A Case Study of the Intersection Between Policy, Law and ...

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Stetson University College of Law

26th Annual National Conferenceon Law and Higher Education

A Case Study of the Intersection Between Policy, Law and Science: Sex, Alcohol and Athletic Recruiting on College Campuses

Miriam J. McKendallFebruary 2005, Copyrighted

Miriam J. McKendall, Esq.Holland & Knight LLPBoston, MA 02116

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The Boston Globe, January 8, 2005, page A-13.

Which thinker is more highly valued by America’s institutions of higher learning?

POP QUIZ:

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The Stakeholder Model

Systematic Approach to Policy Development: Legal Perspective

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Government

Employees

Students

Contractors

Other

Faculty

Public

Stakeholders

•Parents•Alumni•Trustees•Bondholders

Educational Institution

Stakeholders

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Stakeholders’ Interests

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Government

Employees

Contractors

OtherPublic

•Education •Safe Environments•Residence •Privacy•Student Groups

•No Discrimination•Reasonable Accommodation•Health Services•Athletics•Constitutional rights

•Compensation•Livelihood•Safe Environment•Privacy•No Discrimination•ReasonableAccommodation

•Employee Interests – PLUS•Tenure•Academic Freedom•Intellectual Capital•Constitutional rights Students

Faculty

•“Deliverables”•Safe Environment•No Discrimination•Reasonable Accommodation

•“Deliverables”•Safe Environment•Contract Compliance

•Statute Compliance•Contract Compliance•Use of Funding•Conflict of Interest•Reporting

Stakeholder Interests

Educational Institution

•Financial Security•Reputation•Disclosures

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Sources of Legal Liability

• Statutory Violations

• Tort

• Breach of Contract

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Sources of Legal Liability

Title IX: No person shall be excluded from participation in, be denied benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving federal financial assistance

Statutory Violations

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Sources of Legal Liability

• Gebser v. Lago Vista (teacher to student)

• Davis v. Monroe (student to student)

• Holdings– Private right of action against funding

recipient under Title IX– Conduct so severe, pervasive and

objectively offensive so as to deprive victim access to educational opportunity based on gender

– Deliberate indifference by funding recipient with actual knowledge of conduct

Title IX and U.S. Supreme Court

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Sources of Legal Liability

• Control over harasser

• Control over context in which harassment occurs

• Knowledge of harassment

• Authority to take remedial action

• Caused student to undergo harassment

• Made student vulnerable to harassment

• No imposition of Title IX liability solely because of existence of bad conduct

Deliberate Indifference under Title IX

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Sources of Legal Liability

• Negligence

• Defamation, Slander, Libel

• Invasion of Privacy

• Infliction of Emotional Distress

Tort Claims

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Sources of Legal Liability

• Written or Implied Contract

• Failure to “Deliver” on Promises Made

• Failure to Follow Policies/Handbooks

Breach of Contract

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THE COLORADO REPORT

The Primary Lessons: Legal Perspective

Failure to view athletic programs incontext of “Stakeholder Model”

• Isolation of interests of athletic programs• Disregard of institutional structure• Disregard of multiple stakeholders• Disregard of legal liabilities• Lack of accountability• Lack of follow-through

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Successful Approaches to Policy Development

• Consistency

• Centralization

• Education

• Accountability

• Prevention

• Effectiveness

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– One standard of conduct for all students

– One disciplinary process for all students

Successful Approaches to Policy Development

• Consistency - Students

– One standard of conduct for all administrators

– One disciplinary process for all administrators

• Consistency - Administrators

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– Knowledge of behaviors– Knowledge of complaints– Knowledge of policies– Knowledge of investigation process– Knowledge of discipline process– Knowledge of sanctions– Knowledge of compliance– Knowledge of assessments

Successful Approaches to Policy Development

• Centralization

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– Those enforcing policies– Those with notice of conduct– Those causing conduct– Those subject to conduct– Those taking responsive action– Those needed for “buy-in”; lead by

example

Successful Approaches to Policy Development

• Education of expected standards of conduct

– Programs, discussion groups, speakers– Required readings– Community experience– Consequences

• Education about unacceptable conduct

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Successful Approaches to Policy Development

– Establish clear limitations

– Pre-emption precautions (“vulnerable”days – championships, end of semester, etc.)

– Police for on-going compliance

– Creative education

• Prevention

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– Administrators with notice of conduct must be held to reporting mechanisms

– Administrators charged with enforcing policies must demonstrate effective implementation

– Administrators charged with disciplinary process must be objective

– Checks and balances among administrators

– Consequences to administrators for non-compliance

Successful Approaches to Policy Development

• Accountability

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Successful Approaches to Policy Development

– Assess individual compliance –student(s)

– Assess individual compliance –administrator(s)

– Assess collective compliance on institutional-wide basis

• Effectiveness

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In response to the Colorado Report, you have been given the broad assignment to prepare policies necessary to make certain that similar behavior and liabilities will not be an issue for your educational institution.

Case Study

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1. Identify impacted stakeholders

2. Identify representatives impacted stakeholders

3. Identify existing policies invoked by conduct

4. Identify potential legal liabilities

5. Identify policies needed to address legal issues

6. Identify (and balance) stakeholders interests and potential liabilities

Case Study

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