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Related: About this forumHigh court won't hear Title IX case involving Michigan State
Source: Associated Press
High court wont hear Title IX case involving Michigan State
Associated Press
December 12, 2022
WASHINGTON (AP) The Supreme Court says it wont take the plunge into a dispute over Michigan State Universitys decision to end its swimming-and-diving teams, a decision female athletes sued over.
The case was one of many the high court rejected Monday. As is typical, the justices didnt comment in turning away the case.
The dispute the justices rejected stems from MSUs decision to end its mens and womens swimming-and-diving teams after the 2021 season. The school cited cost as the reason, saying its swimming and diving facilities needed millions in upgrades.
Members of the womens team sued saying the decision violated federal anti-discrimination law, commonly known as Title IX. A judge rejected a request to keep the womens team alive while the lawsuit proceeded, saying she doubted the female swimmers would prevail at the end of the litigation. But a three-judge federal appeals court panel later ruled 2-1 that the judge should take another look at the case.
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Read more: https://apnews.com/article/lawsuits-michigan-government-and-politics-state-41cbd819f9abbc61cd00eb751707aac6
Thunderbeast
(3,535 posts)While many DO, in fact, excel at sports and academics, I just don't buy the story that intercollegiate sports provide enough crossover benefit to justify the enormous investments in facilities, coaches, travel, and equipment.
The fact is...Most college athletes have been groomed since middle school in elite (mostly private) academies. In order to play in high school, you MUST also play "club sports"...often coached by the high school coach. If you haven't made the cut at age 12 in some sports, you are done.
Public higher education investments are not infinite. Should students take on even more crippling debt so a handful of divers can win medals?
The math doesn't work for me, either.
MichMan
(13,227 posts)As I read it, the lower court ruled that participation in college athletics must mirror exactly the gender make up of the student body to comply with Title IX.
If the percentage of women in the college population is 52%, then at least 52% of the athletes must be women. Not 50%, not 51.5%, but 52.0 %. The university was arguing that a percentage point or two was not significant to prove a violation.
The ruling would appear to dictate that as the student body overall population changes from year to year, the university has to accommodate it in the breakdown of male vs female sports participation. Sounds like since Michigan State eliminated both male and female diving as a sport, they thought they were applying the law equally. In this case since there were 33 women on the diving team and only 29 men, the court disagreed. Had it been the other way around, they would have been OK.