The university seeks to ensure that consensual romantic and/or sexual relationships between and among faculty, staff, students, residents, interns, and fellows do not interfere with the operations of the university or compliance with the law.
To explain the university's position on consensual romantic and/or sexual relationships among and between its faculty, staff, students, residents, interns, and fellows.
This policy covers all university faculty, staff, students, residents, interns, and fellows.
Romantic and/or sexual relationships are prohibited whenever there are direct supervisory, teaching, evaluation, advising, coaching, or counseling responsibilities between:
Romantic and/or sexual relationships between direct supervisor and employee are prohibited. No person involved in a romantic and/or sexual relationship will have direct responsibility for evaluating the performance or for making decisions regarding the hiring, promotion, tenure, compensation, discipline, or termination of the other party to the relationship. Supervisors, including faculty supervisors, must take immediate steps to make alternative arrangements regarding their supervisory responsibility for the other party to avoid a conflict of interest. If alternative arrangements are not feasible, the relationship cannot continue.
Alternative arrangements include removing any supervisory, teaching, evaluation, advising, coaching, or mentoring relationships between the person with institutional power and the student or employee. The alternative arrangements should avoid negative consequences for the student or employee. If alternative arrangements are not feasible, the relationship cannot continue.
Even if the relationship is not prohibited by the above provisions, individuals in positions of power should be aware that romantic or sexual relationships with students or employees pose a legal risk to both the individual and the institution and may result in either disciplinary action up to and including termination or removal.
There are special risks in any sexual or romantic relationship between individuals in inherently unequal positions of power. These relationships may be subject to concerns about the validity of consent and unfair treatment of other students or employees. Such relationships can undermine the atmosphere of trust essential to the educational process and the employment relationship. They may, moreover, be less consensual than the individual whose position confers power believes. The apparent consensual nature of the relationship is inherently suspect due to the fundamental asymmetry of power in the relationship and it thus may be difficult to establish consent as a defense to a complaint of sexual harassment. Even when both parties consented at the outset to a romantic or sexual involvement, this past consent does not remove grounds for or preclude a charge or subsequent finding of sexual harassment based upon subsequent unwelcome conduct.
For all of these reasons, the university discourages all romantic and/or sexual relationships between faculty, employees and students, even when those relationships do not officially violate this policy.
Ohio Admin. Code 3364-25-65
Promulgated Under: 111.15
Statutory Authority: 3364
Rule Amplifies: 3364
Prior Effective Dates: 05/31/2018