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Rutgers Suicide Sparks Federal Legislation
Rutgers Suicide Sparks Federal Legislation

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Rutgers Suicide Sparks Federal Legislation
U.S. senator Frank Lautenberg of New Jersey said Wednesday that he planned to introduce legislation that would require colleges and universities that receive federal funds to adopt policies that protect all students from harassment, including cyberbullying, in response to the suicide of Rutgers University freshman Tyler Clementi.
Lautenberg announced the draft legislation, which he intends to introduce when the Senate returns to session in November, at a town hall forum on the Rutgers campus in New Brunswick, where he told hundreds assembled that colleges have a responsibility to prevent the "terrible degradation of spirit and humanity" that led Clementi, 18, to jump from the George Washington Bridge last month after his roommate secretly filmed his intimate encounter with another man and live-streamed it over the Internet.
"Right now there is no federal law to require colleges to protect students from harassment and bullying and what I want to do is change that, and the bill I'm introducing will require that colleges and universities who are recipients of federal funds must adopt a code of conduct that prohibits harassment and bullying," he said.
In addition, according to his office, the bill would require schools to have in place a policy to deal with complaints and incidents of harassment. The bill would also create a competitive grant program at the U.S. Department of Education for colleges and universities to establish programs that prevent harassment and bullying.
Lautenberg is a cosponsor of the Student Nondiscrimination Act introduced by Sen. Al Franken of Minnesota, which would expressly prohibit public elementary and secondary schools from discriminating against students based on sexual orientation and gender identity or ignoring harassment based on those characteristics. Schools found to violate the law could lose funding from federal departments and agencies.
In remarks to reporters, Lautenberg indicated that he wanted the legislation to honor the memory of Clementi, an idea he shared in a private phone call with the young man's mother, Jane, earlier in the day. Joe and Jane Clementi have not spoken publicly since the tragedy except to issue a brief statement last week calling for compassion.
"I suggested that we would like to do something to commemorate his young life," said Lautenberg. "I told her that I was going to write something to do that. I don't want to go into whether or not she said she liked it or didn't like it. That was the nature of the call."