brooke Borstel, Kaia Ellis and Emily Carr, Love said. “We’re angry at the UVM administration for not listening to us,” Love said. “They’re not hearing us when we’re telling them very, very, very loudly and clear that we don’t feel safe.” Approximately 350

protesters were present at the event, said UVM Police Chief Tim Bilodeau. All the organizers gave speeches sharing their stories of sexual assault and expressing disappointment in UVM’s efforts addressing the issue. Thirteen percent of college students experience rape while in college, according to the Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network website. For UVM’s undergraduate population of 10,554 students as of spring 2022, 13% constitutes 1,372 students. “Sexual assault should not be a part of the UVM experience,” Wellborn said. “It is not the job of survivors to protect other survivors. This is an administration problem and it is the administration’s jobs [to] do better, so do fucking better.” Periodically throughout the event, speakers led the crowd in chants decrying the administration. This protest comes nearly a year after a crowd of approximately 2,000 people staged a walkout May 3, 2021, flooding the steps of Waterman to stand against UVM’s handling of sexual violence and to advocate for improved prevention and support strategies, according to a May 4, 2021 Cynic article. The UVM Title IX Advisory Committee sent a list of 17 demands to UVM

administrators April 30, 2021, who agreed to them May 3, 2021, according to the Cynic article. Since that time, UVM has implemented 14 of the list’s demands and is in the process of implementing the final three, according to the University’s We Hear You website. Despite the University’s actions, organizers and protesters alike do not feel UVM’s efforts to meet these initial demands are enough, Love said. “The word ‘disappointing’ comes to mind in terms of University response,” said senior Steph Ryder, a protester and survivor. “But I think it’s encouraging to see how many students care about it and hopefully will continue to take action with these things.” In 2018, then-sophomore Syd Ovitt ‘21 founded Explain the Asterisk following the revelation that many colleges only signify sexual violence misconduct with an unspecified asterisk on the assaulter’s transcript, according to a Sept. 17, 2018 Cynic article. Explain the Asterisk’s name comes from the fact this asterisk could refer to a wide range of circumstances, ranging from poor grades to sexual assault, the Explain the Asterisk website stated. Ovitt reached out to Love to coordinate the April 27 protest at UVM to serve as the leading

example for other universities across the nation, Love said. Ovitt knows Love personally and reached out to Love because they are an active member of UVM’s activism community. Fourteen other universities participated in the event nationwide, according to Explain the Asterisk’s Instagram. The protest also coincided with Denim Day, a worldwide campaign sparked after an abuser’s rape conviction was overturned on the basis of the survivor wearing jeans when she was assaulted, according to the Denim Day website. Denim Day has since become a survivor solidarity education campaign, according to the website. The new set of demands are unrelated to last year’s demands and are based on changes the organizers of the recent walkout personally want to see, as well as input received from talking to students while tabling in the Davis Center, Love said. “The University has acknowledged receipt of the document and is in the process of reviewing it,” stated UVM Spokesperson Enrique Correderra in an April 29 email. The protest was also intended to be a safe space where survivors could understand their own power, Love said. “I think a lot of people felt that this was a very powerful

space that was held,” Love said. “I felt that this did some good for the people who came here today. [...] I think that the people who did attend found power in it.” Organizers will continue to protest for this cause at UVM in future semesters, Love said. “We want to have those conversations with UVM administration about the list of demands,” they said. “This is not the end, and it’s going to take more planning, but we’re nowhere near finished.” The UVM Women & Gender Equity Center offers support services for anyone who needs a safe space to talk to advocates through HOPE Works at their office located at 34 South Williams Street and at the Living/Learning Annex Room 215, according to their website. HOPE Works is a hotline providing counseling and advocacy for people whose lives have been impacted by sexual violence, according to their website. Their partnership with UVM came about as a result of the University’s response to the April 30, 2021 demands from the UVM Title IX Advisory Committee, according to the We Hear You website. Any survivors in need of support can access 24/7 hotline services through HOPE Works advocates at (802) 863-1236.

Read the full list of demands at vtcynic.com.


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