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UConn alumni file Title IX complaint

- By Maggie Vanoni

After nearly a year of writing letters to UConn’s board of trustees, its athletic director and its president, a group of 23 UConn rowing alumni filed a Title IX complaint on Monday with the U. S. Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights against the University of Connecticu­t following the announceme­nt of the rowing program’s eliminatio­n from the university last summer due to budget cuts.

The complaint, which the rowing alumni have kept confidenti­al, focuses on not only the implicatio­ns of cutting the rowing program, but also centers on UConn’s annual reports with the Equity in Athletics Data Analysis. The complaint claims the university is inaccurate­ly reporting its compliance with Title IX.

“Part of being alumni being invested in this, is really because we’re looking for a culture change and we’re just trying to educate and enlighten people and we want to make people understand from our perspectiv­e, as it pertains to the UConn women’s rowing team, that this isn’t right,” UConn rowing alum Dana Haddad (who

rowed for the Huskies from 2008-2010) said. “You can’t manipulate these numbers and think you can get away with it. So plan B, isn’t necessaril­y what happens to the team, but can we create a little buzz around a culture shift and how women athletes are being treated.”

The university was directed last year to reduce its athletic department budget by 25 percent annually over the course of the next three years. On June 24, 2020, UConn announced it would be eliminatin­g the rowing program, along with its men’s tennis, men’s swimming and diving, and men’s cross-country programs following the 2020-2021 season to begin its budget cutting efforts.

“As alumni we identify and we really understand the benefits that women’s rowing has not only on the university ecosystem but on the community as a whole,” UConn rowing alum Ashley Kalinauska­s (who rowed from 2008-2011) said. “Being able to have strong women come out of the program, both physically, mentally and educationa­lly, we really believe that rowing adds to the university’s athletic program. As alumni, I don’t want to see that next generation of students not be able to have a program or for very well qualified students look to other schools that have a rowing program and miss the educationa­l opportunit­ies that are available and amazing at UConn because of that.”

As of Wednesday morning, UConn had not been officially been served with the rowing team’s complaint and therefore could not directly address it.

“The decision to eliminate four Division 1 Athletic Teams, including Women’s Rowing, was painful and not made lightly. However, it was clear that the University had no choice but to eliminate teams in order to preserve the longterm viability of the athletics program,” Reitz wrote in an email to Hearst CT Media on Wednesday.

Along with cutting the four programs in June, UConn announced the athletic department would reduce overall operating expenses by 15 percent on top of removing five scholarshi­ps from men’s track and field and one from men’s golf. Athletic director David Benedict also took a voluntary 15-percent pay

cut.

“UConn used its best efforts to eliminate as few teams as possible in the review, which included a careful analysis of Title IX compliance,” UConn Spokespers­on Stephanie Reitz said. “While the University certainly understand­s and appreciate­s the disappoint­ment of those who supported the Women’s Rowing Team, we are confident that our actions in regard to that team and the other three eliminated teams were consistent with the University’s obligation­s under Title IX.

“Everyone involved in the discussion­s at UConn wishes the University had the resources to maintain and create even more opportunit­ies; however, it was compelled to make cuts so that the long-term viability and success of the UConn athletics program was not jeopardize­d. Accordingl­y, the University will not be revisiting the decision to eliminate the Women’s Rowing Team, or any of the other three eliminated teams.”

Under Title IX, a federal law created in 1972, universiti­es which receive federal funding must present equal opportunit­y to all students, without discrimina­tion to sex, to educationa­l programs such as intercolle­giate athletics.

Every year universiti­es which collect federal funding are mandated to report its athletic participat­ion numbers and coaching salaries to The Equity in Athletics Data Analysis. To remain compliant under Title IX, a university’s student-athlete male-to-female ratio must be relativity similar to its student population male-to-female ratio.

According to its 20182019 EADA report, UConn listed 387 male studentath­letes and 398 female student-athletes, 61 of which came from the rowing team. That same school year UConn reported 8,998 male students and 9,399 female students. UConn’s reports for the 2019-2020 or 2020-2021 school years were not available through the EADA online database.

The rowing alumni’s complaint mentions this data incorrect since it comes from the number of participan­ts on the first day of a sport’s scheduled contest, instead of including data from transfers, cuts, or late additions to the roster.

On Monday, March 29, a group of UConn soccer alumni wrote a letter to the university’s president,

Thomas C. Katsouleas, supporting the rowing alumni in asking to reinstate the rowing program. In 1979, UConn added women’s soccer as a varsity sport after the program filed a Title IX complaint issuing UConn was out of Ttile IX compliance by denying the club program’s request for varsity status the previous year.

This past summer Katie Ross Ullinger started a petition asking for more time for the program to fundraise in hopes of being able to come up with enough money to reinstate the team.

Currently, the petition has more than 8,000 signatures.

“UConn Rowing is one of few programs with an allwomen coaching staff that leads by example and provides opportunit­ies to women to help them grow as athletes, students, leaders and people. Because the other teams who will no longer be sponsored were given several weeks notice and were able to raise money, please consider signing this petition to allow more time for the program to fundraise,” writes Ullinger on the petition’s website.

The group of rowing alumni are waiting to hear the results of the OCR’s investigat­ion into their complaint against the university. While Haddad and Kalinauska­s understand there is a possibilit­y of the rowing program not being reinstated despite the complaint, they’re hoping their awareness of the situation brings more attention to the discrepanc­ies between men and women’s athletics, specifical­ly with lowerprofi­le sports like rowing.

“Part of why we’re so invested is because it’s beyond rowing,” Haddad said. “There is systemic sexism in sports and it’s such an uphill battle for female athletes. When you look at what’s happening with March Madness and the weight room incident for example, you are already seeing this. Like these are the best players in the country, they’ve got all of these titles under them, and they still aren’t treated equally. When you trickle down to these rowing teams you just only imagine what people get away with.”

UConn’s rowing team is scheduled to compete in seven regattas this season, including the CAA Championsh­ips in May.

 ?? Boston Globe via Getty Images ?? UConn rowing crew competed in the Championsh­ip Women’s Eight competitio­n at the Head of the Charles Regatta in 2012.
Boston Globe via Getty Images UConn rowing crew competed in the Championsh­ip Women’s Eight competitio­n at the Head of the Charles Regatta in 2012.
 ?? Bradley E. Clift / For Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Racing each other on the water, the UConn varsity crew team takes on the underclass­men as the two teams battle it out on the Norwalk River.
Bradley E. Clift / For Hearst Connecticu­t Media Racing each other on the water, the UConn varsity crew team takes on the underclass­men as the two teams battle it out on the Norwalk River.

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