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The Fraternal Movement in Washington: Changing Public Policy to Improve the Experience.

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Presentation on theme: "The Fraternal Movement in Washington: Changing Public Policy to Improve the Experience."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Fraternal Movement in Washington: Changing Public Policy to Improve the Experience

2 Who Are We? The Fraternal Government Relations Coalition (FGRC) consists of the North-American Interfraternity Conference (NIC), National Panhellenic Conference (NPC) and the Fraternity and Sorority Political Action Committee (FSPAC) as equal partners. Mission Statement: To build a permanent platform for an integrated federal government relations program supporting the objectives and needs of fraternal life.

3 History Coalition formed in April 2011 Remain nimble and prepared to react quickly to opportunities or issues facing the fraternity community Strong communication channels are intact with the Coalition partners

4 Public Policy Agenda Addressing Campus Sexual Assault Limiting Alumni Volunteer Liability Passage of Collegiate Housing and Infrastructure Act Student Housing and Safety

5 Public Policy Agenda Preservation of Member Rights Freedom of Association Title IX Ensuring Rights to Due Process Charitable Giving

6 Addressing Campus Sexual Assault

7 Campus Sexual Assault Student safety is one of FGRC’s highest priorities Committed to prevention of campus sexual assault and to protect students from threat of sexual assault Fraternities and sororities providing leadership: NIC Presidential Commission on Sexual Violence and Abuse Prevention NPC Task Force on Student Safety and Sexual Assault Awareness Potential to be addressed through HEA reauthorization and/or standalone legislation

8 Limiting Alumni Volunteer Liability

9 Limiting Volunteer Liability Increasing barriers to alumni volunteer involvement: Required background checks Reporting requirements Increasing liability requirements No additional training/support from institutions Additional barriers = additional challenges in recruiting and retraining alumni volunteers Encouraging policymakers to address through HEA reauthorization

10 Student Housing & Safety

11 61% of chapter houses lack fire sprinklers $1 billion of projects on the docket to be addressed, but in need of funding 250,000+ students living in fraternity/sorority housing nationwide Fraternities and sororities are the second leading not-for-profit landlord after host institutions Fires continue to plague college campuses; in particular off-campus housing with over 17 fires in the last 14 years with 60 deaths Not-for-profit student housing groups are not currently treated equally under the law

12 Student Housing & Safety The Collegiate Housing and Infrastructure Act (CHIA) (H.R. 1449/S. 654) CHIA would result in all not-for-profit housing being treated the same under the law. Institutions can use tax- deductible contributions for brick & mortar and so can fraternities and sororities. Fraternities and sororities often lack the financial capacity to make critical safety improvements to existing housing stock. The ability to use charitable contributions for housing infrastructure will support small businesses and the construction industry.

13 Preservation of Member Rights

14 Freedom of Association Opportunity to create or join single-sex organizations Compliance with Title IX provisions System level restrictions on fraternity/sorority communities Encouraging lawmakers to use HEA reauthorization process to reaffirm value of Title IX single sex organization language

15 Due Process Rights

16 Protecting the due process rights of all students Handling complex judicial cases Preserving constitutional protections Standard of proof Significant implications for students & institutions

17 Preserve Charitable Giving

18 Problem: The federal government continues to look for new revenue sources. One option: Reduce the value of tax-deductible charitable contributions for high-income taxpayers (singles making over $200,000/couples making over $250,000)

19 Preserve Charitable Giving Solution: Ask members of Congress to resist efforts to reduce the value of charitable deductions Our organizations rely exclusively on charitable contributions to fund scholarships, leadership development programs and community service programs. 65% of our leading donors would reduce contributions to our organizations if the value of charitable giving was reduced. 50% of our leading donors would reduce their annual contribution by 30% or more under such a scenario.

20 How Has the FGRC Addressed the Key Issues and Extended the Reach of the Fraternal Community? Regulatory Mental Health Awareness Promotion Fall 2013 White House “invitation only” forums Girls Leadership and Civic Engagement Listening Session on Sexual Assault Student Mental Health Visits to Congressional offices regarding Dear Colleague letter Legislative IRS Form 1099 influence Charitable giving deductions with tax reform review Serving as a stakeholder in any hazing legislation (federal and state)

21 Members of Congress

22 What Can You Do to Help This Effort? As leaders of our fraternal organizations, we should help to create the rules to make fraternities and sororities more effective, instead of being stuck with rules that hinder our success. Let us know who you have a personal relationship with that could provide us with a means to directly communicate to on the issues and opportunities. Complete the RAP Index at http://www.myrapindex.comhttp://www.myrapindex.com Periodically review two important websites for additional communication. Fraternal Government Relations Coalition (FRGC): http://www.fgrc.comhttp://www.fgrc.com Fraternity and Sorority Political Action Committee (FSPAC): http://www.fspac.org http://www.fspac.org

23 What Can You Do to Help This Effort? Sign up for the FSPAC News Alerts that will share time- sensitive information on pertinent legislative and regulatory issues/opportunities. Be able to help with a letter-writing campaign when an issue arises where we need to “canvas” the members of Congress. Consider making a donation to the FSPAC to help fund our efforts to be involved in the legislative process.


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