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108th CONGRESS
1st Session
S. RES. 153
Expressing the sense of the Senate that changes to athletics policies
issued under title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 would
contradict the spirit of athletic equality and the intent to prohibit
sex discrimination in education programs or activities receiving
Federal financial assistance.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
May 22, 2003
Mrs. Murray (for herself, Ms. Snowe, Mr. Daschle, and Mr. Kennedy)
submitted the following resolution; which was referred to the Committee
on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
Expressing the sense of the Senate that changes to athletics policies
issued under title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 would
contradict the spirit of athletic equality and the intent to prohibit
sex discrimination in education programs or activities receiving
Federal financial assistance.
Whereas title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 (20 U.S.C. 1681 et seq.),
also known as the ``Patsy Takemoto Mink Equal Opportunity in Education
Act'' (referred to in this resolution as ``title IX''), prohibits
education programs or activities, including athletic programs or
activities, that receive Federal financial assistance from
discriminating on the basis of sex;
Whereas prior to 1972 and the enactment of title IX, virtually no college
offered athletic scholarships to women, fewer than 32,000 women
participated in collegiate sports, and women's sports received only 2
percent of college athletic dollars;
Whereas the regulation implementing title IX was submitted to Congress, multiple
hearings were held, and the regulation became effective July 21, 1975,
with specific provisions governing athletic programs and the awarding of
athletic scholarships;
Whereas according to the Department of Education's 1979 Policy Interpretation,
which interprets the application of title IX and its implementing
regulations to athletics, an educational institution may demonstrate
compliance with title IX's requirement that it allocate athletic
participation opportunities on a nondiscriminatory basis to male and
female athletes by meeting 1 of the criteria in a 3-part test, by
demonstrating--
(1) that intercollegiate level participation opportunities for male and
female students are provided in numbers substantially proportionate to
their respective enrollments at the institution;
(2) a history and continuing practice of program expansion responsive
to the developing interests and abilities of members of the
underrepresented athletes' sex; or
(3) that the interests and abilities of the members of the
underrepresented athletes' sex have been fully and effectively accommodated
by the present program;
Whereas the 1979 Policy Interpretation and its 3-part test have been in place
for over 2 decades and have been supported by both Republican and
Democratic administrations;
Whereas 2 out of 3 educational institutions comply with the second or third
criterion of the 3-part test;
Whereas the Office for Civil Rights of the Department of Education issued a
Clarification of Intercollegiate Athletics Policy Guidance in 1996
regarding the 3-part test--
(1) confirming that educational institutions can comply with title IX's
requirement of nondiscriminatory allocation of athletic participation
opportunities by meeting any single part of the 3-part test;
(2) setting out specific examples for compliance to guide the
institutions; and
(3) confirming that there are no strict numerical formulas for
determining title IX compliance;
Whereas the 1979 Policy Interpretation and the 1996 clarification provide
educational institutions with ample and fair guidance on compliance with
title IX and provide flexibility to the institutions so that they may
determine for themselves how best to comply with the law;
Whereas the enforcement mechanism of title IX, the 3-part test, has been upheld
as legal and valid by each of the 8 United States Courts of Appeals to
consider it;
Whereas since the beginning of title IX implementation, men's participation in
intercollegiate sports has increased from 220,178 to 231,866, and
women's participation in those sports has increased from 31,852 to
162,783, an increase of more than 400 percent;
Whereas the number of girls participating in athletics at the high school
varsity level has increased from 294,015 in 1972 to 2,784,154 in 2001,
an 847 percent increase;
Whereas sex discrimination in athletics persists, despite the strides made under
title IX, with, for example, female athletes receiving only 42 percent
of the college athletic participation opportunities nationwide, even
though female students make up 56 percent of the college population, and
female athletes receiving $133,000,000 fewer athletic scholarship
dollars per year than their male counterparts;
Whereas nothing in title IX or its policies requires educational institutions to
reduce men's athletic participation opportunities to come into
compliance with participation requirements and 72 percent of colleges
and universities that have added women's teams have done so without
cutting any teams for men;
Whereas recommendations made by the Commission on Opportunity in Athletics for
changes to the athletics policies issued under title IX would seriously
weaken title IX's protections and result in significant losses in
athletic participation opportunities and scholarships to which women and
girls are entitled under current law; and
Whereas those recommended changes to the title IX athletics policies would allow
an educational institution that fails to equally accommodate its male
and female students to be in compliance with title IX without having to
fully demonstrate that discrimination does not exist in the
institution's athletic programs: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That it is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) changes to athletics policies issued under title IX
would contradict the spirit and intent of title IX's mandate to
provide equal opportunities in athletics;
(2) the current title IX athletics policies, namely, the
1975 regulations issued under title IX, and the 1979 Policy
Interpretation, as clarified in the 1996 Clarification of
Intercollegiate Athletics Policy Guidance, should remain
unchanged and be enforced vigorously to eliminate the
continuing discrimination against women and girls in athletics;
and
(3) if the Department of Education changes the current
title IX athletics policies, Congress will respond with
legislation to restore the policies and preserve the right to
equal opportunities in athletics, as mandated by title IX.
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