FILTERS
- Age Discrimination
- Disability Discrimination
- Diversity in Employment
- Diversity in the General Counsel’s Office
- Enforcement of Non-Discrimination Laws
- Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA)
- Gender Identity & Sexual Orientation Discrimination
- Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA)
- Race and National Origin Discrimination
- Religious Discrimination & Accommodation
- Retaliation
- Sex Discrimination
- Veterans Discrimination
- Academic Freedom & Employee Speech
- Background Checks & Employee Verification
- Collective Bargaining
- Diversity in Employment
- Employee Benefits
- Employee Discipline & Due Process
- Employee Sexual Misconduct
- Employment of Foreign Nationals
- Employment Separation, RIFs, ERIPs & Retrenchment
- Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) & Categorization of Employees
- Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA)
- Intellectual Property
- Reproductive Health Issues
- Research
- Retaliation
- Tenure
- Veterans & Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act (USERRA)
- Diversity in the General Counsel’s Office
- Ethical Obligations of Higher Education Lawyers
- Evaluation of Operations & Staff in the General Counsel’s Office
- External Counsel
- Law Office Management
- Law Office Technology
- Law Office Training
- Roles & Responsibilities of the General Counsel
- Wellness & Stress Management
- Academic Performance and Misconduct
- Admissions
- Distressed & Suicidal Students
- Financial Aid, Scholarships, & Student Loans
- Hazing
- Internships, Externships, & Clinical Work
- Student Athlete Issues
- Student Conduct
- Student Housing
- Student Organizations
- Student Speech & Campus Unrest
- Title IX & Student Sexual Misconduct
- Uncategorized
Latest Cases & Developments
Date:
Tirrell and Turmelle v. Edelblut (D. N.H. Feb. 12, 2025)
Second Amended Complaint. Plaintiffs, transgender female high school student athletes, challenged a New Hampshire statute, HB 1205, claiming it violated Title IX because it discriminated on the basis of sex, when it defined “sex” as a student’s biological sex at birth and mandated that “[a]thletic teams or sports designated for females, women, or girls shall not be open to students of the male sex,” thereby excluding transgender females from participation in women’s sports. Plaintiffs also challenged the January 20, 2025, Executive Order, “Defending Women from Gender Ideology Extremism and Restoring Biological Truth to the Federal Government,” and the February 5, 2025, Executive Order, “Keeping Men Out of Women’s Sports,” as facially discriminatory on the basis of sex in violation of Title IX, and as unconstitutional in violation of the Equal Protection clauses of the Fourteenth and Fifth Amendments and the separation of powers in Articles I and II of the U.S. Constitution.
Topics:
Athletics & Sports | Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Gender Equity in Athletics | Gender Identity & Sexual Orientation DiscriminationDate:
Dear Colleague Letter: U.S. Department of Education to Enforce 2020 Title IX Rule Protecting Women (Jan. 31, 2025)
U.S. Department of Education, Office for Civil Rights Dear Colleague Letter re: Enforcement of the 2020 Title IX Rules. The Letter states the binding regulatory framework for Title IX enforcement includes the principles and provisions of the 2020 Title IX Rule, 34 C.F.R. 106, and excludes and vacates the 2024 Title IX Rule. Pursuant to the Letter, open Title IX investigations initiated under the 2024 Title IX Rule should be immediately reoriented to comport fully with the requirements of the 2020 Title IX Rule. The Letter also states that Title IX must be enforced consistent with President Donald J. Trump’s January 20, 2025, Executive Order: “Defending Women from Gender Ideology Extremism and Restoring Biological Truth to the Federal Government.” Resources pertaining to Title IX and the 2020 Title IX rule can be found here.
Topics:
Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Gender Identity & Sexual Orientation Discrimination | Students | Title IX & Student Sexual MisconductDate:
Department of Defense Memorandum on Restoring America’s Fighting Force (Jan. 29, 2025)
The U.S. Department of Defense (the Department) published a Memorandum for Senior Pentagon Leadership titled: “Restoring America’s Fighting Force.” The Memorandum states that diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) policies, as defined in the January 27, 2025, Executive Order are incompatible with the values of the Department and the Department will strive to provide merit-based, color-blind, equal opportunities to Service members but will neither guarantee nor strive for equal outcomes. The Memorandum was published in accordance with Executive Order: “Restoring America’s Fighting Force” which formally prohibited any preference or disadvantage for any individual or a group within the Armed Forces on the basis of sex, race, or ethnicity. Additionally, the Memorandum states that the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness (USD(P&R)) will establish a Task Force to oversee the elimination of any program, element, or initiative that was established to promote “divisive concepts” as defined in Executive Order 13950 of September 2020 (“Combating Race and Sex Stereotyping”), or “gender ideology” as defined in Executive Order of January 2025 (“Defending Women from Gender Ideology Extremism and Restoring Biological Truth to the Federal Government”). The Task Force will report on actions taken by the Department to terminate DEI initiatives by March 1, 2025, and issue a final report on June 1, 2025.
Topics:
Admissions | Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Gender Identity & Sexual Orientation Discrimination | Race and National Origin Discrimination | StudentsDate:
Protecting Children from Chemical and Surgical Mutilation (Jan. 28, 2025)
Executive Order: “Protecting Children from Chemical and Surgical Mutilation.” This Executive Order directs that “it is the policy of the United States that it will not fund, sponsor, promote, assist, or support the … ‘transition’ of a child from one sex to another” and that the Federal government “will rigorously enforce all laws that prohibit or limit these … life-altering procedures.” The EO (1) denounces the World Professional Association for Transgender Health’s “Standards of Care Version 8” guidelines for gender-affirming care for minors; (2) directs the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) to both “publish a review of the existing literature on best practices for promoting the health of children” and “withdraw HHS’s March 2, 2022, guidance document titled ‘HHS Notice and Guidance on Gender Affirming Care, Civil Rights and Patient Privacy;’” and (3) instructs “[t]he head of each executive department or agency [] that provides research or education grants to medical institutions, including medical schools and hospitals, shall, consistent with applicable law and in coordination with the Director of the Office of Management and Budget, immediately take appropriate steps to ensure that institutions receiving Federal research or education grants end the chemical and surgical mutilation of children.”
Topics:
Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Employee Benefits | Faculty & Staff | Gender Identity & Sexual Orientation Discrimination | Health Care & Insurance | Sex DiscriminationDate:
Department of Education Overview of the Law Webpage Updated Following the Vacating of the 2024 Rule (Jan. 14, 2025)
The U.S. Department of Education (the Department) updated its resource page on Title IX following the January 9, 2025, court order vacating the 2024 Final Rule. The page notes that “on January 9, 2025, a federal district court issued a decision vacating the 2024 Final Rule. Consistent with the court’s order, the 2024 Title IX regulations and these resources are not effective in any jurisdiction.” No new resources have been posted; the 2020 amendments are available on the webpage, along with additional information and technical assistance.
Topics:
Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Gender Identity & Sexual Orientation Discrimination | Students | Title IX & Student Sexual MisconductDate:
Tenn. v. Cardona (E.D. Ky. Jan. 9, 2025)
Order granting Plaintiffs’ Motion for Summary Judgment and denying Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment. Plaintiffs, the states of Kentucky, Virginia, Indiana, Tennessee, and West Virginia, along with plaintiff intervenor Christian Educators Association International and A.C., by her mother, sued the U.S. Department of Education (the Department) challenging the Title IX Final Rule and its corresponding regulations, and alleged the regulations are invalid, the Department exceeded its lawful authority in implementing them, and that the regulations are otherwise contrary to law. In finding that the Department exceeded its statutory authority and relying on the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) in its reasoning, the court wrote “there is nothing in the text or statutory design of Title IX to suggest that discrimination ‘on the basis of sex’ means anything other than it has since Title IX’s inception–that recipients of federal funds under Title IX may not treat a person worse than another similarly-situated individual on the basis of the person’s sex, i.e., male or female.” Finding that the Final Rule and its corresponding regulations exceeded the Department’s authority, and violate the Constitution, the court granted plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment, and denied the Department’s motion for summary judgment, ultimately barring the Final Rule from being enforced nationwide.
Topics:
Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Gender Identity & Sexual Orientation Discrimination | Students | Title IX & Student Sexual MisconductDate:
Slusser v. The Mountain West Conference (D. Colo. Nov. 25, 2024)
Order denying Emergency Motion for Preliminary Injunction. Plaintiffs, several student athletes and participants in the Mountain West Conference (MWC), sought emergency injunctive relief against the MWC and its Commissioner regarding the MWC’s “Transgender Participation Policy” (TPP) and San José State University’s rostering of an alleged transgender woman on its women’s volleyball team, asserting violation of Title IX, the Fourteenth Amendment, and First Amendment. Plaintiff-Intervenor University of Utah also joined in the claim that the TPP violates Title IX. Specifically, plaintiffs were requesting that the court require the MWC to “(1) rescind the TPP; (2) flip the wins granted [to the University] and the losses accorded forfeiting teams; (3) recalculate the teams’ standings; and (4) enjoin [the University] from continuing to roster its alleged trans teammate and prohibit her from playing in the upcoming tournament.” The request for injunction followed a slew of forfeits from teams scheduled to play against the University’s women’s volleyball team after news of the alleged transgender player on the team and the public acknowledgment of MWC’s TPP. In denying the motion for injunction the court found plaintiffs failed to meet their burden of showing irreparable harm, as the alleged harm had already occurred, accounting for the fact the team member in question has been part of the team since 2022. Further, the court noted that plaintiffs’ delay in filing the action until two weeks prior to the commencement of the MWC Tournament weakened their argument regarding irreparable harm. Additionally, the court found that plaintiffs failed to meet their burden to establish a likelihood of success on the merits with respect to their Title IX claims, Equal Protection claims, and First Amendment claims, explaining that the TPP has been in place since 2022, and schools that chose to forfeit their matches against the University during the 2024 season expressly acknowledged their understanding and application of the TPP, without protest.
Topics:
Athletics & Sports | Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Gender Equity in Athletics | Gender Identity & Sexual Orientation Discrimination | Student Athlete Issues | StudentsDate:
Zhornitsky v. Yale Sch. of Med. (D. Conn. Nov. 25, 2024)
Granting in part and denying in part Defendant Yale’s Motion to Dismiss. Plaintiff, a male former doctor for Yale University School of Medicine, brought claims of gender discrimination and retaliation under Title VII, as well as a Title IX due process violation against the University, alleging it discriminated against him on the basis of sex. Plaintiff also initially asserted but later abandoned claims for breach of contract and intentional infliction of emotional distress. While jointly employed by the University and working at the Connecticut Mental Health Center (the Center), plaintiff sent multiple private messages to a colleague via Instagram, which she did not respond to. When the colleague complained and requested that plaintiff be advised not to contact her again, Yale initiated a Title IX investigation into the communications but found no violation, and plaintiff ceased communicating with her directly. Subsequently, the female coworker filed a second Title IX complaint, which Yale also investigated, and again, found no violation. Later, the female colleague saw plaintiff – whose job duties included taking blood and urine samples from patients – waiting outside a patient room on the same floor of the Center where she worked, which prompted her to file a third complaint. While Yale investigated the third complaint, the Center banned plaintiff from entering its facilities despite confirmation from plaintiff’s supervisor that he had been present on the second floor of the Center pursuant to his job duties. Eventually, the Center lifted its ban, and plaintiff returned to work. The female colleague was notified of plaintiff’s return to the Center and expressed concern about potential future interactions with plaintiff. Yale took no immediate action in response to this new expression of concern from the colleague. Two months later, and allegedly one day after Yale was notified that plaintiff had filed a charge of discrimination with the Connecticut Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities (CHRO), Yale initiated a fourth Title IX investigation. Plaintiff claims he sought to file a cross complaint against the female coworker, but Yale declined to permit him to do so since she was neither a University employee nor student. Plaintiff claims that the fourth investigation exceeded the scope of the female colleague’s most recent articulation of concern, disregarded the conclusions of the trio of prior of Title IX investigations, and improperly considered his initial direct messages to the coworker. Since the fourth investigation found he engaged in sexually harassing conduct, plaintiff was “suspended, banned from his work location and forced out of his employment with Yale.” The court allowed his discrimination claims to proceed, reasoning that “[a] Title IX proceeding could not have been properly brought against [p]laintiff because all prior complaints against him had been found either to be unsubstantiated or not rising to the level of sexual harassment or stalking.” It also permitted the retaliation claims to move forward based upon the alleged procedural irregularity of Yale’s disallowance of a crossclaim by plaintiff, and the temporal proximity between plaintiff’s filing of a CHRO complaint and initiation of Yale’s fourth Title IX investigation into plaintiff. Plaintiff’s due process claims were dismissed as duplicative of his claims of discrimination.
Topics:
Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Gender Identity & Sexual Orientation Discrimination | Retaliation | Students | Title IX & Student Sexual MisconductDate:
Kansas v. U.S. Dep’t of Ed. (D. Kan. Nov. 12, 2024)
Notice of supplemental list of schools attended by plaintiffs. This notice of additional schools follows plaintiffs’ pending challenge to the 2024 Title IX Final Rule from the U.S. Department of Education, which they claim impermissibly defined “sex discrimination” to include discrimination on the basis of gender identity. The enumerated institutions, which are attended by members or children of members of plaintiff organizations Young America Foundation and Moms for Liberty, span the P-20 spectrum and addend the ongoing preliminary injunction against implementation of the Rule including in the prior 26-page Notice of List of Colleges & Universities by Young America’s Foundation and Female Athletes United.
Topics:
Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Gender Identity & Sexual Orientation Discrimination | Students | Title IX & Student Sexual MisconductDate:
Hunter v. U.S. Dep’t of Educ. (9th Cir. Aug. 30, 2024)
Opinion and Judgment affirming the District Court’s dismissal of all claims and denial of leave to amend. Plaintiffs, LGBTQ+ students who applied to, currently attend, or previously attended religious institutions that receive federal funding, brought multiple constitutional claims against the U.S. Department of Education challenging the Department’s application of the religious exemption in Title IX. On appeal, the Ninth Circuit affirmed the district court’s dismissal of Plaintiffs’ APA claim for lack of Article III standing and the Fifth Amendment equal protection and First Amendment Establishment Clause claims for failure to state a claim. The Circuit reasoned that Plaintiffs lacked standing to challenge the Rule’s removal of the requirement that schools submit a letter to qualify for a religious exemption under Title IX since the Department never previously denied any institution’s assertion that it was religious in nature, and thus this change did not increase the likelihood that schools would permissibly discriminate against students but “only … deprived the Plaintiffs of advance notice that their schools could … discriminate against them.” The Ninth Circuit held that the exemption does not violate the Establishment Clause as it “substantially relates to the achievement of limiting government interference with the free exercise of religion,” and further did not run afoul of the Fifth Amendment’s guarantee of Equal Protection. In analyzing the former claim, the Circuit found that although the district court erred in applying the Lemon test, such error was not invited by Plaintiffs sufficient to invoke the invited error doctrine, and that the lower court should have considered the “historical practices and understandings” underlying the Establishment Clause.
Topics:
Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Gender Identity & Sexual Orientation Discrimination
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.