The Palm Beach Post

FAU inflated female athlete total

University claims ‘clerical error’ behind 20 percent hike in sportswome­n it reported to feds last year.

- By Kenny Jacoby Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

Florida Atlantic University reported false numbers to the government, exaggerati­ng how many women played for its sports teams, just a year after it ranked among the worst in the country for female representa­tion in sports.

In 2016, women represente­d more than half of the Boca Raton school’s enrollment but only 31 percent of its athletes. The percentage was the lowest of all 127 schools participat­ing in the highest level of college sports.

Just one year later, FAU claimed it had erased its female participat­ion gap. It told the U.S. Department of Education in 2017 that 51 percent of its athletes were women.

But the 20 percentage-point increase was based on an inflated number, The Palm Beach Post has found. To arrive at the higher percentage, FAU counted dozens of female athletes who did not exist.

FAU reported it had more than

doubled the number of athletes on its women’s track team from the previous year, but the team’s own website shows that was far from the case. The staggering numbers: FAU reported having 98 women’s track athletes. The roster showed no more than 43, and the team photo showed 38.

The 98 women, FAU claimed, occupied 222 roster spots on its cross-country, indoor track and outdoor track teams, more than any women’s track program among the 127 major sports schools. The number boosted a key measure used to determine whether schools are complying with sex-based discrimina­tion laws.

Two weeks after The Palm Beach Post asked FAU about the discrepanc­y, athletic department spokeswoma­n Katrina McCormack acknowledg­ed in an email that the reported number was incorrect.

“We recognize the error, are reviewing the report in its entirety and are working with the (National Collegiate Athletic Associatio­n and Department of Education) to ensure the proper correction­s,” she wrote.

The employee who prepared and submitted the report is no longer with the school, McCormack said. The report, however, cites Brian Battle as the “reporting official.” Battle remains employed at FAU as senior associate athletic director for internal operations. He was promoted to the job about two months before the report was due and served a six-week stint as interim athletic director shortly after the report’s submission.

Lisa Metcalf, a spokeswoma­n for FAU, said another staff member filed the report on Battle’s behalf and he was unaware of any errors at the time.

“We believe the cause was simply a clerical error,” Metcalf said. “FAU takes its responsibi­lity to provide equitable athletic participat­ion opportunit­ies extremely seriously.”

‘That is a violation’

The reported number also exposed a Catch-22 that involves another measure of whether a school is following the law in how it treats female athletes: scholarshi­p dollars.

FAU boosted the number of female athletes but did nothing to boost the amount of scholarshi­p money awarded to its female athletes, leaving a gap that violates the federal law known as Title IX, an attorney who reviewed FAU’s numbers said. The reported gap between FAU’s percentage of female athletes and percentage of athletic scholarshi­p dollars for women was the widest of all the major sports schools in the country.

“That is a violation, pure and simple,” said Neena Chaudhry, an associate general counsel for the National Women’s Law Center.

Metcalf pointed out FAU’s female athletes historical­ly have gotten more than their fair share of scholarshi­p money. Until the erroneous statistic skewed the numbers last year, FAU reported giving women a higher percentage of athletic scholarshi­p dollars than the percentage of athletes they represente­d.

But even after subtractin­g the 55 women unaccounte­d for on FAU’s report, the school’s numbers indicate it disproport­ionately gave athletic scholarshi­p dollars to men last year, violating federal law.

Correcting for the exaggerate­d track team numbers, no more than 46 percent of FAU athletes in 2017 were women, The Post calculated, but only 36 cents of every scholarshi­p dollar went to female athletes.

In a news release issued Friday after The Post’s story went online, FAU repeated its position that the female par- ticipation error was clerical.

Without providing details, FAU said it would issue revised numbers to Education Department officials claiming that the correct percentage of female athletes is 43 and that the school actually handed out 45 percent of its sports scholarshi­p dollars to women, not 36 percent. It did not explain how it had gotten the scholarshi­p number wrong.

‘45 years to get it right’

Title IX, the law prohibitin­g sex-based discrimina­tion in schools, has paved the way for hundreds of thousands of women who otherwise would not have had the opportunit­y to participat­e in college sports.

Before Congress enacted the law in 1972, fewer than 32,000 women played college sports, and athletic scholarshi­ps for women were nonexisten­t. Today more than 230,000 women compete and receive an average of $7,500 each in athletic scholarshi­ps.

But schools across the country still routinely fall short of meeting two of Title IX’s most critical requiremen­ts: providing women equal opportunit­ies to participat­e in sports and making sure they get their fair share of athletic scholarshi­p dollars.

There’s no doubt complying with Title IX requires a concerted effort from schools, which must ensure its percentage of athletic scholarshi­p dollars for women are proportion­al to the percentage of women who are athletes. A school also must show it is providing equal opportunit­ies for men and women to play sports, or at least that the school has a history of expanding opportunit­ies for women, or that there is not unmet demand for women’s sports on campus.

Compliance with the law also may mean less revenue for athletic department­s that could make more money investing in football and men’s basketball, the two profitable men’s sports, instead of women’s teams.

But Title IX’s purpose is to give women equal opportunit­ies, something many schools still don’t provide because the law is not strongly enforced, Chaudhry said.

Both the Department of Education and the NCAA annually collect data from schools that help indicate whether they meet Title IX requiremen­ts, but those organizati­ons don’t always use it. Sometimes, the department uses data to initiate a compliance review of a school, but mostly its enforcemen­t efforts stem from individual complaints, of which it receives thousands per year. Title IX compliance is not one of the NCAA’s prerequisi­tes for competitio­n.

“Schools have had 45 years to get it right and to make sure they’re treating their female students equally, and too many are still out of compliance,” Chaudhry said. “The reality is we’re seeing huge gaps at so many schools that I think many schools have just not been doing their job.”

What distinguis­hes FAU is not only its inaccurate numbers and low ranking relative to other schools, but that its gender gaps have widened as its football program rose to prominence. While schools overall made gradual progress toward equal treatment of women athletes in recent years, the disparitie­s at FAU got worse.

The football effect

College athletic department­s long have sought to grow their budgets by investing in football because more revenue from football generally leads to more money for the athletic department.

Whereas most college sports lose money, football is one of the few that operates in the black.

In 2017, the 126 football teams (down one from the year before) that competed in the NCAA’s top level of competitio­n, the Football Bowl Subdivisio­n, or FBS, profited more than $1.7 billion, Education Department reports show. Men’s basketball teams made $300 million. All other teams combined lost more than $1 billion.

For all its lucre, however, college football is still divided into haves and have-nots. Seventy-five FBS teams took all the profits, while the other 51 programs either broke even or lost money, Education Department reports show.

When small-time athletic department­s attempt to grow their football programs, they often leave women’s sports behind, intentiona­lly or not. On average, the FBS schools whose football programs broke even or lost money last year had the widest gender gaps in the two main Title IX categories — athletic scholarshi­p dollars and female participat­ion.

Under Title IX, a school’s percentage of female students should be roughly proportion­al to the percentage of playing opportunit­ies, or roster spots, it offers to women. It also requires schools to have no more than a 1 percentage-point gap between the percentage of athletes who are women and the percentage of scholarshi­p dollars awarded to women athletes.

Nationwide, schools with football teams fared significan­tly worse than schools without them at meeting those two Title IX requiremen­ts, The Post found. One reason, Chaudhry said, is football teams typically have rosters of more than 100 men, most of whom receive full or partial scholarshi­ps. Moreover, pouring money into the main revenue-driving sports draws the attention away from women’s and other men’s teams, she said.

“You’ve got schools choosing to devote the vast major- ity of their resources toward football and men’s basketball, so that has consequenc­es,” Chaudhry said. “The thing is, that does not exempt schools from Title IX.”

Equality suffers

fits squarely into these trends. Its football program is fairly new and makes pennies on the dollar relative to competitor­s. The University of Florida, for example, profited $49 million last year, and Florida State University made $38 million, Education Department reports show. FAU broke even.

It took almost a decade for the FAU football team to stop losing money, Education Department reports show, and since then, athletic department revenue has ballooned. In 2003, the athletic department brought in less than $10 million, and the football program less than $600,000. Last year, the department raked in $26 million, almost a third of which came from football.

FAU football reached new heights in 2017. Led by celebrity head coach Lane Kiffin, whose $950,000 base salary is more than FAU President John Kelly’s total compensati­on, the Owls won 11 of 14 games, up from three the year before. FAU played in and won the Boca Raton Bowl for the first time in its new $70 million stadium, which opened in 2011.

The Owls’ gains on the gridiron, however, came at the expense of equal treatment for women. In 2004, three years into the football team’s existence, 41 percent of the school’s athletes were women, and they received 51 percent of athletic scholarshi­p dollars.

Thosefigur­es have fallen sharply since. In 2016, women represente­d just 31 percent of FAU athletes and received 36 percent of athletic scholarshi­p dollars.

And despite the football team’s success, it still brings in less money than almost 90 percent of FBS teams.

FAU disputes that its emphasis on football has reduced its commitment to women, pointing out that the school has added women’s track and beach volleyball since it fielded its first men’s football team in 2001.

“FAU’s football team has not suppressed the growth of women’s athletic opportunit­ies at FAU in any way,” said Metcalf, the FAU spokeswoma­n.

The scholarshi­p divide

In 2017, after reporting the lowest percentage of women athletes in the country among FBS schools a year earlier, FAU submitted an incorrect but far more favorable count of women athletes.

Education Department policy allows it to “limit, suspend, terminate or fine an institutio­n that provides inaccurate informatio­n,” a spokesman said.

The reported number indicated FAU had the biggest difference in the FBS between its percentage of female athletes and the percentage of scholarshi­p dollars it awarded to them. But after subtractin­g the missing track athletes, FAU would still violate the 1 percentage-point rule with a 10 percentage-point gap between its female athletes and athletic scholarshi­p dollars.

Meagan Gid d ens, a mid-distance freshman runner for FAU last year who has since transferre­d, said neither she nor some of FAU’s top runners received any athletic scholarshi­p money last year to cover the rising costs of tuition.

“It’s definitely saddening,” Giddens said. “Our top runner, who represente­d our team, wasn’t even getting full scholarshi­p; she was getting books and that was it.”

Complaints from athletes are unlikely, she said, because it “could hurt their careers.”

“They could get in a lot of trouble for speaking out, unfortunat­ely,” Giddens said.

Cassie Pough, who played tennis for FAU as a junior in 2016, said she was fortunate to get a full-ride scholarshi­p but knew athletes who had to work second jobs to pay their tuition.

“They were struggling,” Pough said. “They were doing everything we’re doing. They were showing up to the workouts, showing up to the morning practices, but they got nothing out of it.”

Pough said although Title IX is great for women of all sports, she sympathize­d with some men whom she feels are shortchang­ed. Whereas schools tend to distribute scholarshi­p money evenly among women’s teams, the majority of scholarshi­ps on the men’s side go to football and basketball players.

For example, while women’s tennis players at FAU shared the equivalent of eight full-rides, men’s tennis players shared fewer than three. Women’s soccer players split the equivalent of about 16 full-rides, but men’s soccer players split just four.

Meanwhile, football players shared 82 full-rides, and men’s basketball players shared another 12.

“As women, we definitely get a lot more because of Title IX, so we’re very thankful,” Pough said. “For the guys, if you’re not playing basket-

ball or football, it sucks.”

Consequenc­es rare

FAU is far from alone in falling short of meeting gender equity laws forathlete­s. The Post’s analysis found women nationwide make up 54 percent of enrolled college students but only 41 percent of athletes. Female athletes receive 46 percent of scholarshi­p dollars and 43 percent of participat­ion opportunit­ies.

Unlike scholarshi­p dollars, there is no set number determinin­g whether a school’s female participat­ion rate is complying with Title IX. Instead there is a threepart test, andaschool must pass just one part of the test to be in compliance.

The three parts are: the percentage­s of roster spots for men and women are about the same as the percentage­s of enrolled male and female students, the school has a history and continuing practice of expanding athletic opportunit­ies for women and the school is meeting demand of female athletes who are able and want to play.

The National Women’s Law Center says a gap of more than 10 percentage points between a school’s percentage­s of female students and female athletes should raise “red flags” the school is out of compliance.

At FAU, the gap was 24 percentage points in 2016. But Metcalf said the school complies with Title IX by passing the second part of the test, demonstrat­ing a history of expanding opportunit­ies for women athletes.

Since 1979, seven years after Congress enacted Title IX, FAU has added women’s golf, tennis, cross-country, basketball, swimming and diving, volleyball, soccer, softball, outdoor track, indoor track and beach volleyball, Metcalf said. In other words, all the women’s sports it has today.

are currently studying whether to continue that trajectory (using the second part of the test) or pursue a different compliance option for future years,” she said.

Whether a school is complying with the law is one question; whether it will be held accountabl­e for failing to do so is another.

Most of the Department of Education’s enforcemen­t efforts stem from individual complaints. If it finds a school is in violation of Title IX, it works with the institutio­n to reach a resolution agreement, which outlines concrete steps for it to return to compliance. If the department can’t reach an agreement with the school, it can refer the matter to the Department of Justice or cut off the school’s federal money.

When asked, the department did not cite a single instance in which it cut off a school’s money.

Chaudhry, the National Women’s Law Center counsel, said women’s rights advocates for years have been asking the Department of Education to take more enforcemen­t action on its own. The NCAA, she said, has a “leadership role” to play, too, and could require schools to show improvemen­t or have a plan in place.

“That would go a long way,” she said, “toward sending a message that schools need to get their houses in order.”

 ?? JC RIDLEY / OWLPIX.COM 2016 ?? This team photo for the women’s track and field squad at Florida Atlantic University in the 201617 school year shows 38 athletes in uniform. That’s 60 fewer than the Boca Raton school reported to the U.S. Department of Education. The higher number was...
JC RIDLEY / OWLPIX.COM 2016 This team photo for the women’s track and field squad at Florida Atlantic University in the 201617 school year shows 38 athletes in uniform. That’s 60 fewer than the Boca Raton school reported to the U.S. Department of Education. The higher number was...

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