Almost five years ago, the Department of Education issued its “Dear Colleague” letter on Title IX and sexual violence. The letter was a not-so-subtle reminder that Title IX requires federally funded educational institutions to prevent sexual harassment and violence. After that, the day-to-day work of many higher education attorneys and student affairs professionals has never been the same.

Are similar changes on the horizon with respect to considerations of race on campus? There are several signs suggesting the answer very well may be yes, making now an opportune time to evaluate how your campus is handling these issues.

What to do now?

For schools looking to be proactive in this area, here are six practical suggestions:

  1. Review institutional policies. Over the past five years, schools have spent considerable time drafting, reviewing, and revising their sexual misconduct policies. Now is the time to do a similar review of institutional race discrimination policies. Is your institution clear about what conduct is prohibited, how to report race discrimination, who will handle complaints, etc.? Is your institution comfortable that your current policies and processes are consistent with best practices in handling discrimination complaints?
  2. Examine messaging to the university community. Again, similar to what institutions have done with respect to sexual misconduct, now seems to be an ideal time to make clear to the campus community what sort of conduct is prohibited and how people who believe they have been victims of race discrimination can complain.A number of interesting free speech issues have popped up throughout the country about how far institutions should and can go in describing what the school prohibits. Campus communications regarding race discrimination should at least be informed by the national conversation over legitimate free speech concerns.
  3. Determine whether there are enough of the right people. An increase in awareness and attention can lead to an avalanche of complaints. It is essential for schools to be in the best position to handle race discrimination complaints in a prompt, thorough, and equitable manner.It is equally important that institutions have a high degree of confidence in the skills of their frontline personnel who will serve as the face of the institution in handling these often emotionally charged cases. Put in stark terms, one high-profile incident handled poorly by someone who is overwhelmed or not up to the job can result in catastrophic consequences for your school.
  4. Implement a sense of urgency. Institutions have learned in recent years that complaints of sexual misconduct have to be given priority over other, less-pressing matters. You should put issues involving race in the same category. As more students complain that their concerns of race discrimination have not been treated seriously, it is clear that the same sense of urgency that has become second nature in dealing with complaints of sexual misconduct needs to also apply to complaints of race discrimination.
  5. Check the climate. Most schools are doing climate surveys to assess sexual discrimination on campus. It may make considerable sense to piggyback on those efforts and gauge the campus climate on race. How do students of color feel about conditions on campus? Are there recommendations to improve this climate? Are students aware of institutional policies and how to express concerns? Having a sense of what the campus racial climate is now can go a long way in helping a college or university target prevention efforts and prioritize resources.
  6. Emotional intelligence and understanding the unique nature of higher education. Finally, it bears noting that the calls for resignations at the University of Missouri and Ithaca College were not based solely on concerns about inadequate responses to race discrimination. Rather, there were a number of other issues in play, including the sense that senior leadership was very “top down” in how they governed and that school leaders did not have an interest in traditional shared-governance models.Whether that criticism is fair, it goes without saying that the management of universities is unique. The sort of top-down approach that may work in traditional business settings may only needlessly complicate already nettlesome areas in higher education. Put simply, institutional constituencies affected by a problem appreciate being consulted with and working on important institutional initiatives and solutions to that problem.

Considerations of race on campus clearly fit the bill. An approach to addressing racial concerns that involves only senior management at a school will likely be poorly received and may actually escalate problems. Rather, schools looking to tackle racial problems would be well-advised to identify those groups on campus who are interested in the issue and, at the very least, solicit their opinions about how things are and how things can be improved.

Scott Schneider leads the Higher Education Practice Group at Fisher & Phillips, LLP, where he focuses on providing counsel and litigation support on a host of higher education issues, with a particular emphasis on institutional policies and handling allegations of sexual assault and violations of Title IX. A version of this article appeared on HigherEdLawyer.net, and it is reprinted with permission of the author.

Reprinted from Racial Tensions on Campus: Six Practical Solutions for Educational Institutions,”Academic Leader, 32, 3 (2016): 1,3. © Magna Publications. All rights reserved.