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IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA
TAI KWAN CURETON, LEATRICE SHAW, CIVIL ACTION
ANDREA GARDNER, and
ALEXANDER WESBY NO. 97-131
individually and on behalf of all others
similarly situated,
Plaintiffs,
v.
NATIONAL COLLEGIATE
ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION,
Defendant.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 8th day of March 1999, upon consideration of Plaintiffs'
CrossMotion for Summary Judgment (Docket No. 41), Defendant's response thereto
and Motion for Summary Judgment (Docket Nos. 47 and 48), Plaintiffs' amended
answer (Docket Nos. 53, 54, 56, and 57), Defendant's reply memorandum (Docket
No. 58), the parties' supplemental submissions at the request of the Court
(Docket Nos. 61, 62, 63, and 65), the parties' presentations at oral argument
on February 12, 1999, the parties' post-argument letter briefs, and the
parties' submissions with respect to their prior motions to dismiss/summary
judgment (Docket Nos. 4, 5, 11, 139 15, and 16), it is hereby ORDERED that
Plaintiffs' motion is GRANTED and Defendant's motion is DENIED, in accordance
with the accompanying opinion.
IT IS THE JUDGMENT and ORDER of the Court:
(1) That judgment is entered in FAVOR of Plaintiffs Tai Kwan Cureton,
Leatrice
Shaw, Andrea Gardner, and Alexander Wesby and AGAINST Defendant the National
Collegiate
Athletic Association;
(2) That the policy of denying eligibility to participate in intercollegiate
athletics and/or receiving athletically related financial aid during the
freshman year of all student-athletes who have failed to attain the minimum
score on either of two standardized tests, the SAT or the ACT, known as
"Proposition 16" and adopted as NCAA Bylaw 14.3, is hereby DECLARED
illegal under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §
2000d et 1M. and the regulations promulgated thereunder;
(3) That Defendant the National Collegiate Athletic Association, their
officers, agents, servants, employees, and those persons in active concert
or participation with them who receive actual notice of this order, are
hereby PERMANENTLY ENJOINED from continued operation and implementation
of Proposition 16.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that, while the parties may seek an immediate appeal
of this order, the Court retains jurisdiction over the case and expects
a motion for class certification within twenty (20) days of the date of
this order as previously stipulated. Both parties shall include briefing
on what relief would be appropriate irrespective of whether a class is certified.
BY THE COURT:
RONALD L. BUCKWALTER, J.
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA
TAI KWAN CURETON, LEATRICE SHAW, CIVIL ACTION
ANDREA GARDNER, and
ALEXANDER WESBY, NO. 97-131
individually and on behalf of all others
similarly situated,
Plaintiffs,
V.
NATIONAL COLLEGIATE
ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION,
Defendant.
OPINION
BUCKWALTER, J. March 8, 1999
The primary question presented by the parties' cross-motions for summary
judgment is whether Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 ("Title
VI"), 42 U.S.C. § 2000d et aM., and certain implementing regulations
promulgated thereunder, prohibit colleges and universities, through the
auspices of the National Collegiate Athletic Association ("NCAA"),
from requiring students to achieve a minimum score on either of two standardized
tests as a condition of eligibility to participate in intercollegiate athletics
and/or receive athletically related financial aid during their freshman
year.
For the reasons discussed below, the Court holds, as a matter of law,
that the NCAA is subject to suit-under Title VI, and that the NCAA's initial
eligibility rule has an
unjustified disparate impact against African-Americans. Accordingly, Plaintiffs'
motion is GRANTED and Defendant's motion is DENIED.
I. BACKGROUND
This is a putative class action lawsuit brought by four African-American
student-athletes (Tai Kwan Cureton, Leatrice Shaw, Andrea Gardner, and Alexander
Wesby), alleging that they were unlawfully denied educational opportunities
as freshmen through the operation of initial eligibility rules by the NCAA.
Specifically, they claim that these rules ("Proposition 16") utilize
a minimum test score requirement that has an unjustified disparate impact
on African-American student-athletes.
All four named plaintiffs failed to achieve initial eligibility under
these rules because they did not meet the minimum standardized test cutoff
score and consequently, were denied the opportunity to compete in intercollegiate
athletics during their freshman year at Division I schools, denied admission
to Division I schools, denied athletic scholarships by Division I schools
(or provided with less athletically related financial aid), and/or denied
recruiting opportunities by Division I schools (or provided with fewer recruiting
opportunities).
Apart from requesting class certification, Plaintiffs pray for the entry
of a declaratory judgment of Title VI liability; a preliminary and permanent
injunction enjoining the NCAA from continued operation of Proposition 16;
a notification to Division I schools that student-athletes who satisfy the
minimum GPA/core course requirement of Proposition 16 are immediately eligible
to participate in freshman year athletics; and the provision of a fourth
year of eligibility under the NCAA rules for those student-athletes who
have lost a year of freshman eligibility at Division I schools due to the
minimum test score requirement of Proposition 16.
On October 8, 1997, this Court held that, while a private right of action
exists under Title VI and its implementing regulations, Plaintiffs must
still establish: (1) that the NCAA receives federal financial assistance,
and (2) that the NCAA's minimum test score requirement in Proposition 16
violates Title VI because the requirement has an unjustifiable disparate
impact on African-American student-athletes. See Cureton v. NCAA, Civ. A.
No. 9713 1 @ 1998 WL 634376, at *2 (E.D. Pa. Oct. 8, 1997). Approximately
one year later to the day, the Court received the first of the parties'
voluminous submissions in their cross-motions for summary judgment. It would
be difficult to summarize the enormous amount of factual information presented
in the record, particularly since much of it is in the form of charts, tables,
and graphs. However, some background on the NCAA and Proposition 16 is necessary
for an understanding of this Court's opinion.(See endnote 1.)
The NCAA is a voluntary, unincorporated association of approximately
1,200 members, consisting of colleges and universities, conferences and
associations, and other educational institutions. Its active members are
four-year colleges and universities located throughout the United States.
The active members are divided, for purposes of bylaw legislation and competition
in intercollegiate championship events, into Division I, H, and III, with
further classification of Division I members into Division I-A Football
and Division I-AA Football. The only funds received by the NCAA from its
members are in the form of annual dues determined by the members. The record,
however, is not clear as to whether the NCAA directly receives federal financial
assistance.
While some bylaws of the NCAA are applicable to all divisions, each division
may, and has, adopted bylaws applicable only to that division. This lawsuit
deals with the promulgation of a bylaw affecting initial eligibility only
in Division I. Prior to 1971, freshmen were, not eligible to participate
in varsity athletics. Various eligibility rules affecting freshman participation
in athletics were put into effect thereafter. During the early 1980s, public
attention focused on the perceived lack of adequate academic preparation
and success of student-athletes. Evidence existed that student-athletes
were being exploited for their athletics talents and were exhausting their
athletics eligibility without any realistic hope of obtaining an undergraduate
degree. However, at the same time, student-athletes were graduating at rates
comparable to nonathletes, and African-American student-athletes were graduating
at rates higher than AfricanAmerican students in general.
After debating the issue for several years, the Division I membership
implemented Proposition 48 during the 1986-1987 academic year, requiring
high school graduates to present a 2.000 GPA in 11 academic core courses
and a minimum score of 700 on the SAT (or a composite score of 15 on the
ACT) before being allowed to participate in freshman athletics. If the criteria
in this "double-cut" or "conjunctive" rule were met,
student-athletes were declared "eligible" for competition, practice,
and athletically related financial aid immediately upon 4 enrollment.
Otherwise, they were barred from such opportunities during their first year.
The standards, however, neither addressed a student-athlete's admission
to a particular institution, nor precluded a student-athlete from receiving
institutional financial aid generally available to all students. The Proposition
48 requirements were phased in by the 1988-1989 academic year and, over
time, student-athletes have improved their academic performance -- particularly
African-American student-athletes -- as measured by an increase in their
graduation rates.
The initial eligibility rules were modified in 1992 (fully implemented
in the 19961997 academic year) with the adoption of Proposition 16 (ultimately
codified at NCAA Bylaw 14.3), which increased the number of required core
courses to 13 and introduced an initial eligibility index or "sliding
scale." Using the index, the student-athlete could establish eligibility
with a GPA as low as 2.000, provided the student also presented an SAT score
of 1010 (See endnote 2.) or an ACT sum (as opposed to composite)
score of 86. At the other end of the index, a minimum 820 SAT or 68 ACT
sum score establishes the floor for students with GPAs of 2.500 or higher.
Statistically speaking, the resultant effect of Proposition 16 was to modify
Proposition 48 by increasing the weight assigned to GPAs relative to test
scores: while the core GPA cutoff score of 2.000 is set at two standard
deviations below the national mean, the SAT/ACT test cutoff scores are set
at only one standard deviation below the national mean, resulting in a heavier
weighting of the standardized test. A student-athlete not qualifying under
Proposition 16 may become a partial qualifier by presenting an SAT score
between 720 and 8 1 0 (ACT score between 59 and 67) and a core GPA that
produces a GPA-test combination score comparable to that required of qualifiers.
Partial qualifiers may not compete in intercollegiate athletics, but may
be eligible for athletically related financial aid.
II. DISCUSSION
A.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Summary judgment is appropriate "if the pleadings, depositions,
answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits,
if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and
that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law."
Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). The moving party has the burden of demonstrating
the absence of any genuine issue of material fact. See Celotex Corp. v.
Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323 (1986). A factual dispute is "material"
if it might affect the outcome of the case under the governing substantive
law. See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248 (1986). Additionally,
an issue is "genuine" "if the evidence is such that a reasonable
jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party." Id.
On summary judgment, it is not the court's role to weigh the disputed
evidence and decide which is more probative; rather, the court must consider
the evidence of the nonmoving party as true, drawing all justifiable inferences
arising from the evidence in favor of the non-moving party. See id. at 255.
If a conflict arises between the evidence presented by both sides, the court
must accept as true the allegations of the non-moving party. See id. "This
standard does not change when the issue is presented in the context of cross-motions
for summary judgment." Appelmans v. City of Philadelphia, 826 F.2d
214, 216 (3d Cir. 1987). When the non-moving party will bear the burden
of proof at trial, the moving party's burden can be "discharged by
'showing' -- that is, pointing out to the district court -- that there is
an absence of evidence to support the non-moving party's case." Celotex,
477 U.S. at 325.
If the moving party establishes the absence of a genuine issue of material
fact, the burden shifts to the non-moving party to "set forth specific
facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial." Fed. R. Civ.
P. 56(e). In doing so, the non-moving party must "do more than simply
show that there is some metaphysical doubt as to the material facts."
Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 586 (1986).
If the evidence of the non-moving party is "merely colorable,"
or is "not significantly probative," summary judgment may be granted.
Anderson, 477 U.S. at 249-50.
Counsel have made a myriad of arguments, and an attempt has been made
to address most of them. By not commenting on any particular argument, or
omitting a citation to a document in the record, the Court is not implying
that it has either rejected or adopted the argument, or failed to review
the record in its entirety.
B.
IS THE NCAA SUBJECT TO TITLE VI?
Having previously determined that the NCAA is a program or activity covered
by Title VI, see Cureton v. NCAA, Civ. A. No. 97-131, 1997 WL 634376, at
*2 (E.D. Pa. Oct. 8, 1997), the Court must also decide, as a preliminary
matter, whether the NCAA receives federal financial assistance before subjecting
the NCAA to the strictures of Title VI and its implementing regulations,
see 42 U.S.C. § 2000d (prohibiting discrimination "on the ground
of race ...under any program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance").
Plaintiffs attest that in response to a Request for Admissions they propounded,
the NCAA admitted that it receives dues from member schools who are recipients
of federal funds. Accordingly, Plaintiffs conclude that the NCAA indirectly
receives federal financial assistance because the NCAA acts as the member
institutions' agent with respect to the governance of intercollegiate athletics.
Plaintiffs also contend that, under Smith v. NCAA, 139 F.3d 180 (3d Cir.),
cert. granted, 119 S. Ct. 31 (1998) (argued Jan. 20, 1999), the NCAA would
be subject to Title VI as an indirect recipient of federal funds by virtue
of its relationship to its member colleges and universities. Finally, Plaintiffs
maintain that the NCAA is a recipient of federal funds through its alter
ego, the National Youth Sports Program Fund ("Fund"). (See endnote
3.)
In response, the NCAA contends that Plaintiffs' continued reliance on
Smith is
increasingly dubious in light of the arguments made in the Supreme Court
by the Solicitor General of the United States and Smith's counsel, each
of whom cast some doubt on the Third Circuit's analysis. The NCAA also asserts
that, in the October 8th order, this Court rejected the argument that the
mere receipt of dues from its membership may subject the NCAA to the provisions
of Title VI, although the Third Circuit in Smith had ruled in favor of this
argument in the context of Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972,
20 U.S.C. § 168 1, et seq.
To be clear, in the October 8, 1997 order, this Court specifically left
it to Plaintiffs to establish at trial that the NCAA is subject to suit
under Title VI. See Cureton, 1997 V@L 634376, at *2 ("at the trial
on the merits of this case, plaintiff will have to prove: (1) that the NCAA
receives federal financial assistance"). Specifically, the Court first
ruled that, under the definition found in 42 U.S.C. § 20OOd-4a, "the
NCAA appears to be a program or activity covered by Title VI." Id.
Then, contrary to the NCAA's assertion that the Court rejected the argument
that the mere receipt of dues from its membership may subject the NCAA to
the provisions of Title VI, the Court only refrained from determining whether
"the National Youth Sports Program Fund is nothing more than a sham
to disguise the NCAA's use of federal funds for its own benefit" on
the basis of the record then before it. I.d. Nothing in the Court's order
precluded Plaintiffs from proceeding on the theory that the Fund is the
alter ego of the NCAA at a trial on the merits. Significantly, the Court
also took under advisement the other theories advanced by Plaintiffs for
finding the NCAA subject to suit under Title VI and thus, rendered no opinion
on their viability.
In any event, it appears that the NCAA accurately predicted the Supreme
Court's decision in Smith. In the midst of this Court's consideration of
the issue, the Supreme Court 9
vacated the judgment of the Third Circuit and remanded the case for further
proceedings because the appellate court had "erroneously held that
dues payments from recipients of federal funds suffice to subject the NCAA
to suit under Title IX." NCAA v. Smith, No. 98-84, slip op. at 10,
1999 WL 83907, at *6 (U.S. Feb. 23, 1999).
Smith is applicable to this case because "Title IX was patterned
after Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Except for the substitution
of the word 'sex' in Title IX to replace the words 'race, color, or national
origin' in Title VI, the two statutes use identical language to describe
the benefitted class.... The drafters of Title IX explicitly assumed that
it would be interpreted and applied as Title VI had been during the preceding
eight years." Cannon v. University of Chicago, 441 U.S. 677, 694-96
(1979) (footnotes omitted). See also Smith, slip op. at 5 n.3, 1999 WL 83907,
at *4 n.3 (stating that "[t]he scope of several other federal anti
discrimination measures is defined in nearly identical terms" and citing
Title VI).
Thus, under the rationale of Smith, Plaintiffs may no longer rely solely
on this theory to establish that the NCAA receives federal funds sufficient
to subject the NCAA to suit under Title VI because "[a]t most, the
Association's receipt of dues demonstrates it indirectly benefits from the
federal assistance afforded its members. This showing, without more, is
insufficient to trigger Title [VI] coverage." Id., slip op. at 8, 1999
WL 83907, at *5. Indeed, the regulations implementing Title VI are even
more explicit than the Title IX regulations at issue in Smith in excluding
"any ultimate beneficiary" as a "recipient" for Title
VI purposes. 45 C.F.R. § 80.13(I) (1999); accord 34 C.F.R. § 100.13(l)
(1999); see also Smith, slip op. at 8, 1999 WL 83907, at *5 (holding that
"entities that only benefit economically from federal assistance are
not" recipients).
However, as the above-quoted language suggests, Plaintiffs are not precluded
from using this theory in combination with other facts to establish that
the NCAA receives federal funds sufficient to trigger Title VI coverage.
See Smith, slip op. at 8, 1999 WL 83907, at *5 (offering "earmarked"
federal funds as one example of such a fact). Nor are Plaintiffs precluded
from advancing alternative theories for bringing the NCAA within the purview
of Title VI. See id.., slip op. at 9 & nn.6-7, 1999 WL 83907, at *6
& nn.6-7. While the law of the case doctrine properly constrains the
scope of this Court's reconsideration of a prior order, in light of the
Supreme Court's intervening decision on this issue and the lack of any prejudice
to the parties, the Court undertook a thorough review of the record and
the numerous briefs previously submitted for this Court's consideration.
See Williams v. Runyon, 130 F.3d 568, 573 (3d Cir. 1997) (identifying prudential
considerations limiting a trial court's reconsideration of a prior decision);
see also Landgraf v. USI Film Prods., 511 U.S. 244, 245 (1994) (reiterating
the principle that "a court should apply the law in effect at the time
of decision"). Consequently, the Court is now prepared to make definitive
rulings on the alternative theories advanced by Plaintiffs.
Initially, the Court notes that this case is in a much different, more
developed procedural posture than Smith. Smith involved a district court's
denial of leave to amend a complaint. Here, the parties have engaged in
extensive discovery, resulting in a substantial factual development of the
record and the present cross-motions for summary judgment. Moreover, the
parties have collectively submitted five post-Smith letter briefs that include,
inter alia, additional arguments, evidentiary materials, and copies of briefs
filed with the Supreme Court in Smith. Thus, the Court concludes that the
parties have thoroughly briefed this issue and definitive rulings are possible.
Plaintiffs appear to be advancing four additional theories to support
a conclusion that the NCAA is subject to the reach of Title VI: (1) that
the NCAA directly receives federal financial assistance through the Fund
(which indisputably is a recipient of federal funds) because the Fund is
nothing more than the NCAA's alter ego; (2) that the NCAA indirectly receives
federal financial assistance through the Fund due to the NCAA's complete
control over the Fund; (3) that members schools who receive federal funds
have created and comprise the NCAA and that the NCAA governs its members
with respect to athletics rules; and (4) that recipients of federal financial
assistance have ceded controlling authority over a federally funded program
to the NCAA, who then becomes subject to Title VI regardless of whether
it is itself a recipient.
As for the first theory, this Court held on October 8, 1997 that a ruling
on whether the NCAA directly receives federal financial assistance through
its alter ego, the Fund, "can neither be made nor refuted based upon
the present record before the court." Cureton, 1997 WL 634376, at *2.
Upon reconsideration, the Court essentially adheres to that earlier decision
as the present record provides no basis to disturb it and thus, concludes
that Plaintiffs have failed to sustain their heavy burden of "piercing
the corporate veil" sufficient to have the Fund construed as the NCAA's
alter ego.
However, as for the second theory, the Court determines that Plaintiffs
have sustained their burden of proving that the NCAA exercises effective
control and operation of the Community Services Block Grant given by the
United States Department of Health and Human Services to be construed as
an indirect recipient of federal financial assistance. While on this record,
there was nothing improper in establishing a separate corporation to manage
the National Youth Sports Program and for the corporation to be the designated
recipient of the block grant, overwhelming evidence in the record supports
the fact that the Fund is ultimately being controlled by the NCAA. (See
endnote 4.) That is, although the Fund is the named recipient of
the block grant, it is merely a conduit through which the NCAA makes all
of the decisions about the Fund and the use of the federal funds.
The NCAA maintains that there is only an administrative services contract
between itself and the Fund. However, the Court was not presented with a
copy of that contract and, even if the contract were presented, the true
nature of the relationship and operations between the two entities has been
firmly revealed by the record. Consequently, as the NCAA is deemed a recipient
of federal funds under this theory, all of its operations, including its
promulgation of initial eligibility rules, are covered by Title VI. See
42 U.S.C. § 20OOd-4a (4) (establishing entity-wide coverage).
Finally, the Court considered the third and fourth theories together
because, as the Court understands them, they are simply variants of one
another, differing only in degree. The Court determines that Plaintiffs
have also sustained their burden of proving that the NCAA is subject to
suit under Title VI irrespective of whether it receives federal funds, directly
or
indirectly, because member schools (who themselves indisputably receive
federal funds) have ceded controlling authority over federally funded programs
to the NCAA.
The NCAA plays a pivotal role in "maintain[ing] intercollegiate
athletics as an integral part of the educational program and the athlete
as an integral part of the student body." NCAA v. Tarkanian, 488 U.S.
179, 183 (1988). (See endnote 5.) Because of the unique nature of
intercollegiate athletics and the various industries that have grown around
it, it is one of the few educational programs of a college or university
that cannot be conducted without the creation of a separate entity to provide
governance and administration. In this vein, the NCAA has adopted "legislation,"
like Proposition 16, "governing the conduct of the intercollegiate
athletic programs of its members.... By joining the NCAA, each member agrees
to abide by and to enforce such rules." Tarkanian, 488 U.S. at 183.(See
endnote 6.) Specifically, in the case of eligibility requirements,
those rules are "designed to assure proper emphasis on educational
objectives, to promote competitive equity among institutions and to prevent
exploitation of student athletes." NCAA Const., art. 2, rule 2.12 (Exhibit
A to Docket No. 11). Thus, the creation of this supervising association
is not only necessary for the promotion of intercollegiate athletics, but
the existence of that entity is merely a consequence of the inherent nature
of the member institution's intercollegiate athletics programs.(See endnote
7.)
The NCAA places much stock in Article 2, rule 2.1.1 of its constitution,
which states that "[i]t is the responsibility of each member institution
to control its intercollegiate athletics program in compliance with the
rules and regulations of the Association." Moreover, Article 6, rule
6.01.1 states that "[t]he control and responsibility for the conduct
of intercollegiate athletics shall be exercised by the institution itself.
(See endnote 8.) However, these rules merely reinforce the Court's
understanding that the NCAA and its members have agreed that the schools
exercise control over their intercollegiate athletics programs to the extent
permitted by the constitution and bylaws of the NCAA. Once legislation affecting
the membership nationwide (or a subset of the institutions like in the case
of Proposition 16) is adopted by the NCAA, it becomes enforceable and binding
on the member schools. As in any relationship in which authority is transferred,
a school is always free to choose not to abide by the legislation, but it
will then either suffer sanctions at the hands of the NCAA or be forced
to renounce its membership in the association, a decision that would have
grave consequences for its intercollegiate athletics program.
Whether characterized as a "delegation" or an "assignment"
of "controlling authority," "regulation," or "supervision,"
Plaintiffs have established on this record that the member colleges and
universities have granted to the NCAA the authority to promulgate rules
affecting intercollegiate athletics that the members are obligated to abide
by and enforce. Under these facts, the NCAA comes sufficiently within the
scope of Title VI irrespective of its receipt of federal funds. )While each
of the member schools is also undeniably subject to Title VI for a challenge
to Proposition 16, the NCAA, in light of the fact that it is the decisionmaking
and enforcement entity behind legislation adopted by, and enforced against,
its membership, is also subject to Title VI.
The import of such a determination is that the NCAA is subject to Title
VI for claims relating to programs or activities to which those federal
funds are directed. The statute proscribes discrimination "on the ground
of race ... under any program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance."
42 U.S.C. § 2000d. Thus, because there is a nexus between the NCAA's
allegedly discriminatory conduct with regards to intercollegiate athletics
and the sponsorship of such programs by federal fund recipients, the NCAA
is subject to Title VI for a challenge to Proposition 16.
Accordingly, the Court holds that, under either the "indirect recipient"
or "controlling authority" theories, the NCAA is subject to Title
VI for a challenge to Proposition
16.
C. DOES PROPOSITION 16 HAVE AN UNJUSTIFIED DISPARATE IMPACT?
In Grigias v. Duke Power Co., 401 U.S. 424 (1971), the Supreme Court
introduced the theory of disparate impact discrimination by holding that
a plaintiff need not necessarily prove intentional discrimination in order
to establish that an employer has violated Title VII of the Civil Rights
Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et §gq. Since then, "facially
neutral employment practices that have significant adverse effects on protected
groups have been held to violate the Act without proof that the employer
adopted those practices with a discriminatory intent." Watson v. Fort
Worth Bank and Trust, 487 U.S. 977, 986-87 (1988) (O'Connor, J., plurality
opinion).
The disparate impact theory is premised upon the notion that "some
employment practices, adopted without a deliberately discriminatory motive,
may in operation be functionally equivalent to intentional discrimination."
Id. at 987. That is, it does not purport to strive for equal results at
the institution, but to ensure that individuals are not the victims of unintentional
discrimination and thus, treated unequally. See The Supreme Court 1988 Term
Leading Cases, Title VII -- Evidentiary Requirements in Disparate-Impact
Cases, 103 Harv. L. Rev. 350, 356-57 (1989) (arguing that the Supreme Court
reshaped disparate impact law in accordance with a theory of "equal
treatment," which "seeks to guarantee fair 12rocess," rather
than a "theory of equal achievement, which strives for fair results
-- racial parity after years of discrimination") (emphasis in original).
Moreover, "[t]he evidence in these 'disparate impact' cases usually
focuses on statistical disparities, rather than specific incidents, and
on competing explanations for those disparities." Watson, 487 U.S.
at 987.
Although the disparate impact theory was originally developed in cases
involving employment discrimination, courts have subsequently applied the
theory to claims brought pursuant to the regulations implementing Title
VI. See, e.2., NAACP v. Medical Ctr., Inc., 657 F.2d 1322@ 1331 (3d Cir.
1981); New York Urban League, Inc. v. New York, 71 F.3d 1031, 1036 (2d Cir.
1995); Quarles v. Oxford Mun. Separate Sch. Dist., 868 F.2d 750, 754 n.3
(5th Cir. 1989); Larry P. v. Riles, 793 F.2d 969, 982 nn.9-10 (9th Cir.
1984); Elston v. Talladega County Bd. of Educ., 997 F.2d 1394,1407 &
n. 14 (1lth Cir. 1993).
In order to establish a prima facie case of disparate impact discrimination,
a plaintiff must initially demonstrate that the application of a specific
facially neutral selection practice has caused an adverse disproportionate
effect, to wit, excluding the plaintiff and similarly situated applicants
from an educational opportunity. See Wards Cove Packing Co. v. Atonio, 490
U.S. 642, 656-57 (1989) (superseded in part by statute). Where such a showing
has been made, the burden of rebuttal shifts to the defendant, who must
demonstrate that the selection practice causing the disproportionate effect
is nonetheless justified by an "educational necessity," which
is analogous to the "business necessity" justification applied
under Title VI. See Board of Educ. of the City Sch. Dist of New York v.
Harris, 444 U.S. 130, 151 (1979). The defendant bears only a burden of producing
evidence to sustain its educational necessity. See Wards Cove, 490 U.S.
at 659-60. But cf. 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e(m), 20OOe-2k(l)(A) (requiring
the defendant under Title VII to bear both a burden of production and persuasion
on its business necessity justification).
Finally, even where a defendant meets that burden, a plaintiff may ultimately
prevail by discrediting the asserted educational justification, or by proffering
an equally effective 1 8
alternative practice that results in less racial disproportionality while
still serving the articulated educational necessity. See Watson, 487 U.S.
at 998. The ultimate burden of proving that the selection practice caused
a discriminatory effect against a protected group always remains with the
disparate-impact plaintiff. See Wards Cove, 490 U.S. at 659-60.
1.Whether Proposition 16 Causes a Racially Disproportionate Effect
In Wards Cove, the Supreme Court emphasized that a racially disproportionate
effect is typically shown through the presentation of competent statistical
evidence comparing the racial composition of candidates who are selected
by the practice in question and the racial composition of the qualified
candidate pool. See 490 U.S. at 650-55. Without such carefully tailored
statistical proof, there may be an insufficient basis to conclude that the
causation requirement is satisfied. Plaintiffs have not presented their
evidence of racially disproportionate effect in this fashion, and the NCAA
has not drawn the Court's attention to this. Due to the interplay between
enrollment and eligibility, the Court highly doubts that either party could
have presented accurate statistics in this manner.
In any event, Plaintiffs are not limited to such a showing because "statistical
proof can alone make out a prima facie case," id. at 650, and there
is no rigid mathematical threshold of disproportionality that must be met
to demonstrate a sufficiently adverse impact on African-Americans in a disparate
impact case, see Watson, 487 U.S. at 994-95. Instead, the plaintiff may
offer statistical evidence sufficient to show that the practice in question
has caused the exclusion of candidates for a particular opportunity because
of their membership in a protected group. See id. at 994. The Supreme Court's
"formulations" have only "stressed that statistical disparities
must be sufficiently substantial that they raise ... an inference of causation."
Id. at 994-95. (See endnote 9.)
Accordingly, Plaintiffs contend they have established their prima facie
case by pointing to a July 27, 1998 NCAA memorandum to the Division I membership
in which NCAA research data relating to Proposition 16 is summarized. In
that memorandum, the NCAA makes the following observations about Proposition
16:
African-American and low-income student-athletes have been disproportionately
impacted by Proposition 16 standards. Of those African-American student-athletes
appearing on a Division I Institution Request List submitted to the NCAA
Initial Eligibility Clearinghouse, 26.6 percent did not meet Proposition
16 standards in 1996 and 21.4 percent did not qualify in 1997 (compared
to 6.4 percent of white student-athletes in 1996 and 4.2 percent in 1997).
This disproportionate impact also is seen (to a lesser degree) for other
ethnic-minority groups.
Preliminary enrollment data for 1994-1996 show a drop in the proportion
of African-Americans among first-year scholarship athletes in Division I
from 23.6 percent to 20.3 percent (accompanied by a 2.0 percent increase
in white student-athletes and a 1.3 percent increase in student-athletes
from all other ethnic groups combined).
For both African-American and low-income student athletes, the single
largest reason for not meeting Proposition 16 standards was a failure to
meet the minimum standardized test score.
The impact of the minimum standardized test score in Proposition 16 is
partly a result of this standard being twice as stringent as the GPA minimum
in terms of national norms. Specifically, the cut score on the ACT/SAT (68/820)
is set about one standard deviation below the national mean while the core
GPA cut score (2.000) is set at two standard deviations below the mean.
Among a representative national population of students, it would be expected
that more than 15 percent would be affected by the test minimum while less
than three percent would be affected by the GPA minimum. Differences in
the Proposition 16 impact on minority groups and low-income student-athletes
are in line with current group differences in national ACT/SAT score distributions.
NCAA Division I Academics/Eligibility/Compliance Cabinet Subcommittee
on Initial-Eligibility Issues Mem., July 27, 1998, at 7 (Exhibit C to Pls.'
Opening) (Plaintiffs' emphasis). (See endnote 10.) Moreover, the
memorandum specifically states that "a disproportionate number of ethnic
minorities are affected adversely by the imposition of these rules."
Id. at 5.
Plaintiffs also point to a July 29, 1994 memorandum issued just prior
to the adoption of Proposition 16, which states in the Executive Summary:
"The Association's own research ... provides dramatic evidence of the
disparate impact on both the current rules and those scheduled to go into
effect in 1995 [Proposition 16] on minority student athletes." Report
of the Special NCAA Comm. to Review Initial-Eligibility Standards Mem.,
July 29, 1994, at 2, NCAA 15639 (Exhibit A to Pls.' Opening) (Plaintiffs'
emphasis). Finally, Plaintiffs look to a report prepared by the United States
Department of Education, which cites that only 46.4% of the African-American
college-bound high school seniors met Proposition 16's requirements, as
compared to approximately 67% of white college-bound high school seniors.
See Pls.' Ans. (Exhibit 3 thereto). (See endnote 11.)" The report
also indicates that the Proposition 16 cutoff score was the factor that
caused the greatest degree of disparate impact because only 67.4% of African-American
college-bound student-athletes cleared the test score hurdle, as compared
to 91.1% of white college-bound student-athletes. See id. According to Plaintiffs,
the essence of the disparate impact is that Proposition 16's cutoff score
affects people of all races differently in that white student-athletes apply
to Division I schools in greater numbers and are excluded less, while African-American
student-athletes apply to Division I schools in smaller numbers and are
excluded more.
Despite these and other similar admissions from its own documents, the
NCAA suggests that the issue of disproportionate effect should be framed
somewhat differently. The NCAA characterizes Plaintiffs as focusing on the
alleged disparate impact of Proposition 16 on African-Americans because
of the "well-known and continuing discrepancy" in the distribution
of standardized test scores for black and white students. And yet, the NCAA
notes that Plaintiffs are not alleging that either the SAT or the ACT is
racially biased. While recognizing that this black-white gap in test scores
necessarily means that a larger share of black students than white students
who take the test will score below a given minimum, the NCAA instead posits
that the educational opportunity at issue here is not the opportunity to
participate in college athletics during the freshman year but rather, the
opportunity to obtain a college degree.
The NCAA further argues that the ultimate goal of Proposition 16 is to
raise the African- American student-athlete graduation rate. That is, the
standards project that the black graduation rate will increase to 59.2%,
which would be 94.8% of the projected white graduation rate of 62.5%. See
Petr. Aff. 1 4 (Exhibit C to Def.'s Response). (See endnote 12.)
The NCAA maintains that Plaintiffs have not disputed that African-Americans
are graduating at higher rates; that the gap between African-Americans and
white graduation rates has declined since the adoption of stricter initial
eligibility rules; or that more African-American student-athletes are graduating
since the adoption of the test score requirement.
The NCAA also contends that the increased number of African-Americans
receiving athletic scholarships relative to their composition in the general
student body is further proof of how college athletics has, in fact, benefitted
this group. According to the NCAA, although the initial eligibility rules
have reduced the number of incoming African-American student-athletes, they
have concomitantly resulted in creating more opportunities to graduate for
those athletes that meet the eligibility standards. Thus, if graduation,
and not freshrnan-year athletics, is the opportunity at stake here, the
NCAA maintains that Plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate the requisite
disproportionate effect.
Notwithstanding its attempt to reframe the lawsuit, the NCAA never disputes
the veracity of the statements made in their own documents. These admissions
and the bare statistics themselves plainly evince that African-Americans
are being selected by Proposition 16 at a rate disproportionately lower
than whites sufficient to infer causation.
The Court additionally notes that, in cases challenging selection practices
that function as a pass/fail barrier (like the standardized test score cutoff
of Proposition 16), a common basis for determining the statistical significance
of the disparity is the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission's four-fifths
(or 80%) rule. See 2 Barbara Lindemann & Paul Grossman, Employment Discrimination
Law, at 1729 (3d ed. 1996). Under that rule, the EEOC generally presumes
a selection rate which is less than four-fifths (or 80%) of the rate for
the group with the highest rate as evidence of adverse impact. See 1978
Uniform Guidelines on Employee Selection Procedures, 29 C.F.R. § 1607.4(D)
(1999). Although this rule has been the subject of criticism because of
its oversimplification, see, eg., Watson, 487 U.S. at 995 n.3, the EEOC
guidelines are "entitled to great deference," Albemarle, 422 U.S.
at 431 (quoting Griggs, 401 U.S. at 434). Neither party has drawn the Court's
attention to the EEOC's rule, but applying it here shows that, in most instances,
the selection rate of African-Americans is less than four- fifths that of
the white selection rate. (See endnote 13.)
Because Proposition 16 relies, in part, on standardized test scores,
it is undeniable that there will be some disparity between blacks and whites
at some point in the eligibility determination. "The data suggest that
any rule that is imposed will have a disproportionate effect on minority
student-athletes (because of the difference in the distribution of minority
[GPAs] and test scores) both in terms of false negatives and overall number
declared ineligible." NCAA Special Comm. to Review Initial Eligibility
Standards Mem., May 29,1994, at 1, NCAA 15916 (Exhibit 20 to Pls.' Ans.)
(emphasis in original). It is precisely this educational opportunity that
Plaintiffs are challenging, and not the opportunity to graduate.
Moreover, the Court finds unpersuasive the NCAA's argument that a selection
practice having a disproportionate "beneficial" impact on the
protected group can compensate for any disproportionate adverse impact on
that same group. That singular fact misdirects the Court's inquiry. The
alleged beneficial impact (increased graduation rates) redounds at the "back-end"
while the adverse impact occurs up-front.
[I]rrespective of the form taken by the discriminatory practice, an [institution's]
treatment of other members of the plaintiffs' group can be "of little
comfort to the victims of... discrimination." Title [VI] does not permit
the victim of a facially discriminatory policy to be told that he has not
been wronged because other persons of his or her race or sex [benefitted].
That answer is no more satisfactory when it is given to victims of a policy
that is facially neutral but practically discriminatory."
Connecticut v. Teal, 457 U.S. 440, 455 (1982) (quoting International
Bhd. of Teamsters v.
United States, 431 U.S. 324, 342 (1977)).
Accordingly, the Court concludes that Plaintiffs have established a prima
facie showing of a racially disproportionate effect sufficient to shift
the burden of rebuttal to the NCAA.
2.Whether Proposition 16 Is Justified by an Educational Necessity
Under the educational necessity prong of the analysis, "the dispositive
issue is whether a challenged practice serves, in a significant way, the
legitimate [educational] goals of the [institution]." Wards Cove, 490
U.S. at 659. That is, the practice in question must bear a demonstrable
"manifest relationship" to a legitimate goal. See Connecticut
v. Teal, 457 U.S. 440, 446 (1982) (quoting Grig2s, 401 U.S. at 432). "The
touchstone of this inquiry is a reasoned review of the [institutional justification
for [its] use of the challenged practice.... [T]here is no requirement that
the challenged practice be 'essential' or 'indispensable... to the institution.
Wards Cove, 490 U.S. at 659. Rather, the defendant's burden of production
at this stage is met only when the institution is able to offer some proof
that the device serves identified legitimate and substantive [educational]
goals. That is, the defendant's burden [is] to identify the particular [educational]
goal and to present evidence of how the [challenged practice] cc serves
in a significant way" the identified goal. Merely being abstractly
rational, as opposed to arbitrary, would not suffice. The defendant, therefore,
has some burden of presenting objective evidence ... factually showing a
nexus between the selection device and a particular [educational] goal.
Without evidence of such a relationship it cannot be said that the defendant
has presented any evidence that the "challenged" practice serves,
in a significant way, the legitimate [educational] goals of the [institution].
Newark Branch, NAACP v. Town of Harrison, New Jersey, 940 F.2d 792, 804
(3d Cir. 1991) (quoting Mack A. Player, Is Griggs Dead? Reflecting (Fearfully)
on Wards Cove Packing Co. v. Atonio, 17 Fla. St. U. L. Rev. 1, 32 (1989)).
The NCAA has proffered the following two goals as underlying the promulgation
of Proposition 16: (1) raising student-athlete graduation rates, and (2)
closing the gap between black and white student-athlete graduation rates.
The Court will address the legitimacy of these goals before continuing to
discuss whether a manifest relationship exists between Proposition 16 and
those goals.
a. Are these legitimate goals of the NCAA?
It is well established that the NCAA has become an indelible institution
of intercollegiate athletics. "Since its inception in 1905, the NCAA
has played an important role in the regulation of amateur collegiate sports.
It has adopted and promulgated playing rules, standards of amateurism, standards
for academic eligibility, regulations concerning recruitment of athletes,
and rules governing the size of athletic squads and coaching staffs."
NCAA v. Board of Regents of Univ. of Okla., 468 U.S. 85, 88 (1984). (See
endnote 14.) Indeed, it is fair to say that the NCAA has played a
"historic role in the preservation and encouragement of intercollegiate
amateur athletics. " Id. at 101. While neither party disputes these
general assertions, the specific goals proffered as objectives of Proposition
16 require closer examination.
Preliminarily, the Court notes that it cannot seriously be disputed that
the NCAA, acting only as the members' "surrogate with respect to athletic
rules," Smith, 139 F.2d at 188, have no legitimate interest in promulgating
academic standards that affect the graduation rates of students in general.
The proper scope of their authority must be circumscribed to requirements
pertaining only to student-athletes. (See endnote 15.) While the
Court is sure that both parties are cognizant of this fact, their submissions
have not always been as careful in making that distinction when discussing
whether Proposition 16 is justified by an educational necessity.
In conclusory fashion, the NCAA initially stated that "[t]here can
be no dispute that raising student athlete graduation rates are legitimate
goals." Def 's Response at 40. Then, in response to Plaintiffs' arguments
(discussed below), the NCAA claimed that it is its membership, and not the
NCAA officers or staff, who chooses the NCAA's policy objective and adopts
the NCAA's bylaws. In so doing, they generally disavowed statements made
by NCAA executives as merely personal opinions, stating that those individuals,
"like every other member of the staff or any NCAA committee, does not
determine the eligibility bylaws. That responsibility lies with the members."
Def's Reply at 6 (See endnote 16.) According to the NCAA, Proposition
16 ( like its predecessor Proposition 48) "is designed to discourage
the recruitment of athletically talented, but academically unprepared students."
Id. at 9. Thus, "because graduation rates are the best available measure
of the degree to which student athletes are academically prepared for college,
it makes perfect sense for the NCAA to look at graduation rates as a way
of evaluating a rule's relative success." Id. at 9-10.
The NCAA also disputes Plaintiffs' argument that it is inappropriate
to promote eligibility standards that result in a somewhat higher graduation
rate for student-athletes than for non-athletes. Citing the affidavit of
the Chair of the NCAA Division I Board of Directors, the NCAA claims that
(1) it is reasonable to apply eligibility standards that promote the chances
of obtaining a college degree because an athletic scholarship is a substantial
investment of resources by the granting institution; (2) an athletic scholarship
also eliminates the financial concerns that inevitably cause some students
to drop out from college; and (3) the motivation to remain in intercollegiate
athletic competition is itself a powerful incentive for student-athletes
to remain in school -- an incentive that may have no counterpart for non-athletes.
See Spanier Aff. ¶ 15 (Exhibit B to Def.'s Response).
Finally, the NCAA claims to have set out affirmatively to improve graduation
rates and to narrow the black-white graduation rate gap. Contending that
Plaintiffs have confused the second and third prongs of the disparate impact
proof model, the NCAA argues that "[i]f the goal is sound, a practice
to achieve that goal is not unlawful merely because of the severity of its
adverse disparate impact." Def.'s Reply at 18. According to the NCAA,
"[tlhe degree of disparate impact becomes relevant only when the court
analyzes (under prong three) whether equally effective alternatives exist
that decrease an adverse disparate impact." Id.
In response, Plaintiffs contend that it is not the mission of the NCAA
to ensure that students graduate but rather, it is within the province of
each educational institution to put into place admissions policies, academic
curricula, faculty, and necessary classroom and individual attention that
bear on graduation rates. According to Plaintiffs, the NCAA is merely the
entity to whom member institutions have delegated the task of administering
their intercollegiate athletics programs, which is evidenced by its role
with respect to Division III schools wherein there are no initial eligibility
rules simply because the members voted not to adopt one.
Plaintiffs also contend that the NCAA has failed to show that closing
the black-white student-athlete graduation rate is a substantial legitimate
justification rising to the level of educational necessity. According to
Plaintiffs, the NCAA has tacitly admitted that the graduation rate gap between
blacks and whites is the result of many more things than simply the difference
in test scores and high school GPAs. (See endnote 17.) Interestingly,
Plaintiffs' statistical expert has hypothesized that if it were legitimate
for the NCAA to adopt an initial eligibility rule designed to yield a black
student-athlete graduation rate within one percent of the white student-athlete
graduation rate, the NCAA could simply exclude over 90% of the African-American
student-athletes to achieve that result. See Hedges Aff. ¶ 11 (Exhibit
24 to Pls.' Ans.).
Plaintiffs also note that, when Proposition 48 was adopted, African-American
student-athletes were already graduating at a rate higher than African-American
students generally, and student-athletes were graduating at a rate equal
to the overall student graduation rate. (See endnote 18.) Indeed,
Plaintiffs contend that the NCAA has merely linked the goal of raising student-athlete
graduation rates to the "perceived" problem that student-athletes
are less likely to be academically successful than their non-athlete student
counterparts. Plaintiffs point out that the data suggest that both black
and white student-athletes prior to the implementation of Proposition 48
graduated in rates comparable to (indeed, higher than) students of those
racial groups in general. (See endnote 19.)
With respect to the NCAA's first proffered objective of raising student-athlete
graduation rates, this Court concludes that it is a legitimate educational
goal. An educational institution's primary mission is to educate and graduate
as many students as possible who meet the level of academic proficiency
deemed sufficient by the institution. Thus, raising graduation rates is
directly in line with that mission. Here, as the surrogate of the colleges
and universities in Division I, the NCAA is properly setting academic standards
for student-athletes in hopes of improving the rate at which they graduate.
What is more probative than this kind of facial inquiry, however, is
an examination of what specifically motivated the membership to undertake
the promulgation of Proposition 16, and its predecessor, Proposition 48.
After reading transcripts of the multiple NCAA convention proceedings, examining
the NCAA research results and summaries, and analyzing the various NCAA
memoranda and other documents in the record, the Court concludes that there
is overwhelming and abundant support for the proposition that the membership
was concerned about raising student-athlete graduation rates. (See endnote
20.)
While the evidence of graduation rates prior to the adoption of Proposition
48 suggests that there may have been no empirical need to raise the graduation
rates of student-athletes, the Court sees no reason to judge the wisdom
of embarking on this goal when the "perceived" abuses of student-athletes
were, in fact, real. There appears to have been a perception that student-athletes
were less academically prepared than the rest of the student body because,
in the early 1980s, "a few highly publicized cases of perceived academic
abuses by colleges and student athletes came to light. In response to charges
of exploitation that stemmed from those stories, the NCAA adopted what has
become known as Proposition 48 NCAA Membership Services Initial Eligibility
Satellite Video Conference, Aug. 19, 1998, Tr. at 7 (statement of Todd A.
Petr) (as amended) (Exhibit 7 to Pls.' Ans.).
Certainly, a public relations benefit would redound to the NCAA for having
promulgated academic standards to combat these stories of abuse and exploitation.
However, merely because a public relations benefit exists does not render
the NCAA's adoption of Proposition 48 (or 16) invalid. But cf. Groves v.
Alabama State Bd. of Educ., 776 F. Supp. 1518, 1531 (M.D. Ala. 1991) (declaring
illegal the selection of a minimum cutoff score "essentially as a public
relations ploy, so that the Board and education professionals could misrepresent
to parents concerned about their children's schooling that it was faithfully
ensuring all new teachers would be 'as smart' as half -- or to be more exact,
39% -- of their students"). Setting academic standards in the hopes
of raising student-athlete graduation rates is a legitimate goal directed
towards curbing the abuses that were not only perceived, but were indisputably
real and documented.
The same conclusion cannot be reached for the NCAA's second proffered
objective of closing the gap between black and white student-athlete graduation
rates. Not only is there no support for an educational institution (let
alone its surrogate) to engage in such a goal, but the proffered goal was
unequivocally not the purpose behind the adoption of the initial eligibility
rules. Absolutely nothing in the record -- transcripts of convention proceedings,
research results, or memoranda -- even suggest that this was a goal that
motivated the promulgation of Proposition 16 or 48. Indeed, the Court finds
it difficult to reconcile the NCAA's current articulation of such a goal
with their own documents plainly evincing that only two goals motivated
the adoption of Proposition 16 and 48: "(1) raising of graduation rates,
and (2) allowing more individuals access to the finite number of athletics
opportunities available." NCAA Division I academics/ Eligibility/Compliance
Cabinet Subcommittee on Initial-Eligibility Issues Mem., July 27, 1998,
at 4 (Exhibit 2 to Pls.' Ans.). The NCAA does not even make the (unpersuasive)
argument that its concern over "access to the finite number of athletic
opportunities" is somehow equivalent to decreasing the graduation gap
-- the educational opportunity on which the NCAA would prefer this Court
to focus. In fact, the NCAA's counsel opened oral argument before this Court
by stating that the legitimate goal of the organization was to improve the
academic performance of student-athletes, the best measure of which was
graduation rates. No mention was made that a second objective of closing
the black-white graduation gap existed.
Furthermore, the only place in the entire record that this goal is even
articulated in the form of admissible evidence is in the affidavit of the
Chair of the NCAA Division I Board of Directors. See Spanier Aff. ¶
11 (Exhibit B to Def 's Response) ("There has also long been a gap
between black and white graduation rates. That gap has been reduced for
student athletes under Proposition 48, and is projected to be reduced further
under Proposition 16. This reduction is another highly desirable outcome
and should be encouraged. I would be reluctant to sacrifice the gains achieved
under Proposition 48 and projected under Proposition 16, in favor of a different
eligibility standard that would result in a wider racial gap in graduation
rates."); accord id. ¶ 12. In light of the NCAA's prior declaration
disavowing statements made by NCAA executives as personal opinions not binding
on the organization, see Def.'s Reply at 6, the Court is not entirely sure
what to make of these lone statements.
The Court agrees that closing the black-white graduation rate gap is,
as the NCAA states, "a subject of longstanding concern in the educational
and civil rights communities." Def.'s Response at 15. However, that
desirable outcome of Proposition 16, actual or projected, is simply a collateral
benefit of promulgating a rule that sets heightened academic standards.
Actually proffering such a "back-end" balancing between graduation
rates as an express objective underlying Proposition 16 is in direct violation
of the Supreme Court's prohibition against using a "bottom-line"
defense to disparate impact cases involving pass/fail selection practices.
See Connecticut v. Teal, 457 U.S. 440, 452-56 (1982) (achieving an appropriate
racial balance after utilizing employer's entire promotional process did
not preclude plaintiffs from establishing a prima facie case of disparate
impact resulting from an examination administered to
determine initially the employees eligible for promotion; moreover, such
a "bottom-line" justification is an impermissible defense to employer
liability).
Moreover, this explicitly race-based goal stands in stark contrast to the
characterization of Proposition 16 as a facially neutral selection rule.
The NCAA's continued contention that this goal underlies the promulgation
of Proposition 16 raises serious questions concerning whether Proposition
16 is functioning simply as a proxy for a racial quota. This is especially
so in light of the NCAA's research finding that "these group differences
can be accounted for by taking into account the other high-school academic
variables. This means that the prediction equation does not function differently
for different racial groups." Report of the Special NCAA Comm. to Review
Initial-Eligibility Standards, July 29, 1994, at 4, NCAA 15642 (Exhibit
19 to Pls.' Ans.).
Accordingly, the Court concludes that raising student-athlete graduation
rates is a legitimate goal of the NCAA, but closing the gap between black
and white student-athlete graduation rates is not.
b. Is there a manifest relationship?
The NCAA claims that its own research demonstrates that the use of standardized
test scores not only serves these goals but has, in fact, been instrumental
in achieving some success. Moreover, the NCAA argues that the use of standardized
test cutoffs has been accepted as a legitimate means of achieving educational
goals even when a cutoff disproportionately disqualifies one racial group.
The NCAA also attests that the classes of 1985 and 1986 were covered
by the same Satisfactory Progress Rules (See endnote 21.) throughout
their college years, and that there was no substantive change in those rules
between 1985 and 1992. From this, the NCAA concludes that the observed increase
in African-American student-athlete graduation rates for the class of 1986
cannot be attributed in any way to the Satisfactory Progress Rules21 but
rather, to Proposition 48, which took effect in that year.
The NCAA further claims that its own research demonstrates that Proposition
16's test score requirement significantly serves the stated objectives of
the rule. According to those research results, high school GPAs and standardized
test scores are a "significant but moderate predictor of college performance,"
with GPAs especially being a predictor of first year grades and both criterion
being predictors of later graduation. NCAA Membership Services Initial Eligibility
Satellite Video Conference, Aug. 19, 1998, Tr. at 21-22 (statement of John
J. McArdle). Additionally, the NCAA contends that courts have recognized
that the SAT and the ACT have been validated as predictors of academic performance
in college and thus, the NCAA's use of standardized tests and a minimum
cutoff score for the purpose of predicting college academic performance
is proper.
Plaintiffs, however, argue that, in light of numerous internal recommendations
that the rule be modified to eliminate the cutoff score, the current cutoff
is arbitrary and irrational. Because student-athletes who fail to meet the
cutoff score are deemed ineligible, regardless of how impressive their high
school transcripts, Plaintiffs contend that the use of a cutoff score is
fraught with peril. Moreover, Plaintiffs claim that the NCAA has never come
forward with a valid educational necessity for a rule with an arbitrary
cutoff requirement that is intended to yield a graduation rate for student-athletes
that is higher than students generally. As an alternative, Plaintiffs would
have this Court require a rule that is intended to predict graduation rates
equal to that of the general student population. Such a rule (which is apparently
based upon the NCAA's own data), has been prepared by Dr. Lawrence Hedges.
See Hedges Aff. ¶¶ 2-9 (Exhibit 24 to Pls.' Ans).
In any event, under the manifest relationship analysis, the NCAA must
produce significant evidence that establishes a strong factual showing of
manifest relationship between the" use of the particular cutoff scores
of 820 and 68, and its goal of raising student-athlete graduation rates.
Newark Branch, NAACP v. Town of Harrison, New Jersey, 940 F.2d 792, 804
(3d Cir. 1991). That is, the NCAA "has some burden of presenting objective
evidence ... factually showing a nexus between the" use of the particular
cutoff scores in question and the goal. 1-d. (internal quotations omitted).
To the Court's knowledge, no court in this Circuit has yet ruled on the
propriety of using standardized test cutoff scores as a facially neutral
selection practice. Thus, some general propositions drawn from case law
nationwide regarding cutoff scores will properly frame the ensuing analysis
in this uncharted territory. Additionally, for ease of discussion, the Court
will only refer to the SAT cutoff score of 820, although the analysis applies
with equal force to the ACT cutoff score of 68. (See endnote 22.)
As a general matter, it is well accepted that the SAT has some predictive
ability of academic success in college as measured by college grades. That
is, the College Board has shown that there is a significant correlation
between the combined SAT Math and Verbal scores and predicted college GPA.
(See endnote 23.) In fact, the College Board's statistical research
shows that there is a 0.51 mean correlation between the SAT total score
and college course grades. (See endnote 24.) However, it bears noting
that the SAT has only been validated as a predictor of first-year GPA, and
not college graduation. (See endnote 25.) This is why it makes
sense for college and universities to rely, at least in part, on the SAT
in making admissions decisions.
The anti-discrimination statutes do not require the proponents of standardized
tests "to introduce formal 'validation studies' showing that particular
criteria predict actual ... performance." Watson, 487 U.S. at 998.
But by the same token, using a standardized test to achieve objectives for
which it was neither intended nor validated would be improper. For example,
then United States District Judge Walker (now sitting on the United States
Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit) concluded in Sharif v. New York
State Educ. Dep't, 709 F. Supp. 345, 362 (S.D.N.Y. 1989), that the defendants
had "failed to show even a reasonable relationship between their practice"
of using a SAT cutoff score and awarding merit scholarships for high school
academic achievement because "[t]he SAT was not designed to measure
achievement in high school and was never validated for that purpose."
As with all facially neutral practices challenged under the disparate
impact theory, the use of a SAT cutoff score as a selection practice would
be proper so long as it is justified. That is, an arbitrarily selected SAT
cutoff score, in the sense that the particular cutoff in question was randomly
chosen from the universe of possible choices (400 through 1600), would be
invalid. See, eg., Groves v. Alabama State Bd. of Educ., 776 F. Supp. 1518,
1531 (M.D. Ala. 1991) (concluding that the Board had arbitrarily selected
a minimum cutoff score of 16 on the ACT).
Nonetheless, "[m]erely being abstractly rational, as opposed to
arbitrary," will not suffice. Harrison, 940 F.2d at 804. Instead, a
particular cutoff score affecting (in this case) student-athlete graduation
rates "should normally be set so as to be reasonable and consistent
with normal expectations of the acceptable proficiency" of student-athletes
towards attaining a college degree. 1978 Uniform Guidelines on Employee
Selection Procedures, 29 C.F.R. § 1607.5(H) (1999). Such a requirement
makes intuitive sense to the Court, as it did for the Second Circuit:
No matter how valid the exam, it is the cutoff score that ultimately determines
whether a person passes or fails. A cutoff score unrelated to job performance
may well lead to the rejection of applicants who were fully capable of performing
the job. When a cutoff score unrelated to job performance produces disparate
racial results, Title VII is violated.
Guardians Ass'n of the New York City Police Dep't. Inc. v. Civil Serv.
Comm'n, 630 F.2d 79, 105 (2d Cir. 1980), cert. denied, 452 U.S. 940 (198
1). In addition, "the existing [SAT] requirement would not be educationally
justified if the particular cutoff score used by the [NCAA] to determine
the eligibility of applicants is not itself a valid measure of the minimal
ability necessary" to meet the goal of raising student-athlete graduation
rates. Groves, 776 F. Supp. at 1530; accord Grimes v. Sobol, 832 F. Supp.
704, 7 1 0 (S.D.N.Y. 1993) (quoting Groves), aff d, 37 F.3d 857 (2d Cir.
1994); Association of Mexican-American Educators v. California, 93 7 F.
Supp. 1397, 1420 (N.D. Cal. 1996) (quoting Groves).
"Consequently, there should generally be some independent basis
for choosing the cutoff." Guardians, 630 F.2d at 105. For example,
the NCAA "might establish a valid cutoff score by using a professional
estimate of the requisite ability levels, or, at the very least, by analyzing
test results to locate a logical 'break-point' in the distribution of scores."
Id.
Under the above-articulated standards, it is plainly apparent that the
NCAA has offered no such basis in this case. It chose a cutoff that seemed
acceptable from its consideration of, among other things, the "essential
tension between two conflicting goals: (1) raising of graduation rates,
and (2) allowing more individuals access to the finite number of athletics
opportunities available." NCAA Division I Academics/Eligibility/Compliance
Cabinet Subcommittee on Initial-Eligibility Issues Mem., July 27, 1998,
at 4 (Exhibit 2 to Pis.' Ans.). Then it essentially engaged in a "wait
and see" strategy to see if the predicted effects and outcomes would
come to pass. (See endnote 26.)
Initially, the Court notes that the NCAA has not validated the use of
the SAT, or any particular cutoff score of the SAT, as a predictor of student-athlete
graduation rates. This is important because the average student body population
at Division I schools between 1983 and 1989 was 529,242, while the average
student-athlete population at Division I schools during that same time period
was 13,550 -- this amounts to a mere 2.56%. See NCAA Research Report 960
1 , at NCAA 17212, 17215 (Exhibit 9 to Pls.' Ans.). Moreover, Division I
schools do not represent all of the colleges and universities nationwide.
These facts place into question the validity of the use of the SAT or any
particular cutoff score in order to raise student-athlete graduation rates
at Division I schools when the SAT was not validated for that purpose. While
the NCAA's research found that "[t]he best college-level predictor
of the student-athlete graduation rate was the graduation rate of the entire
student body," the record did not reveal any studies or other support
for the researcher's naked finding. Report of the Special NCAA Conim. to
Review Initial-Eligibility Standards Mem., July 29, 1994, at 5, NCAA 15643
(Exhibit 19 to Pls. Ans.).
Aside from the validity of using the SAT as an accurate predictor of
student-athlete graduation rates, the record makes abundantly clear that,
prior to adopting Proposition 16, the NCAA devoted substantial discussion
towards the anticipated effects (raising graduation rates) and desired outcomes
(increasing access to opportunities) of requiring additional high school
course work, using core GPA and SAT cutoff scores, and allowing for the
index or sliding scale. Specifically, the 820 cutoff score being challenged
in this action is roughly one standard deviation below the SAT national
mean, (See endnote 27.) suggesting that the NCAA referred to an independent
objective standard in identifying this particular cutoff score. What is
special about a cutoff one standard deviation from the mean is that "[flor
any test, regardless of how carefully it was prepared, statistical analysis,
based on the normal distribution curve, shows that there is 68% probability
that successive scores would fall within a range of one standard deviation
from an actual score." Guardians. 630 F.2d at 102. Thus, the Court
cannot conclude that the 820 cutoff score was arbitrarily selected in the
sense that the particular cutoff in question was randomly chosen from the
possible values of 400 through 1600.
But these facts only demonstrate that the NCAA was being abstractly rational.
"[U]nder Wards Cove the defendant's burden of production involves something
beyond mere articulation of a rational basis for the challenged practice."
Harrison, 940 F.2d at 802. It is apparent that, because the NCAA has relied
exclusively on the predictive ability of the SAT on graduation rates of
student-athletes in justifying the cutoff score, it has failed to analyze
the issue in terms of what factors affect the graduation rate in addition
to Proposition 16, thereby concomitantly failing to control for those variables.
By simply pointing to the end result of graduation rates, the NCAA can all
too obviously point to some relationship between choosing a particular cutoff
score and increased graduation rates. However, it cannot possibly know with
any degree of certainty whether the predicted increases in graduation rates
are attributable to numerous factors other than the 820 cutoff score. (See
endnote 28.)
Merely examining the outcomes of the initial eligibility rule does not
demonstrate that the choice of the particular cutoff score in question serves
the goal in a significant way. Taken to its logical end, the NCAA's proffered
"manifest relationship" is tantamount to a rationalization of
any cutoff score, once the SAT's predictive ability is presumed. Such a
decisionmaking process, while reasoned to some degree, fails to demonstrate
that there is "some independent basis for choosing the cutoff."
Rather, to be legally justified, the NCAA must produce evidence explaining
why it chose the 820 cutoff score, as opposed to any other cutoff score,
aside from the fact that its members discussed and considered the matter
in depth. Or, as the NCAA's counsel stated at oral argument, the standard
of arbitrariness as a matter of law means that the cutoff score chosen must
be related manifestly to the goal.
A review of the entire record indicates that it is notable more for what
it does not present than for what it does. The Court appreciates the NCAA's
intent that "[t]he eligibility standards limit freshman participation
in intercollegiate competition to those students who have demonstrated a
minimum level of readiness for college academic work." Spanier Aff.
¶ 7 (Exhibit B to Def 's Response). However, the NCAA has failed to
justify either (1) that its choice of a 820 cutoff score is reasonable and
consistent with normal expectations of the acceptable proficiency of student-athletes
towards attaining a college degree; (2) that its choice of a 820 cutoff
score is the logical "break-point" in the distribution of SAT
scores relevant to meeting its goal of raising student-athlete graduation
rates (and increasing access to opportunities); or (3) that its choice of
a 820 cutoff score is a valid measure of the minimal ability necessary to
raise the graduation rates of student-athletes above those achieved prior
to Proposition 16, let alone prior to Proposition 48. (See endnote 29.)
Indeed, the NCAA has not even articulated what it would consider normal
expectations of the acceptable proficiency of student-athletes towards attaining
a college degree or what it would consider the minimal ability necessary
to graduate. It relies, instead, on vague, unsupported notions such as the
presumption "that students earning a [820] SAT have serious reading
problems." 1995 NCAA Convention Proceedings, at 258, NCAA 27459 (statement
of Freeman Hrabowski) (Exhibit 12 to Def.'s Response).
Significantly, the NCAA has failed to articulate in any meaningful manner
the decisionmaking process behind the selection of the 820 cutoff score.
A solitary statement by one member institution purports to provide a justification:
"Available evidence supports the contention that a core grade-point
average value of 2.500 would have approximately the same screening effects
as the [820] SAT score or the [68] ACT score. Accordingly, it is this relationship
between the core grade-point average of 2.500 and the SAT score of [820]
or the ACT score of [68] that defines the basis of the index values established
in Proposal 16." See 1992 NCAA Convention Proceedings, Jan. 8, 1992,
at 233, NCAA 001 307 (statement of Lorna P. Straus) (Exhibit 8 to Def.'s
Response). And yet, the NCAA's own research consultant, Professor McArdle,
belies such a rationale: "The actual determination of a cutoff score
on any variable was not possible from the research evaluation.... While
I did not pick any particular cutoff score or anchor points for this index,
I did show various decisionmaking committees how [a) cutoff score could
be determined on a rational and objective basis." Letter to Mark Asher,
May 31, 1995 (Exhibit 33 to Pls.' Ans.) (emphasis in original); accord Letter
to Joseph Crowley, Jan. 10, 1995, at 3, M-0003003 (Exhibit 34 to Pls.' Ans.)
("The specific cutting point of SAT=[8201 is not based on APS data
... This number was initially an arbitrary test-score cutoff point.").
It is plain that multiple concerns in addition to the "two conflicting
goals" underlie the adoption of an initial eligibility rule. For example,
the record demonstrates that minimizing false negatives (those student-athletes
deemed ineligible but who then graduate anyway) and false positives (those
student-athletes deemed eligible but who then do not
graduate) is one such concern. (See endnote 30.) Public relations
issues may also have been prevalent.(See endnote 31.) While it may
be true that individual members "may have independently concluded that
[ ] few student-athletes whose tests score below [820 or 68] have a reasonable
prospect of earning a college degree in Division I institutions," id.,
nothing in the record supports the conclusion that the cutoff score was
adopted by the entire membership after due consideration of this issue.
In addition, contrary to the NCAA's blanket assertion that "[t]he
degree of disparate impact becomes relevant only when the court analyzes
(under prong three) whether equally effective alternatives exist that decrease
an adverse disparate impact," Def.'s Reply at 18, the degree of impact
is highly relevant in providing the Court with a basis for determining that
the chosen cutoff score represents a reasoned decision by the NCAA, in light
of the overwhelming evidence in the record attesting to the fact that the
NCAA and its members were concerned over the impact any initial eligibility
rule would have on African-Americans.
Indeed, the NCAA's own research report points to one example of how the
NCAA could have come to their decision by using a mathematical model that
picks a cutoff score after accounting for the members' concerns over the
benefits and costs of an initial eligibility rule. See generally NCAA Research
Report 91-05, Oct. 1992 (Exhibit 26 to Pls.' Ans.). The model has been explained
as follows:
A cutoff score on any variable can be determined objectively by relative
weights on the costs and benefits of different outcomes. An "expected
utility" analysis can be used to find the optimal cutoff score. In
theory, this approach allows decision makers to weigh the benefits of accurate
predictions (the True Positives and True Negatives) against the costs of
inaccurate predictions (the False Negatives and False Positives).
J. J. McArdle, A Summary of Research Results Related to Several NCAA
Initial Eligibility Rules, Oct. 24, 1994, at 3, M-0000560 (Exhibit 31 to
Pls.' Ans.).
By highlighting this method of decisionmaking, the Court is not limiting
the NCAA to justifying its cutoff score solely by reference to an expected
utility analysis. Indeed, "[i]n practice, this formal approach has
been hard to use, mainly because different decision makers have very different
goals and values, and some goals have proven to be contradictory."
Id. The NCAA is free to use any reasonable means to arrive at a decision
as to why the particular cutoff score chosen makes logical sense in reference
to the goal of raising student-athlete graduation rates. This is why Plaintiffs'
approach in criticizing the relative accuracy of Proposition 16 in predicting
student-athlete graduation rates, as compared to other alternative formulations
of an initial eligibility rule, see, e.g., Pls.' Supp. Br. at 5-7, has no
force under the facts of this case. Title VI does not require the NCAA to
adopt the most accurate rule in terms of predictive power; it only demands
that the NCAA justify how its choice of a rule serves a legitimate educational
goal in a significant way.
The lack of justification behind the choice of the 820 cutoff is circumstantially
revealed, for example, by the student-athletes in the partial qualifier
region, whom the NCAA admits "look very similar in performance to several
groups of student-athletes who are full qualifiers with lower GPAs.... The
data indicate that partial qualifiers are performing at a slightly higher
level than low-GPA full qualifiers. Taken as a whole, it is difficult to
distinguish the academic performance of the partial qualifier from the performance
of some qualifiers."
NCAA Division I Academics/Eligibility/Compliance Cabinet Subcommittee on
Initial-Eligibility Issues Mem., July 27, 1998, at 4 (Exhibit 2 to Pls.'
Ans.). (See endnote 32.) " The fact is that the difference in
graduation rates of partial qualifiers and certain full qualifiers is not
statistically significant. See Petr Dep. at 45 (Exhibit I 1 to Pls.' Ans.).
Because the NCAA has failed to analyze the issue in terms of what constitutes
an acceptable level of proficiency for a student-athlete to attain a college
degree, or what constitutes the minimal ability necessary to graduate, the
current choice of the 820 cutoff score results in this anomaly. "If
the goal of the standard is to delineate those who would be successful in
college from those who would not, then it would seem that it is not serving
its intended purpose and in fact, may preclude students who would be academically
successful from attending Division I schools." See Initial-Eligibility
Survey Compilation, at 13 (Exhibit 22 to Def.'s Reply). (See endnote 33.)
" Indeed, this fact is readily inferred from the NCAA's own "selection
line," which identifies individuals who "would have an equal probability
of graduating as anyone else whose combination of test score and grades
puts them on the line." NCAA Research Staff Mem., May18, 1998, at 4,
NCAA 27893 (Exhibit D to Pls.' Ans.); accord NCAA Membership Services Initial
Eligibility Satellite Video Conference, Aug. 19, 1998, Tr. at 37 (statement
of John J. McArdle) (Exhibit 7 to Pls.' Ans.).
Accordingly, the Court concludes that the NCAA has not produced any evidence
demonstrating that the cutoff score used in Proposition 16 serves, in a
significant way, the goal of raising student-athlete graduation rates. Even
if the NCAA had offered evidence sufficient to shift the inquiry back to
Plaintiffs to show that they have carried their burden of persuasion, the
Court concludes, as already shown above, that Plaintiffs have more than
amply carried this burden by demonstrating that the racially adverse impact
caused by the SAT cutoff score is not justified by any legitimate educational
necessity.
In reaching this result, the Court stresses that this case does not preclude
the use the SAT, or any particular cutoff score of the SAT, in the NCAA's
adoption of an initial eligibility rule. It may be "that no strong
statistical basis exist[s) for the use of any particular single minimum
test score," but that is for the NCAA to determine more definitively
after undertaking an appropriate analysis justifying an independent basis
for choosing a cutoff score. 1992 NCAA Convention Proceedings, Jan. 8, 1992,
at 235, NCAA 001308 (statement of Gregory M. St. L. O'Brien); accord id.
at 238, NCAA 001310 (statement of Francis X. Rienzo) (quoting the Academic
Requirements Committee's May 1991 letter, which stated "The research
does not support limitation of a cut-off score within the index.").
3. Whether There are Equally Effective Alternative Practices to Proposition
16
Notwithstanding the Court's conclusion above, Plaintiffs would ultimately
prevail as they have carried their burden of persuasion to proffer an equally
effective alternative practice that results in less racial disproportionality
while still serving the goal of raising student-athlete graduation rates.
Under Title VI, "equally effective" means equivalent, comparable,
or commensurate, rather than identical. See, e.g., Alexander v. Choate,
469 U.S. 287, 294 (1985). The Third Circuit has even held that Plaintiffs
may prevail "where they are able to suggest a viable alternative to
the challenged practice which has the effect of reducing disparate impact
and the employer refuses to adopt the alternative." Newark Branch,
NAACP v. Town of Harrison, New Jersey, 940 F.2d 792, 798 (3d Cir. 1991)
(emphasis added).
Plaintiffs principally proffer the alternative models in the NCAA's own
memorandum as equally effective to Proposition 16. The memorandum presented
four models that the NCAA is considering, the first of which is the retention
of the current rule. After describing the nature of the three alternatives,
a table will be presented summarizing their predicted effects. See generally
NCAA Division I Academics/Eligibility/Compliance Cabinet Subcommittee on
Initial-Eligibility Issues Mem., July 27, 1998 (Exhibit 2 to Pls.' Ans.).
The first alternative, Model 2, would essentially allow partial qualifiers
to become full qualifiers. This would be achieved by lowering the minimum
standardized test score needed for eligibility to a 720 on the SAT, or a
59 on the ACT, and extending the range over which student-athletes are judged
on their combined grades and test score on the sliding scale. The sliding
scale of combined minimum test score and core GPA would apply to student-athletes
with SAT scores between 720 and 1010 (ACT scores between 59 and 86) or core
GPAs between 2.000 and 2.750. This would, however, still require a standardized
test score that is higher in relation to national norms than the same comparison
with respect to high school GPA.
In Model 3, current Proposition 16 partial qualifiers would become full
qualifiers as would student-athletes with SAT scores between 600 and 720,
provided they obtained the core GPA dictated by the sliding scale. This
would be achieved by lowering the minimum standardized test score needed
for eligibility to a 600 on the SAT or a 51 on the ACT, and extending the
range over which student-athletes are judged on their test-grades combination
score. The sliding scale of minimum test score and core GPA would apply
to student-athletes with SAT scores between 600 and 1010 (ACT scores between
about 51 and 86) or core GPAs between 2.000 and 3.050. The minimum SAT score
of 600 is about two standard deviations below the national mean. As a result,
high school grades and test scores would be evaluated equally in initial
eligibility decisions.
Finally, in Model 4, initial eligibility would be based on a fully extended
version of the current sliding scale. This would be achieved by eliminating
the minimum core GPA and standardized test score needed for eligibility,
and basing eligibility for all student-athletes on a test-grades combination
score. As a result, a student-athlete's eligibility would depend entirely
on an equally weighted combination of high school grades and standardized
test scores.
The various alternatives and their predicted effects are summarized in
the following table:
Overall Black Black
Student-Athlete Ineligibility False
Alternative Graduation Rate Rate Negatives
Proposition 16 61.8% 19.4% 15.7%
Model 2 60.7% 15.9% 13.6%
(includes partial qualifiers
as qualifiers)
Model 3 60.0% 15.7% 13.2%
(extends sliding scale to
600 SAT/51 ACT)
Model 4 59.8% 15.6% 13.1%
(full sliding scale)
Even a cursory examination of these statistics demonstrates that the
more selective rule (Proposition 16) projects a higher graduation rate for
student-athletes. Conversely, the less selective rules (Models 2, 3, or
4) project fewer disqualifications of African-American students with lower
test scores, at the cost of somewhat lower graduation rates.
However, even under Model 4, the projected student-athlete graduation
rate of 59.8% is higher than all the rates previously experienced. For example,
the graduation rate of student-athletes in the year prior to the adoption
of Proposition 48 (1985) was 52%. See NCAA Research Report 96-01, at NCAA
17215 (Exhibit 9 to Pls.' Ans.). In the last year for which full data is
available on Proposition 48 (1989), student-athletes graduated at a rate
of 58%. And finally, for the freshman class entering in the year 1991-1992
(the latest year for which data is presented in the record), student-athletes
graduated at a rate of 56%. See 1998 NCAA Division I Graduation-Rates Report,
at 626 (Exhibit 17 to Def's Reply). All of these rates are undeniably surpassed
by the 59.8% predicted under Model 4. Moreover, the NCAA estimates that
"[t]his projected rate would still be about two percentage points higher
than the current student-athlete graduation rate." NCAA Division I
Academics/Eligibility/Compliance Cabinet Subcommittee on Initial-Eligibility
Issues Mem., July 27, 1998, at 13 (Exhibit 2 to Pls.' Ans.).
Although Model 4 may be the least preferred from the NCAA's perspective,
that consideration has no bearing on this prong of the analysis. Moreover,
while the NCAA's counsel took the position at oral argument that the alternative
graduation rate must be statistically significant to the rate predicted
under Proposition 16, the NCAA has not demonstrated that there is something
special about that particular graduation rate. Indeed, it can only be presumed
that the goal of raising student-athlete graduation rates embodies the NCAA's
desire to raise them beyond the level existing prior to the adoption of
Proposition 16 and nothing more. Plaintiffs have shown at least three alternative
practices resulting in less racial disproportionality while still serving
the NCAA's goal of raising student-athlete graduation rates -- not raising
them above a certain threshold number. That is all the proof that Plaintiffs
need to demonstrate under Title VI.
III. CONCLUSION
Viewing each of the respective summary judgment motions in the light
most favorable to the non-moving party, Plaintiffs' motion is GRANTED and
Defendant's motion is DENIED. Plaintiffs are entitled to judgment in their
favor on the merits of their Title VI claim.
An appropriate order follows.
Endnotes
1 The ensuing background information was culled primarily from the following
sources: Marshall Aff. 11 2-3 (Exhibit I to Docket No. 4); NCAA Division
I Academics/ Eligibility/Compliance Cabinet Subcommittee on Initial-Eligibility
Issues Mem., July 27, 1998, at 7 (Exhibit C to 41); NCAA Membership Services
Initial Eligibility Satellite Video Conference, Aug. 19, 1998, Tr. at 6-7
(statement of Todd A. Petr) (as amended) (Exhibit 7 to Docket No. 54); Athletics
and Academics in the Freslunan Year: A Study of the Academic Effects of
Freshman PSAicil2ation in Varsity Athletics,, Dec. 1984, at 1-3 to 1-6,
NCAA 1281512818 (Exhibit 25 to Docket No. 54).
2 "In April 1995, the College Board recentered the score scales
for all tests in the SAT Program to reflect the contemporary test-taking
population. Recentering reestablished the average score for a study group
of 1990 seniors at about 500 -- the midpoint of the 200-to-800 scale --
allowing students, schools, and colleges to more easily interpret their
scores in relation to those of a similar group of college-bound seniors."
Recentered Scale (visited Feb. 22, 1999) <http://www.collegeboard.org/sat/html/admissions/cbs/cbsrec97.html>.
Accordingly, a test score of 700 on the old scale is approximately equivalent
to a 830 on the recentered scale, and a score of 900 on the old scale is
approximately equivalent to a 1010 on the recentered scale. See SAT V+M
Co=osites7' Original to Recentered Scale (visited Feb. 22, 1999) <http:
www.collegeboard.org/sat/html/admissions/equiv/rtO27027.html>.
3 The Fund is an enrichment program for economically disadvantaged youths
that provides summer education and sports instruction on the campuses of
NCAA member and nonmember institutions of higher education. See Thiebe Aff.
T 2 (Exhibit 2 to Docket No. 4); Guidelines for the 199TNational Youth Sports
Program, at 1, NCAA 009886 (Exhibit I to Docket No. I 1)
4 See Marshall Dep. at 82-86 (Exhibit D to Docket No. 1 1); Thiebe Dep.
at 14-17; 21-23; 25-29; 57-61, 78-79, 92-95 (Exhibit E to Docket No. I 1);
id. at 96-97 (stipulation by NCAA's counsel that a committee of the NCAA
renders final determinations with respect to the program, requiring no further
action or authorization by the Fund); see also Br. of Amici Curiae Trial
Lawyers f6i Public Justice, P.C. and Southern Poverty Law Center in Support
of Respondent in NCAA v. Smith, No. 98-84, at 9-15.
5 Accord 1995-1996 NCAA Annual Reports, at 46 (Exhibit H to Docket No.
15).
6 Accord NCAA Const., art. 1, rule 1.3.2 ("Member institutions shall
be obligated to apply and enforce this legislation, and the enforcement
procedures of the Association shall be applied to an institution when it
fails to fulfill this obligation.") (Exhibit A to Docket No. 1 1);
id., rule 2.01 ("legislation enacted by the Association governing the
conduct of intercollegiate athletics shall be designed to advance one or
more basic principles ... to which the members are committed."); Br.
of Petitioner NCAA in NCAA v. Smith, No. 98-84,1999 WL 784591, at *23 ("the
NCAA often adopts rules that are opposed by individual institutions, and
is required to take enforcement actions over the opposition of individual
members, for the collective good"). See also NCAA v. Board of Regents
of Univ. of Okla., 468 U.S. 85, 101, 117 (1984) (acknowledging that for
intercollegiate athletics to exist, a "myriad of rules ... must be
agreed upon" and that "a certain degree of cooperation is necessary
if the type of competition that [the NCAA] and its member institutions seek
to market is to be preserved"); Smith v. NCAA, 139 F.2d 1809 183 (3d
Cir. 1998) ("The member institutions agree to abide by and enforce
these rules."), judgement vacated on other grounds, No. 98-48, slip
op., 1999 WL 83907 (U.S. Feb. 23, 1999).
7 See Generally Br. for the United States as Amicus Curiae in Support
of Respondent in NCAA v. Smith, No. 98-84, at 24-33 (reflecting the collective
views of the Solicitor General of the United States, United States Department
of Education, United States Department of Health and Human Services, and
the United States Department of Justice) (Exhibit 1 to Docket No. 54).
8 See also NCAA Const., art. 1, rule 1.2 (b) (stating that a purpose
of the NCAA is "[t]o uphold the principle of institutional control
of, and responsibility for, all intercollegiate sports in conformity with
the co college board institution and bylaws of this Association").
9 See, e.g., Dothard v. Rawlinson, 433 U.S. 321, 329 (1977) (analyzing
employment standards that "select applicants for hire in a significantly
discriminatory pattern"); Washington v. Davis, 426 U.S. 229, 246-47
(1976) ("hiring and promotion practices disqualifying substantially
disproportionate number of blacks"); Albemarle Paper Co. v. Moody,
422 U.S. 405@ 425 (1975) (plaintiff required to show "that the tests
in question select applicants for hire or promotion in a racial pattern
significantly different from that of the pool of applicants").
10 "Pls."Opening" consists of a legal memorandum with
exhibits A-D (Docket No. 41).
11 "Pls.' Ans." consists of a legal memorandum (Docket No.
57), an appendix of 35 exhibits (Docket Na. 54 and 56), and a second appendix
of four additional documents (Docket No. 53).
12 "Def.'s Response" consists of a legal memorandum with exhibits
A-D (Docket No. 48) and an appendix of 13 additional exhibits (Docket No.
47).
13 According to the figures cited in the NCAA's July 27, 1998 memorandum,
in 1996, African-Americans were selected at a rate only 78.4% of the rate
at which whites were selected. In 1997, African-Americans were selected
at a rate 82.0% of the rate at which whites were selected. See also Draft
Table and Figures for Report 98-04, Feb. 9, 1998 (Exhibit 21 to Def.'s Reply).
According to the figures cited by the Department of Education, the percentage
of African-American college-bound high school seniors who met Proposition
16's requirements constituted only 69.3% of the percentage of white college-bound
high school seniors who met those same requirements. Additionally, African-American
college-bound student-athletes cleared the test score hurdle at a rate only
74.0% of the rate at which white college-bound student-athletes cleared
the hurdle.
14 Accord Smith v. NCAA, 139 F.2d 180, 183 (3d Cir. 1998) (stating that
the NCAA "is responsible for promulgating rules governing all aspects
of intercollegiate athletics, including recruiting, eligibility of student-athletes,
and academic standards"), -judgment vacated on other Grounds, No. 98-48,
slip op., 1999 WL 83907 (U.S. Feb. 23, 1999).
15 See, e. R., NCAA Const., art. 1, rule 1.2 (Exhibit A to Docket No.
1 1); Proceedings of the 77th Annual Convention of the NCAA, at 106, NCAA
2763 1, Jan. 10- 1 2, 1983 (statement of James A. Castaneda) (Exhibit 6
to Def.'s Response) (quoting Article 2 of the NCAA constitution and referring
to the NCAA's role in promoting satisfactory standards of scholarship for
student-athletes).]
16 "Def's Reply" consists of a legal memorandum with 10 exhibits
(Docket No.58).
17 See McArdle Dep. at 134-37 (Exhibit 35 to Pls.' Ans.) (agreeing that
it would be a mistake to conclude that the difference in black-white graduation
rates is wholly attributable to differences in GPA and test scores); see
also Def.'s Response at 10 n.7 (citing scholarly studies documenting the
discrepancy found in the distribution of standardized test scores for black
and white students.).
18 Between 1983-1985, African-American student-athletes graduated at
rates of 35%, 35%, and 36% respectively, as compared to African-American
students generally who graduated at rates of 30%, 30%, and 32% in those
same years. See NCAA Research Report 9601, at NCAA 17212, 17215 (Exhibit
9 to Pls.' Ans.). During those same years, student-athletes graduated at
rates of 51%, 52%, and 52% respectively, as compared to students in general
who graduated at rates of 51%, 52%, and 53%. See id.
19 See id. (showing that between 1983-1985, white student-athletes graduated
at rates of 58%, 59%, ancr59% respectively, as compared to white students
generally who graduated at rates of 54%, 55%, and 55% in those same years).
20 See, e.g., NCAA Division I Academics/ Eligibility/Compliance Cabinet
Subcommittee on Initial-Eligibility Issues Meeting Agenda, Sept. 9, 1998,
at NCAA 28080 (Exhibit 23 to Def 's Reply) ("The subcommittee believes
that the initial eligibility standards need to reflect the Division I membership's
commitment to improving the graduation rates for student-athletes while
limiting as best possible the number of individuals eliminated from the
pool of qualifiers who go on to graduate."); 1995 NCAA Convention Proceedings,
at 257, NCAA 27458 (statement of Edward B. Fort) (Exhibit 12 to Def.'s Response)
("It is worthy of note that the special committee reached a consensus
view. Their deliberations revealed that a choice of initial-eligibility
rules must be guided by clear definition of goals. The latter would unavoidably
involve two contrasting effects. Number one, graduation rates and, secondly,
minority opportunities."); NCAA Resolution No. 174, at NCAA 27505 (Exhibit
IO to Def 's Response) (authorizing a review of the initial eligibility
requirements because, in part, "fundamental concerns of the Association
in the development and adoption of 1992 Convention Proposal 16 were the
need to enhance the academic integrity of intercollegiate athletics programs
and to encourage the adequate academic preparation of student-athletes,
without unfairly limiting educational opportunities for student-athletes
. . ."); Report of NCAA Special Committee on Academic Standards, Aug.
15, 1985, at CB 0004059 (Exhibit 29 to Pls.' Ans.) ("Over the past
decade, there has been increasing concern over the number of student-athletes
entering Division I institutions of the NCAA inadequately prepared to meet
the academic requirements for satisfactory progress and graduation.");
Proceedings of the 77th Annual Convention of the NCAA, Jan. IO- 1 2, 1983,
at 107, NCAA 2763 1, (statement of James H. Zumberge) (Exhibit 6 to Def.'s
Response) To restore the original intent of the athletic grants-in-aid and
to reemphasize the primary [ ]mission of colleges and universities, a number
of Division I presidents and chancellors seek to redefine the qualification
of student-athlete.").
21 See Exhibit 15 to Pls.' Ans.; Exhibit 20 to Def.'s Reply.
22 Additionally, scores on one test can be converted to approximately
equivalent scores on the other. See, e.g., SAT I-ACT Score Comparisons (visited
Feb.22,1999)<http://www.collegeboard .org/sat/html/counselors/stats/statOO4.html>.
23 See, e.g., Brian O'Reilly, Measuring the SAT: The SAT Is the Most
Efficient Predictor of College Success (visited Feb. 22, 1999) <http:H
www.collegeboard.org/sat/html/ admissions/measurec.htrnl>.
24 See Recentered SAT I Scores as a Predictor of College Grades (visited
Feb. 22,
1999) <http://www.collegeboard.org/sat/html/admissions/stats/statOO3.html>.
25 See Gretchen Rigol, Symposium, Insi2ht Magazine May 18, 1998, at 24
(discussion by College Board vice president for Guidance, Access, and Assessment
Services on whether colleges should eliminate the SAT as part of their admissions
decisions); 1992 NCAA Convention Proceedings, Jan. 8, 1992, at 234, NCAA
001 308 (statement of Edward B. Fort) (Exhibit 8 to Def.'s Reply) ("As
we know, the purpose for which these tests were originally developed was
not that6oncemed with student progress but instead predictability for academic
success in college during at least the initial freshman year.").
26 See, e.g., McArdle Dep. at 42 (Exhibit D to Pis.' Opening) ("I
meant that we didn't know what would happen, empirically, if Prop 48 had
been put in place. We then tried to find out with our data what would have
happened -- what happened. But we were making guesses at this time about
what would happen; what the effect would be."); 1995 NCAA Convention
Proceedings, at 260-61, NCAA 27461-62 (statement of Francis X. Rienzo) (Exhibit
12 to Def.'s Response).
27 See NCAA Division I Academics/Eligibility/Compliance Cabinet Subcommittee
on Initial-Eligibility Issues Mem., July 27, 1998, at 7 (Exhibit 2 to Pls.'
Ans.); see also SAT I Verbal and Math: 1998-99 Mean Scores and Percentiles
(visited Feb. 22, 1999) <http://www.collegebdixd.org/sat/html/admissions/stats/statOOl.html>
(citing SAT national mean of 10 1 7 and a standard deviation of 207 for
1998 college-bound seniors).
28 See, eg., J. J. McArdle, A Summary of Research Results Related to
Several NCAA initial Eligibility Rules, Oct. 24, 1994, at 14, M-0000571
(Exhibit 31 to Pls.' Ans.) (stating that "it is not appropriate to
attribute [the observed increase in graduation rates relative to pre-Proportion
48 levels] to Prop 48" in light of multiple unknown factors); McArdle
Dep. at 92 (Exhibit 17 to Pls.' Ans.) (stating that he had no idea what
role, if any, the Satisfactory Progress Rules played in increasing graduation
rates for student athletes); McArdle Dep. at 134-37 (Exhibit 35 to Pls.'
Ans.) (agreeing that it would be a mistake to conclude that the difference
in black-white graduation rates is wholly attributable to differences in
GPA and test scores).
29 But cf. Athletics and Academics in the Freshman Year: A Study of the
Academic Effects of Freshman Participation in Varsity Athletics, Dec. 1984,
at 3-1 to 3-5 1, NCAA 12849-12899 (Exhibit 25 to Pls.' Ans.) (presenting
statistical research to support an independent basis for choosing a GPA
cutoff score of 2.0 for student-athletes).
30 See e.g., Report of the Special NCAA Comm. to Review Initial-Eligibility
-1
Standards Mem., July 29, 1994 at 6, NCAA 15644 (Exhibit 19 to Pls.' Ans.)
("The distributions of graduates and nongraduates overlap on the academic
variables. Thus, the choice between desired outcomes, such as the false
negatives vs. true positives, need to be defined in terms of utility weights.").
31 See e.g., 1992 NCAA Convention Proceedings, Jan. 8, 1992, at 23 5,
NCAA 001308 (statement of Gregory M. St. L. O'Brien) (Exhibit 8 to Def's
Response) ("In endorsing the indexing concept as 'expressed in Proposal
No. 16, the committee expressed the view that the floor of [820] on the
SAT or [68] on the ACT should continue to exist for the additional eligibility
requirements for student-athletes in Division I institutions. The basis
for this view likely differed across the membership of the Commission and
the Council. Some may have been concerned about Congf6ssional public relations
and public reactions to perceived reductions in academic standards in this
age of reform of intercollegiate athletics.").
32 Accord NCAA Research Staff Mem., May 18, 1998, at 3, NCAA 27892 (Exhibit
D to Pls.' Ans.); see also Letter to Joseph Crowley, Jan. 10, 1995, at 3,
M-0003003 (Exhibit 34 to Pls.' Ans.) ("The explicit distinction and
labeling of 'full' and 'partial' qualifiers at this cutoff, and the associated
penalty (loss of the fourth year), was not generally consistent with the
comparative academic performances of the APS students.").
33 Accord 1995 NCAA Convention Proceedings, at 263, NCAA 27464 (statement
of William B. DeLauder) (Exhibit'12 to Def.'s Response) (stating that "the
1992 approval of Proposal 16 is not fully supported by the NCAA's own research.
The 'double cut,' that is a minimum-core GPA and a minimum SAT, is totally
arbitrary. In fact, it eliminates many students who are predicted to have
the same chance of graduating as those admitted under Proposal 16.").
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