RULING ON MOTION FOR PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION
Plaintiffs move for a preliminary injunction to prevent defendant from denying plaintiff David Dennin (“Dennin”) a waiver of its age eligibility rule. The parties were fully heard. An order granted a preliminary injunction with this full discussion of the issues to follow.
I. BACKGROUND FACTS
Dennin is a nineteen-year old student at Trumbull High School with Down Syndrome. He is eligible for special education pursuant to the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (“IDEA”), 20 U.S.C. § 1400 et seq. (“IDEA”) and Connecticut General Statutes § 10-76(a) et seq.
Defendant, The Connecticut Interscholas-tie Athletic Conference, Inc. (“CIAC”), is a Connecticut non-profit corporation organized to supervise, direct and regulate interscho-lastie athletics in Connecticut with 175 public and private secondary schools. Trumbull High School is a CIAC member and must abide by its rules.
Due to his special education needs, Dennin spent four, rather than three, years in middle school, commencing high school in 1992 at sixteen. For the past three years, plaintiff was a fully eligible member of the Trumbull High School swim team. Although his times were slow, his relay teams at times scored points. Plaintiffs competition on the swim team is specified in his Individualized Education Program (“IEP”), developed as required by 20 U.S.C. § 1414(a)(5).
CIAC’s eligibility rules provide that a player may not compete at age ninеteen unless he reaches his nineteenth birthday on or after September 1. The purposes of the rule are to prevent competitive advantage for older athletes; to protect younger athletes from older athletes; to discourage students from delaying their education for athletic purposes; to prevent coaches from “red-shirting” athletes to gain competitive advantage; and to avoid younger athletes from preemption by older athletes.
Plaintiff turned nineteen before September I, 1995. Without a waiver, he is not eligible for the 1995-96 season.
Dennin requested a waiver of the age eligibility rule. CIAC denied a waiver, but allowed him to swim as a non-scoring exhibition swimmer. He may swim in all regular season meets, but he and his relay team cannot earn points.
Dennin is aware of his ineligibility. Being treated no differently then others is important in his relations with the community. The absence of differential treatment fosters his sense of self-esteem and self-confidence and in turn, nurtures his belief in his ability and willingness to function in a community, most of whose members are not afflicted with his limitations.
Participation on the Trumbull swim team is open to all. No оne is cut on the basis of ability. Co-plaintiff, the Trumbull Board of Education joins in Dennin’s requested relief and fully supports his claim to full eligibility and participation which it would allow but for CIAC’s eligibility rales.
II. DISCUSSION
To issue a preliminary injunction, it is well-settled that movant must show (a) irreparable harm; and (b) either (1) probable success on the merits, or (2) sufficiently serious questions going to the merits to make them a fair ground for litigation and a balance of hardships tipping decidedly toward the party seeking injunctive relief.
See, e.g., Sperry Int’l Trade, Inc. v. Gov’t of Israel,
A. Irreparable Harm
If the requested injunction does not issue, Dennin will swim in meets as an exhi
Plaintiffs compеtition on the swim team has increased his self-esteem and social skills. It is considered sufficiently important to his development to be included in his IEP. The limitations on Dennin deprive him of essential badges and indicia of full team membership and participation. Plaintiff is able to understand this difference in treatment. It may diminish his swimming in meets, and in turn his sense of parity with his teammates. Such differential treatment will negаtively impact his self-esteem and thereby his IEP goals.
Any relay team plaintiff swims on cannot earn points. Potentially he will be eliminated if his relay team cannot score points which might otherwise be scored despite Dennin’s slowness. His relay teammates cannot earn points without a fully eligible team member. These points are necessary to earn varsity letters. Such losses оf points would negatively impact plaintiffs self-esteem. In a close meet, the coach may be placed in the position of having to choose between allowing Dennin to swim or losing the meet.
The harm is immediate and irreparable. The swim season is progressing. Meets are occurring and are not awaiting a decision here. Accordingly, plaintiffs have establishеd irreparable harm that cannot be compensated by monetary damages nor recouped.
B. Probability of success on the merits
Plaintiffs allege defendant’s waiver denial violates the Rehabilitation Act, 29 U.S.C. § 794, the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”), 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq., and 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and the IDEA.
1. Rehabilitation Act
To establish a claim under the Rehabilitation Act, plaintiff must prove:
(1)he has a disability as defined by the Act;
(2) he is “otherwise qualified” to participate in interscholastie high school athletics as regulatеd by the [CLAC] or that he may be “otherwise qualified” via “reasonable accommodations;”
(3) he is being excluded from participating in interscholastic high school athletics solely because of his disability; and
(4) the [ClAC] receives federal financial assistance.
Johnson v. Florida High School Activities Ass’n, Inc.,
a. Individual with a disability
An individual with a disability is defined as “any person who ... has a physical or mental impairment which substantially limits one or more of such person’s major life activities.” 29 U.S.C. § 706. Down Syndrome is such a disability. Plaintiff is covered by the Rehabilitation Act.
b. Receipt of federal financial assistance
CLAC receives federal financial assistance indirectly through fees paid by 150 public schools which receive federal assistance. Programs receiving indirect federal financial assistance are subject to the Rehabilitation Act.
See Pottgen v. Missouri High School Activities Ass’n,
Dennin is an “оtherwise qualified” individual if with “reasonable accommodation” he can meet the “necessary” or “essential” requirements of the program.
Sandison v. Michigan High School Athletic Ass’n,
However, if the individual does not meet an essential requirement because of his disability, it must be determined if a “reasonable accommodation” would enable the individual to become “otherwise qualified.”
Pottgen,
Courts disagree on this issue. In
Pottgen,
plaintiff was disabled and ineligible to play interscholastic baseball because he was nineteen. The
Pottgen
court found the age rule was essential to prevent competitive advantage, to protect younger athletes from harm, to discourage athletes from delaying then-education, and to prevent red-shirting.
Pott-gen,
The
Sandison
court followed
Pottgen,
determining that waiving the age requirement for nineteen-year old disabled students fundamentally altered the nature of the track and cross-country program because more mature and competitive students would be competing.
Sandison,
Other courts have rejected this analysis. In
Johnson,
the court considered whether a disabled student could be excluded from football and wrestling because he was not age eligible. Rather than a blanket holding that the requirement was essential, and that
any
waiver would be unreasonable,
Johnson
undertook an individualized analysis of the requirement and its underlying purposes.
Johnson,
the relationship between the age requirement and its purposеs must be such that waiving the age requirement in the instant case would necessarily undermine the purposes of the requirement.... “[I]f a rule can be modified without doing violence to its essential purposes ... it cannot be essential to the nature of the program or activity_”
Id.
(quoting
Pottgen,
Similar individual analyses have found an age requirement waiver to be a reasonable accommodation.
See Booth v. Univ. Interscholastic League,
No. A90CA764,
The reasoning of
Johnson
and the dissent in
Pottgen
is persuasive. It would be an anathema to the goals of the Rehabilitation Act to decline to require an individualized analysis of the purposes behind the age requirement as applied to Dennin. Failure to
So analyzed, waiver of the rule for Dennin could not undermine any of the purposes of the CIAC rule. Plaintiff has no competitive advantage. He is, without dispute, always the slowest swimmer in the poоl. He is no safety risk to himself or others. Swimming is not a contact sport. His education was not delayed to gain a competitive advantage but only because of his disability. He is not a red-shirt threat. Granting him a waiver would not alter the nature of the swimming program.
Additionally, a waiver for Dennin does not impose an undue burden upon defendant. CIAC claims that a waiver in this case will result in a flood of waiver applications which will be administratively impossible to handle. CIAC is not required to grant waivers to
all
students who fail to meet the age requirement. However, it would be required under the Rehabilitation Act to give the disabled individual consideration, including to Dennin, as he falls within the Act.
See, e.g., Booth,
In Dennin’s case, such consideration would be relatively simple. In some cases it would be more complex, depending on the sport in question, the size, agility, strength and endurance of the individual, and whether the quality of his/her athletic capacity/capability is enhanced by his/her age beyond eighteen. That it may prove difficult in some cases does not substantiate the claim that it would be unduly burdensome or destructive of the purpose of the rule. 1
Assuming, arguendo, a waiver for plaintiff does increase applications for waivers of disabled students, the cost may be passed onto the schools through fees.
Defendant argues that it has already made a reasonable accommodation by granting Dennin exhibition status. This status treats Dennin fundamentally differently from fellow teammates. The Rehabilitation Act seeks full participation and equality of the disabled to the extent reasonable accommodations can be made. Thus a reasonable accommodation of full participation of Dennin is required.
d. Discrimination “solely because of’ disability
Finally, it must be determined whether Dennin is being excluded from participating “solely because of’ his disability. Defendant argues that the age eligibility rule is a neutral rule neutrally applied to him. Therefore, defendant claims, he is not being excluded solely because of his handicap, but because of his age.
See, e.g., Sandison,
This argument ignores the fact that the
sole
reason that Dennin is in school at nineteen is due to his disability. But for his disability, his fourth year of athletic participation (provided in CIAC’s rules) would not have been when he had become nineteen but at age eighteen.
See Buchanan,
The Supreme Court noted in
Alexander v. Choate,
The sole reason plaintiff is in school at nineteen is his disability. Since plaintiff is “otherwise qualified” due to the availability of a reasonable accommodation, under the Rehabilitation Act, defendant must grant a waiver to plaintiff.
2. ADA
To establish a claim under Title III of the ADA, 42 U.S.C. § 12182, plaintiff must prove
(1) he is disabled;
(2) thе [CIAC] is a “private entity” which [owns, leases (or leases to), or operates] a “place of public accommodation;” and
(3) he was denied the opportunity to “participate in or benefit from services or accommodations on the basis of his disability,” and that reasonable accommodations could be made which do not fundamentally alter the nаture of [CIAC] accommodations.
Johnson,
CIAC’s purposes include “to supervise, direct and control interscholastic athletics in Connecticut,” and “to develop intelligent recognition of the proper place of interscholastic athletics in the
education
of our youth.”
See
CIAC Handbook, Sec. 1.3. Member schools delegate significant control and authority to CIAC in regulating this 'athletic component of education. Additionally, CIAC sponsors athletic competitions and tournaments. By managing and controlling the aforementioned, it “operates” places of public accommodation, i.e., a place of education, entertainment and/or recreation. The fact that some of these facilities might be owned by a public entity, i.e., a public school, does not affect the conclusion that CIAC “operates” the facilities for purposes of athletic competition.
But see Sandison,
Assuming arguendo that CIAC is not a private entity operating a place of public accommodation, to establish a claim under Title II of the ADA, 42 U.S.C. § 12132, plaintiff must prove
(1) the [CIAC] is a “public entity;”
(2) he is a “qualified individual with a disability;” and
(3) he has been excluded from participation from or denied the bеnefits of the public entity.
Johnson,
Once defendant is found to be covered by ADA, then it must be determined if Dennin falls under the second element of Title II or the third element of Title III. The Rehabilitation Act analysis for an “otherwise qualified” individual is utilized to determine these elements under the ADA.
Johnson,
C. § 1988
Dennin also contends that the enforcement of the age requirement deprives him of his constitutional rights. To state a cause of action under § 1983, he must show (1) the conduct complained of was committed by a person acting under color of state law; and (2) such conduct deprived him of rights, privileges or immunities secured by the Constitution or laws of thе United States.
Parrott v. Taylor,
Although there generally is no constitutional right to participate in interscholastic sports, it has been held that inclusion of such activity in an IEP transforms it into a federally protected right.
See T.H. v. Montana High School Ass’n,
No. CV 92-150-BLG-JFB,
CLAC declined to inquire meaningfully and consider whether Dеnnin’s participation would undercut the purposes behind the rule. A waiver for Dennin was simply not considered. In fact, CLAC officials could provide no reason that an individualized inquiry would not permit a waiver to be granted to plaintiff. As earlier noted, his participation was not shown to undermine any of the stated purposes of the rule. Since, upon individualized inquiry, no reason not to grant the waiver exists, the waiver should be granted.
III. CONCLUSION
Plaintiff has established irreparable harm absent an injunction, and probability of success on the merits. The record here reflects no justification under the Rehabilitation Act, the ADA, and § 1983 and the IDEA for defendant to refuse to waive the age requirement for Dennin. The motion for preliminary injunction is granted. Without disagreement from the parties, this ruling is dispositive of the merits of plaintiffs claims for relief. The only issue flagged as possibly to be raised is that if defendant ultimately prevails on appeal, it may impose penalties or attorney’s fees pursuant to its bylaws upon Trumbull High School.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. CIAC has in place a waiver mechanism for eligibility requirements. There is no limitation on which rules are waivable. Subjective case-by-case analysis must have been foreseen for considering such waivers. In fact, transfer waivers are routinely considered. The presence of this mechanism weakens CIAC’s argument that case-by-case consideration of waivers constitutes an undue burden. The ruling here does not mandate the grant of a waiver in any case but this one.
. Plaintiff also claims disparate impact. The Supreme Court declined to decide what conduct can be challenged under the Rehabilitation Act as causing disparate impact.
See Alexander,
