Reaction following news of a second reported sexual assault allegation against a Brock history professor.
A CBC investigation has uncovered another reported assault, with the same staff member, just months before the most recent case was made public.
The allegations are similar - that the history professor gave the student alcohol and then groped and kissed her in January of 2014.
She reported the incident to the university, and after an investigation it was determined there wasn't enough evidence to support her claims.
The student telling the CBC she came forward because she didn't want it to happen again to someone else.
Associate Professor of Women's and Gender Studies/Sociology Margot Francis tells CKTB's Larry Fedoruk this shows that Brock doesn't take sexual assault allegations seriously.
She says Brock made the wrong decision by not removing the professor from the classroom after the second allegation was made.
She says since he was working at the university, that made other students vulnerable.
Francis says it proves that the university was dealing with these situations "on the fly" with no support for alleged victims.
She calls the entire situation disheartening.
It was in March we first heard from a student who says she was told by the university to keep quiet about the investigation into her alleged assault in the Fall of 2014.
Brock says the student came forward 11 months later and they immediately launched an investigation.
The three month investigation accepted the student's claims that there was inappropriate and unwelcome sexual advances and touching.
Stemming from the outcry over the handling of her complaint, Brock University announced it was hiring a Sexual Violence Response worker to handle harassment cases.