Public Justice filed a
federal lawsuit against
Florida Gulf Coast University on Friday, charging that the school is
retaliating against and defaming an accomplished athletic coach
because she expressed concern that FGCU is violating a federal law
designed to ensure gender equity in education.
The lawsuit stands on
Title IX - the same law that Coach Jaye Flood said the university is
flouting - and notes "a continuing series of retaliatory acts"
against Flood, the most successful coach in FGCU history and this
year's Atlantic Sun Conference "Coach of the Year."
In response to Flood's
advocacy of gender equity in the university's athletic department,
the complaint charges, the university berated Flood's job
performance, placed her on probation and administrative leave,
denied her a salary raise and bonus, and announced her contract will
not be renewed when it expires this summer. The school also "made
defamatory statements intended to damage her professional
reputation," the suit says.
"Rather than treat
our complaints about the athletic program seriously and
respectfully, the university has been picking off female coaches one
by one," Flood said. "It's really for everyone that I'm taking this
action because this unfairness has to stop."
Public Justice
Attorney Adele Kimmel said Title IX
of the Civil Rights Act prohibits policies, practices and programs
at federally funded educational institutions that discriminate on
the basis of gender.
"FGCU has responded
to complaints that it is violating Title IX by taking retaliatory
actions that further violate Title IX," said Kimmel. "Coach Flood
should be lauded for advocating gender equity in FGCU's athletic
program, not pilloried."
The complaint, filed
in the Fort Myers Division of U.S. District Court, notes that the
university is conducting a series of investigations aimed at Coach
Flood, but has not fully informed the coach about either the
underlying basis for the probes or the findings.
Coach Flood took the
FGCU volleyball program from a fledging in the NCAA's Division II to
a Division I tournament contender. In raising concerns about Title
IX compliance at the school, she had pointed out disparities between
men and women's athletic programs in marketing, donations,
facilities and staffing.
"University officials
have spent their energies working to discredit and damage a highly
successful and dedicated coach who cares deeply that all of the
school's athletes and coaches have an equal opportunity to succeed,"
said Public Justice lead counsel Linda Correia, a partner of
Webster, Fredrickson, Henrichsen, Correia & Puth, P.L.L.C. in
Washington, D.C.lead counsel in the case. "Coach Flood is filing
this lawsuit to ensure that the promise of Title IX becomes a
reality for everyone at FGCU."
Public
Justice has successfully prosecuted more Title IX litigation against
universities and colleges than any law firm in the country,
including landmark suits against Brown
University and Temple University.
In November 2005, its threat of a Title IX suit prompted Florida A & M
University to reinstate its women's swimming and
diving teams. At its 25th Anniversary Celebration last fall in
Washington, DC, Billie Jean King lauded Public Justice for its
extraordinary work and accomplishments advancing equal rights.
To view the complaint,
click here.
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