FOR
RELEASE: December 23, 2002 |
Contact:
Susan Aspey, (202) 401-1576 cell,
(202) 549-7013
|
The co-chairs of the U.S. Secretary of Education's
Commission on Opportunity in Athletics today said they
are proud of the commission's work and praised the
commissioners for their commitment to Title IX and
athletics.
Commission co-chairs Ted Leland and Cynthia Cooper
also announced that the commission's end date is being
extended for several weeks in order to give
commissioners more time to review the issues, and that
the commission's next meeting, scheduled for Jan. 8 in
Washington, D.C., will be moved to a later date to
reflect this change.
"I am honored to be part of this important
commission, and believe our work and the process have
been exemplary," said co-chair Ted Leland, athletic
director of Stanford University. "We've engaged in a
thorough and deliberative process and heard from
individuals with a variety of viewpoints. We still have
work to do to achieve the requirements of the charter,
and I look forward to completing our work on behalf of
Secretary Paige.
"That said, Cynthia Cooper and I believe that given
the serious nature of the issues, and the volume of
comments and information received during these past few
months, that it is to everyone's benefit to extend the
end date of the commission's work by about one month.
This will give the commissioners more time to do the
serious review warranted and produce a report that
reflects the quality of the commissioners who serve on
this commission."
"I am proud that I have been a part of this
commission, and fully support the decision to extend the
due date of our report to Secretary Paige" said co-chair
Cynthia Cooper, former WNBA star and head coach. "For
months, we have been working diligently to gather
information about Title IX and its enforcement. We made
sure all of the commissioners had input in the process.
We've heard from dozens of expert witnesses—many of whom
were suggested by members of the commission and the
public—and hundreds of people with varied
perspectives."
U.S. Education Secretary Rod Paige in June formed the
blue-ribbon panel of sports professionals and Title IX
practitioners, including athletic directors, a
university general counsel and a university president,
to examine ways to strengthen Title IX enforcement and
expand opportunities in a manner that ensures fairness
for all athletes.
Since August, the commissioners have held public
meetings across the country to learn from parents,
athletes, coaches, college officials, educators and
other experts, as well as state, local and national
leaders, to gather information and prepare
recommendations to submit to Secretary Paige.
President Richard Nixon signed into law Title IX of
the Education Amendments of 1972 to the 1964 Civil
Rights Act that says: "No person in the United States
shall on the basis of sex, be excluded from
participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be
subject to discrimination under any educational program
or activity receiving Federal financial assistance."
More information about the Title IX Commission can be
found at http://www.ed.gov/about/bdscomm/list/athletics/index.html.
###
Top