My VIPs for this week are the fifteen female collegiate swimmers and track/volleyball athletes who filed a lawsuit against the NCAA. They seek to force NCAA to stop allowing biological males from participating on women’s teams. The suit contends that the NCAA breached a federal law – Title IX – when they allowed biological males to compete against them in NCAA events. Valerie Hudson at The Deseret News wrote the following about Title IX and the new lawsuit.
The Civil Rights Act of 1964 almost did
not outlaw discrimination on the basis of sex. It was added to the other
prohibited types of discrimination (race, color, religion and national origin)
almost as an afterthought, and some even believe it was added in an attempt to
kill the bill. Just as the 19th Amendment was the great achievement
of the first wave of feminism, so this act, in addition to other legislation
passed around the same time such as the Equal Pay Act of 1963, was the great
achievement of the second wave of feminism. During the 1960s, sex
discrimination became official illegal in the United States.
Title IX was an update to the Civil Rights
Act, though formally passed as part of the 1972 amendments to the Higher Education
Act’s reauthorization. The Civil Rights Act had not explicitly mentioned
prohibiting sex discrimination in education, and Title IX was meant to close
that loophole. While Title IX does not even mention sports per se, its very
name is synonymous with opening the doors to school sports participation for
women, especially at the high school and collegiate level, because it mandated
equal opportunities for men and women in all educational programs.
Title
IX became the law after I graduated from high school. Therefore, I was not
blessed with the opportunity to represent my school in any sport. However, my
daughters and daughters-in-law had the opportunity to play on high school teams,
and one daughter played on a college team. Now my granddaughters are being
blessed by the opportunity to run on cross-country teams and to play on soccer
and basketball teams.
I
applaud the fifteen young women who are fighting for the right for all young
women to participate in sports for their high schools and universities.
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