A look into the work environment at MSU s Title IX office
Four ex-employees of the Office of Institutional Equity said their supervisor created a toxic work environment.
April 13- Outside of Olds Hall which is where Michigan State’s Office of Institutional Equity (OIE) is located on campus in East Lansing. Photo by Jillian Felton | The State News
Chrissy Weathersby Ball went to MSU as a full-ride scholarship gymnast. She was injured when she arrived at MSU in 1996 and was sexually abused by ex-MSU doctor Larry Nassar.
Ball was injured for the two years she competed until she took a medical disqualification after her sophomore year. She said a knee injury had made it so she could barely walk and severely broke her other leg because she was favoring it.
Diversity in Insurance Industry Calls For Including Different Mindsets and Experiences insurancejournal.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from insurancejournal.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
State officials have been issuing “discretionary releases” when an incarcerated person is released from prison or jail to state supervision before the end of their sentence at a rate not seen in at least a decade, according to an analysis by the CT Mirror.
Advocates for the incarcerated insist they can go farther.
Groups like the Katal Center for Equity, Health and Justice and the ACLU of Connecticut have clamored for large-scale releases to protect inmates from catching COVID-19 in a correctional facility, where social distancing is virtually impossible and medical care has historically been strained. Their demands underscore a fast-growing urgency: Three incarcerated people have died from COVID-19 since Dec. 17.