Current:Home > StocksFlorida State to add women's lacrosse team after USA TODAY investigation -SecureNest Finance
Florida State to add women's lacrosse team after USA TODAY investigation
View
Date:2025-04-18 19:58:56
Less than 18 months after a USA TODAY investigation revealed that Florida State University was not in compliance with Title IX, the federal law banning sex discrimination in education, the Seminoles athletic department agreed on Tuesday to add a women’s lacrosse team to its roster of varsity sports.
The agreement comes after Arthur Bryant, a prominent, California-based Title IX lawyer, in consultation with members of the FSU club women’s lacrosse team, threatened legal action against the university in early August, citing Title IX.
"The history of Title IX in America is that the only thing that makes progress for women who are being discriminated against is for them to stand up and fight," Bryant told USA TODAY. "The vast majority of colleges and universities are still in violation of Title IX, 51 years after it was passed, and the federal government has never filed enforcement action in court to force (any) schools to come into compliance with Title IX.
"The only thing that works is women being willing to fight. I know people don't normally go to their schools to sue them, and I know it's hard ... but what this case shows is that if they fight, they win."
The team will start play “no later than the 2025-26 academic year,” according to the settlement released by Bailey Glasser LLP, Bryant’s firm. It will be Florida State’s 19th varsity team and its 10th women’s varsity team; the school last added a women’s sport, beach volleyball, in 2011. In addition to adding a team, the school will conduct a gender equity review of its athletic department and formulate a gender equity plan that will bring FSU into Title IX compliance.
“It doesn’t even feel real. I’ve been crying tears of pure joy all day,” FSU women’s club lacrosse team captain Sophia Villalonga told USA TODAY late Tuesday. “The last few hours have been such a rush. I’m just speechless.”
Villalonga was in the middle of class when she found out FSU will become the 118th D-I women's lacrosse team in the country. She frantically began texting teammates, ecstatic at the news.
Villalonga previously said that she’d always wished lacrosse was a varsity sport at FSU but didn’t know it was a realistic request until USA TODAY’s Title IX investigation “really opened our eyes.”
In a press release, Florida State athletic director Michael Alford said, “Lacrosse is the fastest growing college sport nationally and it is evident that our culture and community will enthusiastically embrace it.”
In July, Villalonga, who will start her second year of graduate school in the fall, sent an email to FSU administrators formally petitioning to add women’s lacrosse as a varsity sport. When the school responded and said FSU was “not actively evaluating the addition of any sports programs to our current collection of teams,” Bryant and the team sent a letter threatening legal action.
“Like FSU said, this is the fastest-growing sport, so getting a team is a no-brainer,” Villalonga said. “And I can’t wait to come back and watch them.”
veryGood! (73)
Related
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- A Guardian of Federal Lands, Lambasted by Left and Right
- Why Teen Mom's Maci Bookout Didn't Think She'd Ever Get to a Good Place With Ex Ryan Edwards
- Environmental Groups File Court Challenge on California Rooftop Solar Policy
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- Gigi Hadid Is the Girl With the Dragon Tattoo After Debuting Massive New Ink
- Environmental Justice Advocates Urge California to Stop Issuing New Drilling Permits in Neighborhoods
- Reese Witherspoon’s Draper James Biggest Sale Is Here: Save 70% and Shop These Finds Under $59
- Trump's 'stop
- Reliving Every Detail of Jennifer Lopez and Ben Affleck's Double Wedding
Ranking
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- Shell Sued Over Air Emissions at Pennsylvania’s New Petrochemical Plant
- Here's the Reason Why Goldie Hawn Never Married Longtime Love Kurt Russell
- The UN Wants the World Court to Address Nations’ Climate Obligations. Here’s What Could Happen Next
- Small twin
- All the Tragedy That Has Led to Belief in a Kennedy Family Curse
- Meet the Golden Bachelor Gerry Turner: All the Details on the 71-Year-Old's Search for Love
- New IPCC Report Shows the ‘Climate Time Bomb Is Ticking,’ Says UN Secretary General António Guterres
Recommendation
Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
Harry Styles’ 7 New Wax Figures Will Have You Doing a Double Take
Global Warming Fueled Both the Ongoing Floods and the Drought That Preceded Them in Italy’s Emilia-Romagna Region
Raven-Symoné and Wife Miranda Pearman-Maday Set the Record Straight on That Relationship NDA
Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
Cities Stand to Win Big With the Inflation Reduction Act. How Do They Turn This Opportunity Into Results?
UN Adds New Disclosure Requirements For Upcoming COP28, Acknowledging the Toll of Corporate Lobbying
Shell Sued Over Air Emissions at Pennsylvania’s New Petrochemical Plant