Students at California universities will all be held to the same standard when it comes to sexual assault and consent, after Gov. Jerry Brown signed a groundbreaking piece of legislation Sunday.
The new law will require all schools that receive state funding to adopt an “affirmative consent” standard in their sexual assault policies. This standard, also sometimes called “yes means yes,” requires clear and ongoing consent, rather than just an absence of resistance.
California is the first state to pass a bill like this. Schools throughout the country already have affirmative consent standards on the books, but this is the first time a state will make that universal.
“Every student deserves a learning environment that is safe and healthy. The State of California will not allow schools to sweep rape cases under the rug. We’ve shifted the conversation regarding sexual assault to one of prevention, justice, and healing,” state Sen. Kevin de Leon, the bill’s sponsor, said in a statement.
The White House unveiled a new campaign on Sept. 19 aimed at addressing campus sexual assault. “It’s on Us” targets members of the campus community, men in particular, to encourage them to step in and intervene in situations where someone might be preparing to commit sexual assault.









