California Considers Mandating Even More Sexual Harassment Training for College Students
The new law would require all state community college students to attend annual sexual harassment training.

The California State Senate is considering a bill that would increase mandatory anti-sexual harassment training for California college students. Assembly bill (A.B.) 2683 would further entrench the already unconstitutional definition of sexual harassment used in state colleges and universities, and which might lead to an increase in unfounded Title IX claims.
California's education code currently defines sexual harassment as "unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual favors, and other verbal, visual, or physical conduct of a sexual nature, made by someone from or in the work or educational setting" that "has the purpose or effect of having a negative impact upon the individual's work or academic performance, or of creating an intimidating, hostile, or offensive work or educational environment."
A.B. 2683 would cement this broad definition by mandating most California public four-year and community colleges to "annually train [their] students on sexual violence and sexual harassment and cover certain topics, including, among other topics, the differing rates at which students experience sexual harassment and sexual assault in the educational setting based on their race, sexual orientation, disability, gender, and gender identity, as specified. The bill would, beginning September 1, 2024, and each year thereafter, require students attending the California Community Colleges to complete their annual training within 6 months of the beginning of the academic year."
While trainings on sexual harassment and assault are currently required at most California colleges, this new bill would expand the mandate to include community colleges, as well as expand the number of required topics the trainings must cover.
A.B. 2683 reflects the endless expansion of Title IX, the provision in federal law that requires universities which receive federal education dollars to protect students from sex discrimination. If passed, the law will likely lead more students to feel victimized, increase the number of complaints to Title IX officers, and make real instances of unacceptable, illegal harassment harder to differentiate from the noise of petty complaints.
"If students are taught they have the right to be free from harassment as broadly defined as is the case in California, it is all but certain that complaints will be filed over expression that is protected," says Greg Gonzalez, a legislative fellow with the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE). He adds that "by requiring the state to train students using overbroad definitions, the state is encouraging frivolous complaints that will divert resources from meritorious complaints."
Alison Somin, a legal fellow with Pacific Legal Foundation, notes that the bill may also increase poorly constructed anti-harassment trainings: "[i]t's essentially a state subsidy to the trainers and consultants who teach these courses and the firms that develop them," Somin says. "The more government subsidizes consultants and firms like this, the more ambitious they get in terms of recasting seemingly innocuous interactions as 'microaggressions' or the like."
This bill would also further cement a definition of sexual harrasment which is at odds with the Supreme Court's definition of peer-on-peer hostile environment harassment, as established in Davis v. Monroe County Board of Education (1999). In that case, the Supreme Court determined that for schools to be constitutionally obligated to intervene, the harassment must be "so severe, pervasive, and objectively offensive that it effectively bars the victim's access to an educational opportunity or benefit."
Harassment codes like California's are often far more restrictive than Davis requires. As FIRE notes in their Guide to Free Speech on Camus, "Harassment codes often prohibit "verbal conduct" or "verbal behavior" that is demeaning, upsetting, or offensive to members of protected groups. In a free society, however, speech is permitted to demean, upset, and offend (indeed, much honest criticism and polemic aims to do precisely that), and such speech is protected by the First Amendment. Protected speech certainly does not qualify as discriminatory harassment."
College students need to know the actual legal definition of harassment, and to know that their actions will be judged in accordance with it. Mandating more anti-harassment training with increasingly specific rules is unlikely to change student behavior, but it might make it harder to Title IX officers to focus on the truly bad offenders.
A.B. 2683 was referred to the Senate education committee on May 18.
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“We need a higher level of sexual harassment.”
I would say we might look into CA's University school systems to see why they're recruiting and accepting people who require exceptional levels of sexual harassment training... but I'm pretty sure our efforts would be better spent bombing the San Andreas and letting the whole thing slide into the Pacific.
this new bill would expand the mandate to include community colleges, as well as expand the number of required topics the trainings must cover.
Think of the JOBS!
Sexual repression classes mst be expanded to deal with Californian student's growing confusion about The Birds And The Fish.
Every male forced into these classes should file paperwork against the instructor for creating a hostile environment, because this training will be nothing but hostile.
The link in the article to Harvard Business Review is pointing to exactly this. It starts with men are all guilty, which makes them defensive and distrustful, which makes women defensive and distrustful.
Interesting, their statistics show that places with harassment training had worse results for women in management.
Personally, when I see draconian "you can't do this" sexual harassment stuff happening, I just don't talk to female coworkers outside of the specific work context. I won't socialize, I won't go to lunch, I won't do any of that because one slip, even if it is not mine, could ruin my reputation and career.
Yep, let's keep telling men, especially young men, that they are defective and unwanted. Perhaps some of these harassment training assholes could open a facility next to a gun shop.
Well said..but we certainly wouldn’t want these college “snowflakes” to melt from lack of “harassment training”. Bubble wrapped brats need to stay in, what had become a playpen, for more indoctrination.
"Interesting, their statistics show that places with harassment training had worse results for women in management."
Not surprising, if you train people in sexual harassment, they will certainly learn how to sexually harass!
Should be a pretty short class.
“Welcome to mandatory sexual harassment training.
If you’re male, you’re guilty.
This concludes your mandatory sexual harassment training.”
Should be a pretty short class.
“Welcome to mandatory sexual harassment training.
If you’re female, you can get revenge against any male you have a minor grievance about, get them booted from the campus, and ruin their life forever.
Just make a false claim.
This concludes your mandatory sexual harassment training.”
It is important to consider that a major support for the California Democrat party comes from those employed by the government, especially from those who probably could not find employment in their field of study in the private world.
The state is becoming an instrument by and for the HR department.
You already need four years of college to learn all the shit you were supposed to learn in grade school. Pretty soon you'll need an additional four years of college to learn a profession because you spent four years in various struggle sessions.
Learn a trade.
Skip the debt.
What does California statutory law have to do with Title IX, a federal law? Of course they use different definitions. There is no obligation under the US constitution to interpret state law the same way that a similar federal law is interpreted by the US Supreme Court. Also, the Davis case did not establish a constitutional right to have a university intervene in cases off sexual harassment. It was a statutory case. I suggest having legal articles reviewed by a lawyer for accuracy before publication.
"OK, welcome to sexual harassment training. Make sure to purchase your tickets...I mean certificates of attendance...at the counter. Today we'll be watching instructional films about what *not* to do. Today's instructional video is called, let's see...Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! Be sure to pay careful attention to what not to do."
I blame this, and similar bullshit, on the feminization of America. We recognize the liberal bias in education but don't talk enough about the equally destructive gender bias. What did we think would happen after decades of telling boys and men that they are immoral degenerates, and that any natural male inclinations must be corrected?
Grooming and Indoctrinating --- One of the favorite things Nazi's do.
I'm so old I remember when left wingers pretended to believe the government should not be dictating school content. Someone let the left media know this is still going on!
Like most ideological totalitarians, dedicated liberals and progressives did not really object to the methods, just to which side was in charge.
How else are all those sexual harassment activists going to find employment?
Would women who dress "immodestly" constitute sexual harassment towards men?
Can one imagine all of the complaints if this were the case? Women would have to start wearing burkas.