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Title
IX harms low-profile collegiate sports for males
By
JENNIFER LOVEN
Associated Press
WASHINGTON
A federal law credited with transforming womens athletics
causes discrimination against men in lower-profile college sports
such as wrestling and track, coaches and athletes allege in a lawsuit
against the government.
The
suit filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court for the District of
Columbia largely blames a 1996 rule clarifying the 1972 statute
known as Title IX, which prohibits any school or college that receives
federal funding from discriminating based on sex in sports or academics.
Because
nearly all the nations schools receive some federal aid, the
law has had a dramatic impact, particularly on womens athletics.
Federal
regulations say schools can comply with Title IXs guarantee
of equal treatment for female athletes in a number of ways: by showing
that opportunities for women are substantially proportionate
to their enrollment, that opportunities correspond to the level
of students interest, or that new teams are being added. A
1996 clarification of those rules said, in part, that actual athletes
would be counted rather than simply spots allotted to
teams.
The
suit against the Education Department, financed by the National
Wrestling Coaches Association, contends that as a result of those
rules and court decisions interpreting them, many colleges and universities
have come to see trimming mens sports rather than adding
womens teams as the only way to achieve equality.
Over
the last decade, 350 mens programs have been cut, said Eric
Pearson, an NWCA co-chairman. Those losses have come mostly in sports
that dont bring in revenue, such as swimming, wrestling, track-and-field
and gymnastics and have prevailed in some cases despite offers from
alumni and parents to take over funding of the sports, Pearson said.
Numerous
lawsuits have been filed against individual schools for such decisions,
all unsuccessful.
But
the NWCA suit challenges the rules themselves, arguing they were
adopted illegally.
It
asks the court to force the department to write new ones defining
compliance as providing opportunities for female athletes based
on interest instead of enrollment.
Capping
a male athlete off a team or cutting an entire mens team solely
because not enough female students have an interest in athletics
is gender discrimination per se with absolutely no corresponding
benefit to women, the suit says.
The
Education Department, through a spokesman, said it could not comment
on pending litigation.
But
Marcia Greenberger, co-president of the National Womens Law
Center, said the laws requirements are not as rigid as the
NWCA claims. Several studies, in fact, have shown that the majority
of schools come into compliance without cutting mens teams
or relying on comparisons to enrollment, and that mens participation
in athletics has increased as well.
Greenberger
suggested the blame lies not with Title IX as the suit argues, but
with schools decisions to place a priority on popular moneymaking
sports like football and basketball.
There
has been a concerted effort to weaken Title IX ... since the very
day it was passed, she said. This is part of a longtime
effort that fortunately has never borne fruit.
The
government has 60 days to respond.
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