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Quinnipiac Law Scholarship Faces Title IX Complaint for Excluding Heterosexual Males

Quinnipiac Law Scholarship Faces Title IX Complaint for Excluding Heterosexual Males

“A law school should know better than to discriminate on the basis of sex”

It’s amazing how frequently we are seeing this kind of thing happening today. How do people think this is acceptable?

The College Fix reports:

Quinnipiac Law scholarship excludes heterosexual males, faces Title IX complaint

Quinnipiac University School of Law is facing a federal civil rights complaint for a scholarship only open to women and LGBTQ+ students.

The complaint, filed last week with the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights, comes from legal scholar Adam Kissel who shared a copy with The College Fix.

Kissel, a visiting fellow at the Heritage Foundation and former deputy assistant secretary for higher education in the Trump Administration, told The Fix the Goff Law Group Endowed Law Scholarship is “a blatant violation of civil rights.” Title IX prohibits educational institutions from discrimination on the basis of sex.

“The scholarship explicitly is to ‘benefit women students,’ excluding men in violation of Title IX. A law school should know better than to discriminate on the basis of sex,” Kissel said in a recent email. “Maybe this helps us understand why QU Law is poorly ranked.”

University public relations representatives did not respond to several requests for comment this week from The Fix, asking if the university believes the scholarship complies with Title IX and if it received the complaint.

Quinnipiac, a private Connecticut university, announced the $500,000 scholarship in March. Created by alumna Brooke Goff, a personal injury law attorney, it will be awarded to two students every year, according to an article from the Quinnipiac Chronicle.

The Fix also contacted Goff twice by phone and a contact form on her law firm’s website this week seeking comment about the alleged violations, but received no response. Her firm took a message on Tuesday and said someone would get back with comment but no one has yet.

Jennifer Brown, dean of the law school, told The Fix in an emailed statement the scholarship will help students overcome the financial burden of law school.

Brown said Goff provided the gift out of a “desire to increase access to the legal profession for people who have been historically underrepresented.”

“Brooke’s hope is that this support for LGBTQ students and their allies, particularly, will help to diversify perspectives and lived experience among lawyers, and in turn this will enrich the quality of service for a diverse community of clients,” Brown said.

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Comments

But it’s against a law that the government has no independent incentive to enforce… like public housing projects that ban guns, or Democrat-voting welfare queens being required not to cohabitate with “significant others.”

It seems to me that if Quinnipiac alumna Brooke Goff wants to set up and administer a scholarship on her own, then she can be as targeted and discriminatory as desired. But as she seems to be asking the University to administer this scholarship based on her discriminatory criteria, then the University should have told her no.