
Thanks to TLPJ,
female athletes at FAMU won a victory for
gender equity; the school reinstated its
women's swimming and diving team. |
Florida A&M University (FAMU) of
Tallahassee, Florida, has agreed to reinstate its
women’s swimming and diving team to avoid a sex
discrimination lawsuit threatened by the national public
interest law firm
Trial
Lawyers for Public Justice
(TLPJ) and Philadelphia’s
Hangley Aronchick Segal & Pudlin
(HASP). In a
demand letter
dated August 9, 2005, TLPJ charged that the school’s
decision to eliminate the women’s team violated Title IX
of the Education Amendments of 1972, the federal law
that prohibits sex discrimination by educational
institutions receiving federal funds. The school has
confirmed that it will reinstate the team.
"This is a wonderful result for
the female swimmers and divers at FAMU, who were
devastated by the school’s decision to cut the team,"
said plaintiffs’ co-counsel Shanon Levin Lehman of HASP.
"We applaud FAMU for doing the right thing, instead of
the expedient thing. This is a victory for everyone who
cares about equality."
In its demand letter, TLPJ
explained that FAMU’s decision to cut the women’s
swimming and diving team violated Title IX’s three-part
test for determining whether a university has provided
"equal opportunities" for members of both sexes to
participate in sports. The letter stated that FAMU
failed the test because (1) women students comprise 58
percent of the undergraduate student body at FAMU, but
are offered less than 29 percent of the opportunities to
participate in athletics; (2) the school has not
demonstrated a "history and continuing practice" of
expanding its women’s sports program over time and then,
adding insult to injury, decided to cut an
existing women’s team; and (3) the school cannot
claim that it is fully satisfying all existing female
interest in sports because it cut a
viable women’s team that was
ready, willing, and able to compete.
"Unless we are able to resolve the
team members’ claims without the need for litigation,"
TLPJ’s letter concluded, "we are prepared to file suit."
TLPJ has successfully sued several
schools, including Brown University, the University of
Bridgeport at Connecticut, Indiana University of
Pennsylvania, Temple University, and West Chester
University, for illegally discriminating against women
in athletics.
FAMU announced its decision to cut
the women’s swimming and diving team in July 2005,
citing budgetary concerns. This decision shocked the
team members, who were anticipating a full competitive
season in 2005-06. At the same time, FAMU announced that
it had decided to cut men’s swimming and diving, tennis,
and golf as well, also citing budgetary reasons. In its
letter, TLPJ advised FAMU that the simultaneous
elimination of the men’s teams did not provide any
defense under Title IX because the school remained in
violation of the three-part test for Title IX
compliance.
"Although we are confident that we
could have won this case in court, we are extremely
pleased that FAMU has agreed to reinstate the team,"
said TLPJ Staff Attorney Leslie A. Brueckner, co-counsel
for the team. "FAMU has one of the worst records in the
country in terms of accommodating female athletes, and
its decision to cut the
women’s swimming and diving team
added serious insult to injury. Now that the team is
reinstated, we hope that FAMU will turn its attention to
creating even more participation opportunities for
women."
FAMU is one of just three
historically black colleges and universities that has an
intercollegiate women's swimming and diving team.
In addition to Lehman and
Brueckner, the plaintiffs’ legal team includes Sharon
McKee and William T. Hangley of HASP and Jerry Traynham
of Tallahassee’s Patterson & Traynham. The
demand letter
is posted on
TLPJ’s web site.