(This article made me rather sad when I read it. The intention, or rather the ultimate goal, is admirable. But if people dont want to play any sports, then the people who do should not be punished just to make the numbers look good. The simple fact of the matter is that not as many women *want* to play sports as men, there is nothing wrong with this, and no sex is better either way, but it certainly is a trend. Whether or not it is a societal/culturally imposed one is not in question. If the same number of women as men do not want to play sports, cutting the sports programs of both to get the numbers to equal out is not the answer. This is also a good example of where laws and regulations do more harm then good, even when the goal is to live in a happy everything equal world. - Mike)
Gender quotas devastate sports programs
----------
by Jessica Gavora
Title IX -- a law intended to expand opportunities for women in the
classroom and in sports -- is restricting opportunities for both
men and women. Unable to achieve the gender balance in sports
demanded by law, universities are closing down athletic
programs. (1/14/01)
http://washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A55153-2001Jan12.html
Stephen Reynolds has a problem: The 21-year-old college gymnast keeps losing his teams. Three years ago, when he was a freshman at Syracuse University, the men's team on which he competed was cut from the school's varsity sports program. So he transferred to Virginia's James Madison University. Now, JMU is about to cut Reynolds's team, too.
<P> It's not that Reynolds is a jinx. It's that at JMU, women make up
58 percent of the student population, but only 41 percent of the school's athletes.
Under Title IX, the federal law banning sex discrimination in educational institutions
that receive government funds, JMU (like Syracuse) has not achieved "proportionality"
in its athletics programs -- that is, the percentage of women participating
in varsity sports does not mirror the percentage of women in the student body.
So the school plans to cut teams to make the numbers work.</P>
<P><P> In the rush to achieve equality between men and women in
school-sponsored sports, Title IX, a law intended to expand opportunity for
women in the classroom and on the playing field, is now being used to restrict
opportunity for both men and women. Under the law as it is interpreted today,
the pursuit of equality in athletics has become a strict numbers game, with
adverse and unintended consequences. Under pressure to achieve proportionality,
schools are finding that by reducing the number of men in sports, the proportion
of women in sports rises automatically.</P>
<P><P> The alternative, university officials say, is to risk lawsuits
and a loss of funding for failure to comply with Title IX. JMU was threatened
with this last year, when a member of the women's club softball team (a self-supported,
non-varsity team) went to the U.S. Department of Education and charged the school
with discrimination for failing to give the team university-funded varsity status.
The school can't afford to add any more women's teams -- it already offers women
14 sports, far above the national average, and one more than it offers its men.
So it is preparing to make wholesale cuts in its sports program, considering
five men's teams and three women's teams -- all standouts in their own way --
for elimination at the end of the academic year. That way, though fewer opportunities
to play will be offered to all students, they will be offered in the right proportion
-- so that around 58 percent of JMU's athletes are female, and 42 percent male.
In the end, opportunities for women won't increase and opportunities for men
will decline considerably -- by 107 team positions. But the school will have
solved its Title IX problem.</P>
<P><P> JMU's pursuit of Title IX-required "gender equity"
in sports is typical of most colleges and universities today. Schools that once
worried about creating equality of opportunity for female student-athletes now
spend more time trying to produce the appearance of equality -- usually at the
expense of male athletes. They target low-profile, so-called "non-revenue"
men's teams for elimination. Most are unwilling to touch expensive football
and basketball programs, which attract money from alumni and boost a school's
profile.</P>
<P><P> Such outcomes weren't the original intent of Title IX, which
was passed in 1972 as a straightforward nondiscrimination statute, stating that:
"No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be . . . subjected
to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving Federal
financial assistance." Women have certainly made tremendous gains under
Title IX. In 1971, only 43 percent of undergraduates at U.S. colleges and universities
were women; today, 56 percent are. In intercollegiate sports, women's participation
has tripled, and the average female athlete now receives more scholarship aid
than her male counterpart.</P>
<P><P> Title IX itself makes no mention of intercollegiate sports
or proportionality. All that was added later, by federal education officials
who wrote the statute's implementing regulation, and by the courts, which in
turn interpreted that regulation. The Education Department, which enforces Title
IX, is loath to admit that proportionality has become the reigning standard
of compliance with the law. Department officials claim that schools need only
address the "interests and abilities" of female athletes. But in the
eyes of the schools, proportionality is the real standard, one that in effect
creates a quota system for athletic participation that hurts men while not necessarily
helping women.</P>
<P><P> "The law has forced us to look at our program,"
says JMU athletic director Jeff Bourne. "When you have a program as big
as ours and you're looking at proportionality, it's hard to come into compliance
without making some cuts."</P>
<P><P> Growing female majorities on campus are pushing proportionality
further and further out of reach for many schools. Last year, in pursuit of
"gender equity," the University of Miami eliminated the men's swimming
and diving program that produced Olympic gold medalist Greg Louganis. Brigham
Young University eliminated its top 10 ranked men's gymnastics team and its
top 25 ranked wrestling team. The University of New Mexico slashed three men's
teams. Miami University of Ohio eliminated 30 wrestlers, 25 men's soccer players
and 10 men's tennis players -- not just to save money (the men shared a total
of eight scholarships among them), but to get the numbers right.</P>
<P><P> All the schools cited the need to achieve "gender equity"
amid athletic department budget constraints as the reason for making the cuts.
University of Miami athletic director Paul Dee said the school had no other
way of bringing the percentage of female athletes in line with the percentage
of undergraduate women. "These fine young men are being displaced for reasons
. . . which they did not cause," Dee said. "It is extremely regrettable
that this is the necessary solution to the issues we face."</P>
<P><P> A 1997 NCAA gender equity study showed that more than 200
men's teams and 20,000 male athletes disappeared from the ranks of America's
colleges between 1992 and 1997. A 1999 study by the General Accounting Office
found that men's opportunities had declined by 12 percent since 1985. Meanwhile,
during the same period, the number of boys playing high school sports increased
by about 400,000.</P>
<P><P> Title IX proportionality doesn't hurt just men. Despite high
student interest, colleges and universities that have reached proportionality
often freeze their athletic programs at the minimum number of teams required
for membership in the NCAA -- all for fear of upsetting the mathematical balance.
Officials at JMU had resisted making this compromise. While other schools in
its conference offer an average of 18 teams, JMU features a whopping 27. But
even though they have more teams, female students at JMU compete at a lesser
rate than men, reflecting a nationwide pattern.</P>
<P><P> Although NCAA schools offer more sports teams to women than
to men -- 553 more, to be precise -- more men choose to participate in sports.
Women constitute only about 40 percent of college athletes. For whatever reason,
the squad sizes for women's teams tend to be smaller than those of men's teams.
Many women's coaches prefer smaller team rosters, and fewer women than men are
willing to "ride the bench" all season without getting a chance to
play, coaches say. But the federal regulators who enforce Title IX are only
concerned with bodies on the playing field. The losers are schools like JMU,
which considers sports to be part of a well-rounded education experience. With
lots of teams, but relatively low female participation rates, complying with
Title IX means eliminating men's teams to get the numbers right.</P>
<P><P> The courts, with the backing of Clinton administration officials,
have consistently upheld the right of female athletes to be given preference
over men when their numbers don't reflect their percentage of the student body.
No aggrieved female party has ever lost such a court challenge, and since 1991,
when Brown University was sued under Title IX for failing to maintain a 50 percent
female ratio in its athletics program, not a single women's team has been eliminated
in Division I collegiate athletics. Meanwhile, participation by men in the same
division declined 10 percent between 1991 and 1997.</P>
<P><P> JMU's proposed cuts have generated an outpouring of support
for the threatened athletes on campus. Students, male and female, have formed
an ad hoc committee called Save our Sports (SOS), which has proposed redistributing
funds from other programs to pay for additional sports, even suggesting an increase
in student fees. But Michelle Cooligan, a junior on the women's club softball
team that filed the complaint, feels she and her teammates on the squad are
being blamed unfairly for the situation. "As far as I know, JMU is way
out of compliance with Title IX," she says. "This was going to come
about anyway." At the same time, like the majority of her fellow students,
she regrets the remedy her school is being forced to consider. "We're very
excited that we have a chance to try out for the varsity team," she says.
"But we don't want this opportunity at someone else's expense."</P>
<P><P> At JMU and on other campuses, students and faculty alike
have a seemingly genuine desire for fairness. But no one questions the twin
logical fallacies that underlie the current implementation of Title IX: that
the failure of women to participate in sports at the same rate as men means
that something is "wrong," and that achieving proportionality means
everything is "right."</P>
<P><P> "Universities are supposed to be places of inquiry,
but some subjects appear closed to scrutiny," says JMU English professor
Robert Geary. "Students seem caught in a vise of bureaucratic rules which
are combating ills that may well not exist at all."</P>
<P><P> The fact that the current version of Title IX was written
by federal officials and expanded by judges and is not the work of elected members
of Congress means that a new administration in Washington has the opportunity
to change the way the law is being implemented. This, at least, is the hope
of officials at JMU. "We would hope that rather than just doing a head
count or implementing a quota, Title IX compliance would be measured through
taking into account opportunities for women," says JMU's Bourne. "We
don't want to go back to where we were 20 or 30 years ago. We just want a system
that is equity-based and fair to every sport."</P>
<P><P> Title IX has played a significant role in a great national
success story of women in education, on and off the field. But while the law
has never been amended in the 29 years since its passage, its enforcement under
the Clinton administration changed dramatically. The time has come to return
to the original intent of Title IX -- ensuring equal opportunity for both men
and women in the nation's schools. The new administration and Congress should
make it clear that the law was never intended to force schools into mindless
proportionality. When the facts show that women are being discriminated against,
the law must be enforced. But when the numbers show that men and women aren't
behaving the same way, schools should be left alone.</P>
<P><P> Otherwise, men will continue to lose so that universities
can show the federal government the illusion of gains for female athletes. "If
we stay where we are and the interpretation is the same, we will have to look
at eliminations," Bourne says. "We don't determine what the law is,
but we are required to live with it and enforce it." Jessica Gavora is
a Washington writer whose work has appeared in the Wall Street Journal and the
Weekly Standard. She is working on a book about Title IX.</P>
<P><CENTER> © 2001 The Washington Post Company </CENTER></P>
Michael Dickey x10883
EST Reactive Engineer