I do not condone Coach Waltz for his behavior during the NCAA Championship game. Showing class in de...more
posted 07/15/11 at 10:22am
on The NCAA reprimands coaches for comments and actions during NCAA tournament: Baylor�s Mulkey, Louisville�s Walz
| GAME DAY. USWNT vs. Japan for the World Cup Final at 2pm ET on ESPN. Check out our World Cup Coverage. |
posted by Title IX Blog
Wednesday, July 13, 2011 at 4:48pm EDT
An interdisciplinary resource for news, legal developments, commentary, and scholarship about Title IX, the federal statute prohibiting discrimination on the basis of sex in federally funded schools.
Support women's sports and SHARE this story with your friends!
First Washington, then Oregon, now Idaho. The Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights recently received a complaint (pdf here -- it's 600 pages) citing 100 high schools in 78 of the 115 school districts in the state, charging them with violating Title IX for failing to provide equitable athletic opportunities to female students.
This is the third northwestern state in recent months in which OCR has been asked to look into Title IX violations at dozens of school districts statewide. Like the others, the complaint is based on data mined from OCR's most recent Civil Rights Data Collection report, which provides evidence of disparities in participation rates as well as evidence of school districts "padding" their participation rates by including activities (namely, sideline cheerleading and dance) that are not comparable to varsity athletics in terms of their competitive schedule.
From these data, the complaint alleges violations of prong one's proportionality standard. It then uses OCR data over time to cite school districts with declining opportunities for girls, suggesting violations of prong two's requirement of program expansion for the underrepresented sex.
Finally, the complaint sites examples of school districts failing to offer sports that are sanctioned by the state athletic association as evidence of unmet interest, which would violate prong three.
The press has not reported on the person filing the complaint, as government regulations protect anonymity of complainants. However, unlike lawsuits filed in federal court, complaints to OCR may be raised by anyone.
Is Montana next?
Support women's sports and SHARE this story with your friends!
MOST POPULAR POSTS
posted by From A Left Wing
06/27/11 at 8:06pm
posted by Alison M. Starnes Blog
07/08/11 at 10:27am
posted by All White Kit
09/15/10 at 3:21pm
posted by C and R's Stanford Women's Basketball Blog
07/11/11 at 11:08am
posted by Swish Appeal
07/14/11 at 2:40pm
posted by Women Undefined
07/31/10 at 10:26pm
posted by shonnese
07/16/11 at 5:05pm
posted by Fair Game News
07/17/11 at 10:14am
posted by Pat Griffin's LGBT Sport Blog
07/29/09 at 12:41pm
posted by anngaff
07/15/11 at 3:52pm
LATEST WTS POSTS
posted by Fair Game News
Today at 1:09am
posted by All White Kit
Today at 1:07am
posted by From A Left Wing
Today at 1:05am
posted by Fair Game News
Sun at 10:14am
posted by Swish Appeal
Sun at 10:13am
posted by Jayda Evans: Womens Hoops Blog
Sun at 10:11am
posted by All White Kit
Sun at 9:56am
posted by They're Playing Basketball
Sun at 9:52am
posted by Alison M. Starnes Blog
Sun at 9:50am
No one has commented on this yet. Be the first!