HR-9203-119
Ordered to be Reported (Amended) by the Yeas and Nays: 18 - 15.
Sponsored by Elise Stefanik (R-NY)
What it does
This bill would require colleges and universities that receive federal financial aid to establish and publicly disclose formal processes for handling complaints alleging racial, color, or national origin discrimination under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Institutions would be required to designate a Title VI compliance officer, notify complainants of investigation decisions within 30 days, and post federal Office for Civil Rights (OCR) awareness materials on campus and online. The bill would also require the Department of Education's OCR to provide bimonthly briefings and written reports to Congress on Title VI complaints, and would restrict OCR from dismissing complaints solely because a similar complaint was filed elsewhere. Institutions that fail to comply for two consecutive years would lose eligibility for federal student aid programs.
Who benefits
Students who file Title VI discrimination complaints and would receive faster, more transparent responses. Jewish, Muslim, Arab, Black, Asian, Hispanic, and other students who experience race- or national-origin-based discrimination on campus. Students and families who would gain clearer information about how to file complaints. Congress, which would gain regular oversight data on OCR complaint activity. Civil rights advocacy organizations that have sought greater institutional accountability. Students at institutions that currently have weak or opaque complaint processes.
Who is hurt
Colleges and universities that would bear new administrative costs to build or upgrade complaint tracking systems, designate compliance officers, and meet reporting deadlines — costs that may be passed on to students through tuition or fees. Smaller and under-resourced institutions (community colleges, HBCUs, tribal colleges) that may face disproportionate compliance burdens relative to their administrative capacity. Institutions that fail to comply risk losing federal student aid eligibility, which could harm enrolled students who depend on that aid. The Department of Education's OCR, which would face new mandatory reporting and briefing obligations that may strain existing staff and resources.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Title VI complaints at colleges have surged in recent years — particularly complaints involving shared ancestry and national origin discrimination — yet many institutions lack clear, consistent processes for handling them. They contend that requiring designated compliance officers, 30-day response timelines, and public disclosure of investigative procedures gives students meaningful recourse and holds institutions accountable for obligations they already have under existing law. Supporters further argue that the bimonthly OCR briefings to Congress fill a critical oversight gap, ensuring that lawmakers can monitor whether the federal government is enforcing civil rights law effectively and without undue delay.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill imposes rigid procedural mandates — including strict 30-day timelines and mandatory public posting requirements — that may not account for the complexity of individual cases or the varying administrative capacity of different institutions, particularly smaller schools. They contend that the two-year aid ineligibility penalty is disproportionately severe and could harm the very students the bill aims to protect by cutting off their access to federal financial aid. Opponents may also argue that the bill's focus on Title VI processes, without parallel requirements for Title IX or other civil rights statutes, creates an uneven compliance framework that could distort institutional priorities and resource allocation.