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  • Date:

    Tarrant Cnty. Coll. Dist. v. Chavez (Tex. App. Oct. 9, 2025)

    Memorandum Opinion Affirming the Denial of Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss. Plaintiff-Appellee, a former employee at Tarrant County Community College District, sued the college for sex discrimination and retaliation under the Texas Commission on Human Rights Act (TCHRA) after he filed a complaint alleging misandrist comments from female co-workers and was subsequently terminated for violating a college policy prohibiting the recording of conversations of other employees without their consent. The college brought a motion to dismiss, but  the trial court denied the motion finding plaintiff-appellee had raised a genuine issue of material fact over whether the college had violated the TCHRA. On appeal, the court affirmed the trial court’s ruling, holding that because plaintiff-appellee provided some evidence that he was treated less favorably than a similarly situated female employee, who was allowed to remain in her position despite violating the same college policy, he met his “minimal initial burden” to state a prima facie case of discrimination. The court further held that allowing the female employee to remain in her position, even after committing the “stated-terminable offense” raised a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the college’s stated reason for terminating plaintiff-appellee was pretextual.  

    Topics:

    Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Retaliation | Sex Discrimination

  • Date:

    Saud v. DePaul Univ. (7th Cir. Oct. 8, 2025)

    Opinion Affirming Summary Judgment. Plaintiff, a former adjunct professor at DePaul University, brought a racial discrimination claim under 42 U.S.C. §1981, after the university deemed him ineligible for future employment following a campus Title IX investigation found he had sexually harassed a student. The district court granted summary judgment for the university, finding that the plaintiff had failed to raise a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the university had discriminated against the plaintiff. The 7th circuit affirmed, holding that “[s]exual misconduct is a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for an adverse employment action” and that the plaintiff had failed to establish that the university’s action was pretextual because he had failed to provide any evidence that the university did not “honestly believe[] it made the correct employment decision.”  

    Topics:

    Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Employee Sexual Misconduct | Race and National Origin Discrimination | Sex Discrimination

  • Date:

    Department of Energy Withdrawal of DFR on Regulations Related to Nondiscrimination on the Basis of Sex in Sports Programs (Sep. 10, 2025)

    The Department of Energy (the Department) withdrew its May 16, 2025 direct final rule (DFR) that rescinded a provision requiring recipients that sponsor sports teams for members of one sex to allow members of the opposite sex to try out. In deciding to withdraw the DFR, which had received more than 21,000 comments, the Department cited its decision to focus its limited resources on advancing other priorities. Additionally, the Department is extending the effective date of the DFR “Rescinding Regulations to Nondiscrimination on the Basis of Sex in Education Programs or Activities Receiving Federal Financial Assistance” until December 9, 2025.

    Topics:

    Athletics & Sports | Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Enforcement of Non-Discrimination Laws | Gender Equity in Athletics | Gender Identity & Sexual Orientation Discrimination | Sex Discrimination

  • Date:

    Bowei Xi v. The Trs. of Purdue Univ. (N.D. Ind. Sep. 8, 2025)

    Opinion Granting Summary Judgment. Plaintiff, a tenured professor at Purdue University, brought claims of discrimination and retaliation based on sex, race, and national origin after she was denied a promotion from associate to full professor. The university reasoned that plaintiff’s research record was not sufficient for a promotion and that plaintiff failed to provide any evidence of inconsistent treatment throughout the promotion application process. While plaintiff satisfied the first, third, and fourth prongs of the McDonnell Douglas test, the court agreed with the university that plaintiff was unable to satisfy the second prong of the test – i.e., that she was qualified for the promotion. Further, plaintiff failed to demonstrate that she was engaged in Title VII protected activity with regard to her retaliation claim, as her appeal of her application for promotion did not mention any form of discrimination. Finally, the court found that plaintiff did not show any evidence of an adverse action or causation.  

    Topics:

    Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Faculty & Staff | Race and National Origin Discrimination | Retaliation | Sex Discrimination | Tenure

  • Date:

    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 | Students

  • Date:

    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 | Students

  • Date:

    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 | Students

  • Date:

    United States v. Skrmetti (Jun. 18, 2025)

    Opinion Affirming the Judgment of the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth
    Circuit. Plaintiffs, several transgender teenagers, their parents, and a doctor challenged Tennessee Senate Bill 1 (SB1) under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, alleging that the law discriminates
    on the basis of sex because it bans certain treatments only when they are used to support gender transition, while permitting the same treatments for other medical purposes. SB1 prohibits all medical treatments
    intended to help a minor identify with gender inconsistent with their sex assigned at birth, or, to alleviate distress arising from the discordance. The District Court held in plaintiffs favor, finding that transgender
    individuals are a quasi-suspect class, as such the SB1 likely does violate the Equal Protection Clause, and issued a preliminary injunction blocking enforcement of the law. However, the Sixth Circuit reversed the
    District Court’s ruling, upholding the law and applying a “rational basis” review. Plaintiffs contend that this was legal error, and because SB1’s classification is based on sex, it should
    be subject to strict scrutiny rather than the rational basis review. Plaintiffs relied in part on Bostock v. Clayton County, contending that the law’s discriminatory effects on transgender minors
    trigger constitutional protections beyond what rational basis review allows. Upon granting certiorari, the Supreme Court was charged with answering whether SB1 violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth
    Amendment. In a 6-3 decision, the Court upheld the Sixth Circuit’s holding that SB1 is subject to a rational basis review and does not violate the Equal Protection Clause. While plaintiffs argue that SB1 is based
    on “sex-based classifications” and calls for strict scrutiny review, the Court found in the contrary and reasoned that SB1 “prohibits healthcare providers from administering puberty blockers and
    hormones to minors for certain medical uses, regardless of a minor’s sex.” The Court maintains that SB1 is incorporated by the classifications of age and medical use, but not sex. The
    Court acknowledged that SB1 makes reference to sex, but states that “the Court has never suggested that mere reference to sex is sufficient to trigger heightened scrutiny. And such an approach would be especially
    inappropriate in the medical context, where some treatments and procedures are uniquely bound up in sex.” In addressing plaintiffs’ citation to Bostock, the Court stated that it had “not
    yet considered whether Bostock’s reasoning reaches beyond the Title VII context, and [it] need not do so here.” The Court additionally rejected plaintiffs’ allegation and the District
    Court’s holding that the law discriminates on transgender people as a quasi-suspect class, noting that the Supreme Court has never held that transgender people are a suspect or quasi-suspect class. The Court
    further noted that “SB1 does not exclude any individual from medical treatments on the basis of transgender status. Rather, it removes one set of diagnoses—gender dysphoria, gender identity disorder,
    and gender incongruence—from the range of treatable conditions.” In response to plaintiffs’ argument that SB1 “enforces a government preference that people conform to expectations about their
    sex” the Court said that the verbiage reflects the state’s “legitimate, substantial, and compelling interest in protecting minors from physical and emotional harm” and plaintiffs have failed
    to acknowledge “the prohibited medical treatments are experimental, can lead to later regret, and are associated with harmful—and sometimes irreversible—risks.

    Topics:

    Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Gender Identity & Sexual Orientation Discrimination | Sex Discrimination

  • Date:

    Department of Energy Direct Final Rule on Regulations Related to Nondiscrimination on the Basis of Sex in Education Programs or Activities Receiving Federal Financial Assistance (May 16, 2025)

    U.S. Department of Energy (the Department) issued a Direct Final Rule (DFR) rescinding certain regulatory provisions related to nondiscrimination on the basis of sex in education programs or activities receiving federal financial assistance, based on its determination that the provisions are unnecessary. Specifically, the Department seeks rescission of paragraphs (b) through (d) of the regulation, titled “Remedial and affirmative action and self-evaluation.” The Department stated that the requirements were intended to be limited to evaluations conducted between February 20, 2001, to February 20, 2002, and are therefore “unnecessary.” The DFR takes effect July 15, 2025, “unless significant adverse comments are received” on or before June 16, 2025.  

    Topics:

    Athletics & Sports | Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Gender Equity in Athletics | Gender Identity & Sexual Orientation Discrimination | Sex Discrimination

  • Date:

    Zinski v. Liberty Univ. (W.D. Va. Feb. 21, 2025)

    Memorandum Opinion denying Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss. Plaintiff, a transgender female and former Liberty University information technology services employee, sued the University alleging sex-based employment discrimination in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e et seq. when she was terminated after her male to female transition. The University moved to dismiss Plaintiff’s complaint based on: (1) Sections 702 and 703 of Title VII; (2) the Religion Freedom Restoration Act (“RFRA”); (3) the ministerial exception; (4) the First Amendment freedom of expressive association; and (5) the ecclesiastical abstention doctrine. First, the court found that the University’s termination of Plaintiff did not qualify as an employment decision made on the basis “of a particular religion” that is exempted from Title VII under Sections 702 and 703 and concluded that alleged discrimination on the basis of transgender status is sex discrimination, even if religiously motivated. Second, the court adopted the majority rule that the plain language of RFRA applies to conduct by a governmental authority, and the EEOC’s issuance of a right to sue letter to Plaintiff does not otherwise convert a private party lawsuit into government action. Third, the court reasoned that although religious employers enjoy wide latitude as to “employees who[] hold a spiritual role and whose religious beliefs may press upon the faithful” the evidence at this stage of litigation did not support that Plaintiff’s role as an IT professional qualified for application of the ministerial exception as an affirmative defense. Fourth, the court agreed that “Liberty engages in protected First Amendment activity,” but found “any burden imposed by Title VII on Liberty’s expressive interest is minimal, such that rational basis review is satisfied, … Title VII stands constitutionally sound … [and] at this stage of litigation, Liberty cannot claim any expressive association defense to Title VII liability.” Finally, the court found the ecclesiastical doctrine inapplicable, rejecting the University’s position that Plaintiff’s complaint raises questions “concerning Liberty University’s interpretation and application of Scripture,” reasoning that the court was narrowly tasked with considering if Title VII “prohibits a religious institution from firing a transgender person, not whether a religious institution … has properly interpreted its religious doctrine when determining that a transgender person violates religious law.”  

    Topics:

    Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Gender Identity & Sexual Orientation Discrimination | Sex Discrimination