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Latest Cases & Developments
Date:
Clary v. Pennsylvania State Univ., et al. (M.D. Pa. Dec. 2, 2025)
Opinion Granting in Part Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss. Plaintiff, a former student-athlete and member of the men’s basketball team at Pennsylvania State University, brought defamation claims against the university and its head basketball coach based on a series of statements allegedly made by the coach concerning plaintiff’s departure from the team. The court held that plaintiff had sufficiently stated a defamation claim against the coach based on the coach’s statements that (1) plaintiff had refused to return to the university because his father was “after more money”; and (2) plaintiff “decided himself” that he was going to leave the university. In both instances, the court found it “reasonable to infer . . . that [the coach’s] statements caused financial harm to [plaintiff] by harming his reputation and forcing him to attend a less prestigious university.” However, the court dismissed plaintiff’s claims regarding other statements made by the coach, finding the allegations lacked necessary details as to the content, audience, and timing of the statements. The court also dismissed plaintiff’s defamation claims against the university, finding no basis to impose vicarious liability since plaintiff had failed to show the coach’s statements were made within the scope of his employment or with the purpose of serving the university.
Topics:
Compliance & Risk Management | Litigation, Mediation & Arbitration | Student Athlete Issues | Students | Tort LitigationDate:
EducationCounsel Executive Summary and Analysis on DOJ Civil Rights Guidance (Aug. 13, 2025)
Executive summary of EducationCounsel analysis of the Department of Justice (DOJ) non-binding guidance issued on July 29th, 2025. The summary states EducationCounsel’s conclusion that “while some portions of DOJ’s guidance reflect current law, others misstate or overreach, creating a real risk of chilling lawful practices designed to ensure equal opportunity for all.” Specifically, the analysis centers on the following contended outcomes of the guidance: (i) delegitimizing efforts to address discrimination; (ii) delegitimizing federal court-endorsed diversity, equity & inclusion interests; (iii) delegitimizing lawful race-neutral means that advance diversity, equity & inclusion goals; and (iv) misguiding the field through misleading examples.
Topics:
Admissions | Athletics & Sports | Compliance & Risk Management | Compliance Programs, Policies & Procedures | Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Diversity in Employment | Faculty & Staff | Gender Equity in Athletics | Gender Identity & Sexual Orientation Discrimination | Race and National Origin Discrimination | Sex Discrimination | StudentsDate:
EducationCounsel Alert on DOJ “DEI” Programs, ESSA Waivers, and the Bipartisan FY26 Education Funding Bill (Aug. 6, 2025)
EducationCounsel published a comprehensive review of recent updates on (i) the Department of Justice issuing guidance on DEI programs; (ii) efforts by the Department of Education to invite states to apply for broad Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) waivers; and (iii) the Senate Appropriations Committee voted to approve the Bipartisan FY26 Education Funding Bill.
Topics:
Admissions | Athletics & Sports | Compliance & Risk Management | Compliance Programs, Policies & Procedures | Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Diversity in Employment | Faculty & Staff | Gender Equity in Athletics | Gender Identity & Sexual Orientation Discrimination | Race and National Origin Discrimination | Sex Discrimination | StudentsDate:
Department of Justice Memorandum for Federal Funding Recipients Regarding Unlawful Discrimination (Jul. 30, 2025)
The Department of Justice (“DOJ” or the Department) released new guidance clarifying that entities receiving federal funding must comply with federal antidiscrimination laws, regardless of whether their policies are labeled as Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) initiatives. The guidance emphasized that using protected characteristics such as race, sex, religion, or national origin to provide advantages or impose disadvantages are generally prohibited. The guidance provides a detailed, non-exhaustive list of policies and practices the DOJ considers unlawful. These include programs that grant preferential treatment based on protected characteristics, such as scholarships or internships reserved for a specific racial group based on “geographic targeting,” hiring or promotion practices that prioritize “underrepresented” candidates, and segregated facilities or resources. The guidance also targets facially neutral policies that function as proxies for protected characteristics; such, requiring job applicants to demonstrate “cultural competence, “lived experience,” or submit “diversity statements” in ways that advantage individuals based on race or sex. Similarly, recruitment efforts that target specific geographic areas or institutions for their demographic makeup are flagged as potentially unlawful. While the guidance generally prohibited sex-based separation, it includes a notable exception for sex-separated athletic competitions and intimate spaces, warning that allowing males, “including those self-identifying as women”, to access female-only restrooms, locker rooms, or teams may violate Title IX and create a hostile environment under Title VII. The guidance also criticized the use of protected characteristics in selection processes, such as “diverse slate” hiring mandates, contract awards based on race or sex, and program participation quotas tied to demographic categories. The Department also prohibits trainings that stereotype, exclude, or penalize participants based on protected traits; for instance, programs that frame “white privilege” or “toxic masculinity” as inherent characteristics are unlawful. The DOJ concludes by offering a set of recommended best practices aimed at minimizing legal risk: using neutral, merit-based selection criteria, avoiding demographic quotas, documenting legitimate rationales behind institutional decision making, analyzing facially neutral criteria for discriminatory effects, and using nondiscrimination clauses in contracts with third parties. The guidance further affirmed that individuals who refuse to participate in or object to potentially discriminatory programs are protected from retaliation. The DOJ urged all federal funding recipients to review and revise any discriminatory policies to avoid legal liability and loss of funding.
Topics:
Admissions | Athletics & Sports | Compliance & Risk Management | Compliance Programs, Policies & Procedures | Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Diversity in Employment | Faculty & Staff | Gender Equity in Athletics | Gender Identity & Sexual Orientation Discrimination | Race and National Origin Discrimination | Sex Discrimination | StudentsDate:
ACE Letter in Response to OMB RIF Seeking Ideas for Deregulation (May 12, 2025)
The American Council on Education (ACE) sent a letter to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) regarding the request for information on areas for deregulation across the federal government. The letter states that while many federal regulations serve a valuable role in promoting accountability, transparency, and student success, there are examples of regulations that are duplicative, redundant, or poorly targeted, which increase burden and cost to colleges and universities. The letter refers to a report on federal regulation of higher education that the higher education community put together in 2015 regarding burdensome regulations. In addition to the guiding principles that set forth in the 2015 report, the letter suggests regulations that are clear, comprehensible, and related to education, student safety, and stewardship of federal funds; clear safe harbors; recognition of good faith efforts by institutions; timely program reviews and investigations; appropriate penalties; and all substantive police should be subject to the “notice-and-comment” requirements of the Administrative Procedure Act. It concludes by calling on the Trump Administration to delay or provide additional information regarding regulations that were established by the Biden Administration but have not yet been fully implemented, such as the Department of Justice Final Rule on “Nondiscrimination on the Basis of Disability; Accessibility of Web Information and Services of State and Local Government Agencies” and the Department of Education Final Rule on “Financial Value Transparency and Gainful Employment.”
Topics:
Compliance & Risk Management | Compliance Programs, Policies & ProceduresDate:
U.S. Dept. of Education, Office for Civil Rights Annual Report (Dec. 20, 2024)
Annual Report of the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) for fiscal year 2024. The Report detailed an 18% increase in complaints received over FY 2023, which is the highest number per annum. It recounted OCR’s publication of a record-high of 23 policy resources addressing race and national origin discrimination, sex discrimination, and disability rights, and its 36% increase in case resolutions. Finally, the Report summarized data on Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests, Civil Rights Data from the 2020-21 school year, and issuance of the 2024 Title IX Final Rule.
Topics:
Compliance & Risk Management | Discrimination, Accommodation, & DiversityDate:
Rageh v. Univ. of N.C. (M.D. N.C. Dec. 10, 2024)
Memorandum Opinion and Order granting in part and denying in part Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss. Plaintiff, a medical doctor, over the age of forty, and of Egyptian national origin alleged that during his ophthalmology fellowship at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the University discriminated against him and retaliated against him based on his national origin and age, under Title VII and the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA). Plaintiff also brought claims for defamation per se, breach of contract, negligent or intentional infliction of emotional distress, interference with contractual relations, tortious interference with prospective economic advantage, and wrongful discharge in violation of public policy (hereinafter referred to as state law claims). Plaintiff was in a two-year fellowship at the University to receive training in ophthalmology. During his time in the program, he alleged one of his supervising physicians mocked his accent, criticized him for mispronunciation, and frequently allowed younger residents to participate in operations more than him. Plaintiff alleges the same supervising physician refused to work with him after expressing unjustified concerns about plaintiff’s skills and issues with patient safety, and after plaintiff brought his concerns to a supervisor, he alleges he was retaliated against when the University shortened his fellowship to one year. Plaintiff filed a charge with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), and alleges the University subsequently terminated his fellowship. Plaintiff contends that he was informed by the University’s fellowship director that he was terminated because he filed the EEOC complaint, and the fellowship director informed plaintiff’s potential employers and state licensing boards that plaintiff was relieved from seeing patients due to safety concerns. The court allowed the ADEA claim, and Title VII claim based on denial of training opportunities to proceed, based on plaintiff’s allegations that (1) he was over forty years old during the fellowship, (2) the supervising physician provided him with fewer training opportunities than younger residents, (3) the supervising physician expressed concerns about plaintiff’s age to the fellowship director before plaintiff’s fellowship had even started, and (4) plaintiff’s position as a protected class member. However, the court found plaintiff failed to allege facts supporting his claim that his fellowship was shortened and then terminated due to either his age or his national origin, and as such, it dismissed the ADEA and Title VII claims related to the addended length and subsequent termination of the fellowship. It denied the University’s motion to dismiss plaintiff’s retaliation claims, finding plaintiff’s claim that the fellowship director informed him that he was terminated because of his EEOC filing was sufficient to give rise to a plausible inference of retaliation. The court dismissed plaintiff’s state law claims against the University, but allowed the defamation per se claim to proceed against the fellowship director based on the allegation that the director informed plaintiff’s prospective employers that he was terminated due to patient safety concerns. For the same reason, the court permitted the interference with prospective economic advantage claim to proceed. Finally, the court allowed plaintiff to proceed with his wrongful interference with employment contract based on both the fellowship director and supervising physician’s purported knowledge of his employment contract, alleged false allegations made by the supervising physician about plaintiff’s skills with intent to induce the University to breach the contract, and the fellowship director’s steps to allegedly induce the University to breach it’s employment contract with plaintiff based on his filing with the EEOC.
Topics:
Compliance & Risk Management | Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Race and National Origin Discrimination | RetaliationDate:
U.S. Dep’t of Education Approval for Continued Use of Tests with National Reporting System for Adult Education (NRS) (Dec. 12, 2024)
The U.S. Department of Education announced that current approved tests with the National Reporting System for Adult Education (NRS), which were originally set to expire on February 5, 2025, may continue to be used in the NRS during a sunset period through June 30, 2035. Specifically, the Comprehensive Adult Student Assessment System (CASAS) reading GOALS series; forms 901, 902, 903, 904, 905, 906, 907, and 908 are all approved for continued use.
Topics:
Compliance & Risk Management | Compliance Programs, Policies & ProceduresDate:
U.S. Dep’t of Homeland Security (DHS) Finalized H-1B Visa Rule (Dec. 18, 2024)
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) finalized a rule on H-1B visas, allowing U.S. employers to temporarily employ foreign workers in specialty occupations, including international student graduates. Specifically, the rule will allow nonprofits where research is deemed as a fundamental activity to be exempt from the current H-1B caps. Additionally, the final rule codifies DHS’ current practice, allowing the agency to defer to a prior decision on status if it involves the same employer, employee, via classification and appointment, and extends employment authorization to F-1 students who have submitted an H-1B petition to avoid disruptions in their employment authorization.
Topics:
Compliance & Risk Management | Compliance Programs, Policies & Procedures | Immigration | International Students
NACUA Annual Conference
Join us in the Music City June 29 – July 2 to connect, learn, and lead alongside higher education attorneys shaping policy, practice, and impact nationwide together.