San Francisco Chronicle

Title IX’s effects felt in corporate world

- By Tim Reynolds Tim Reynolds is an Associated Press writer.

SEATTLE — Ginny Gilder wasn’t well versed on what Title IX meant until she was a freshman at Yale, competing for the rowing team and taking part in one of the most famous protests surroundin­g the law.

The co-owner of the WNBA’s Seattle Storm was right in the middle of the “Yale Strip-In” in 1976 to protest inequities in the treatment of men and women rowers at the school.

“What happened for me personally, I always say … the experience radicalize­d me,” Gilder said. “Because I grew up in New York City, Upper East Side. I was a Park Avenue, private-school girl. I mean, you want to talk privilege, that would be me. So it was the first time I ever experience­d discrimina­tion.”

Title IX, a gender-equity law that includes sports at educationa­l institutio­ns, marks its 50th anniversar­y this month. Gilder is one of countless women who benefited from the enactment and execution of the law and translated those opportunit­ies into becoming leaders in their profession­al careers.

Participat­ing in that demonstrat­ion ignited a drive in Gilder. It helped propel her to become an Olympic silver medalist in rowing at the 1984 Los Angeles Games. It helped her build a successful business career as an investor and philanthro­pist. It also helped Gilder accept her sexuality in the late 1990s.

She is now part of the ownership group that purchased the Storm in 2008 and kept the franchise stable in its hometown.

“I think a lot of what I learned in the business world is you’ve got to go for what you want, and not what you want, like in a personal way, but in terms of what your vision is for the world and for the change you want to make,” Gilder said. “And certainly that was an experience that I learned from becoming an athlete.

“But it really was an experience I learned from that protest. That you’ve got to push if you’re not happy, you’re not satisfied with how things are. You’ve got to get out there and roll up your sleeves.”

Gail Koziara Boudreaux also has used her competitiv­e drive to succeed off the basketball court. The career scoring and rebounding leader at Dartmouth has been president and CEO of Anthem, Inc., since 2017.

Boudreaux, a threetime Ivy League Player of the Year and a four-time Ivy League shot-put champ, said historical­ly there have not been a lot of female CEOs — and of those who have, she said quite a few have been former athletes.

“If you look at many of us, we do have sports background­s at various levels,” Boudreaux said. “And I think it feeds into the competitiv­eness and our fearlessne­ss about taking challenges on and not being afraid to step in, you know, step in and play the game.”

Jacqie McWilliams knows firsthand what doors can be opened when someone is given an opportunit­y.

She is the first Black female commission­er of the Central Intercolle­giate Athletic Associatio­n. McWilliams also has been on the NCAA Gender Equity Task Force since 2016. Previously, she spent nine years managing NCAA championsh­ips.

McWilliams was a conference player of the year in both basketball and volleyball at Hampton. She sees a responsibi­lity to give back to the pipeline that gave her so much.

“As a commission­er,” McWilliams said, “I have access to a whole lot of things, a platform in a position of power that I think it’s quite humbling that I do have a place that I can bring others forward, that I can advocate in rooms that some may not ever get into, even as a Black female.”

McWilliams and others have fought many battles along the way and understand

there is still much progress that needs to be made. Fighting for that equality has taken on different forms over the past 50 years.

Gilder notes that bias is still prevalent in society. She said though it’s not as overt as it once was prior to the enactment of the law, it’s such that there needs to be a continued push for equity.

“You have to normalize

how people think about things and that is one by one,” Gilder said. “But you do it one by one enough, it starts to become a wave. It’s like any kind of change. And at a certain point, things just start flipping over and what seemed like a radical idea is accepted as the status quo.”

 ?? Ted S. Warren / Associated Press ?? Seattle Storm co-owner Ginny Gilder says the WNBA “wouldn’t exist ... without Title IX.”
Ted S. Warren / Associated Press Seattle Storm co-owner Ginny Gilder says the WNBA “wouldn’t exist ... without Title IX.”

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