MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
I. INTRODUCTION
This is a proposed class action challenging the new policy adopted by defendant Boston University (“BU”) to evaluate the requests of its students to accommodate their learning disabilities.
1
The plaintiffs — ten students with learning disabilities and four organiza
Plaintiffs challenge three aspects of BU’s new policy as violative of state and federal anti-discrimination laws. First, they contend that BU has unreasonably erected a series of harsh eligibility requirements for students who seek accommodations for their learning disabilities, such as the requirement that all testing to document the disability must be no more than three years old and must be performed only by a licensed psychologist or a physician. Second, plaintiffs allege that BU has subjected the students’ accommodation requests to an unfair evaluation and appeal procedure. Third, plaintiffs assert that the university has imposed a discriminatory blanket prohibition against course substitutions for mathematics and foreign language. In addition to the discriminatory treatment claims based on the university’s new accommodations policy, plaintiffs allege that defendants have created a hostile learning environment for learning-disabled students, that the university has breached its contractual agreement to provide reasonable accommodations for such students, and that the named students with learning disabilities at BU have suffered severe emotional distress due to the university’s intentional refusal to deliver on those promises. 4
Plaintiffs now move for class certification. Defendants oppose plaintiffs’ motion and, pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), move to dismiss a majority of the plaintiffs’ eight claims, the four associational plaintiffs, and two of the named defendants. Defendants argue that the allegations of the complaint fail to support plaintiffs’ claims for hostile environment discrimination (Count IV), breach of contract (Count V), promissory es-toppel (Count VI), and intentional infliction of emotional distress (Count VII). Defendants also assert that the associational plaintiffs lack standing, and that defendants Silber and Klafter are improper parties. For the reasons set forth below, defendants’ motion to dismiss is ALLOWED IN PART and DENIED IN PART, and plaintiffs’ motion for class certification is ALLOWED.
II. FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS
The allegations in the complaint that are relevant to the defendants’ 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss and to the plaintiffs’ motion for class certification are as follows. 5
Boston University is a private institution of higher learning that is chartered and incorporated under the law of the state of Massachusetts. Prior to the 1995 — 1996 school year,' students with learning disabilities who sought accommodations were required to provide BU’s Learning Disabilities Support Services (“LDSS”) with documentation of their disability. After reviewing the documentation, LDSS would determine which accommodations were appropriate. Authorized accommodations included tape-recorded textbooks, note-taking assistance, special testing
During the 1995 — 1996 school year, 480 students with learning disabilities were enrolled at BU. Yet, as in prior years, only a small percentage of the total number of learning disabled students asked for and received an accommodation for their disabilities. For example, from 1990 to 1995, BU allowed an average of 15 students per year to accommodate their disabilities by substituting other courses for math and foreign language.
In December of 1995, just prior to final exams, certain BU students with learning disabilities were sent a letter from LDSS notifying them of a new policy regarding their eligibility for accommodations. Students were told that their medical documentation had to have been completed within the preceding three years by a licensed psychologist or a physician “of reputable practice,” and that they had until January 8, 1996 to submit test results that satisfied this new criteria if they were to remain eligible for accommodations. BU extended the deadline for submission of new documentation to August 31, 1996 in a letter dated December 22, 1995; however, other aspects of the university’s new policy went into effect during the 1995 — 1996 school year, including its revised evaluation procedure.
Under the new evaluation scheme, a request for accommodation that has been submitted by a student with a learning disability is subjected to several tiers of review. A student is required, first, to submit to LDSS a recent physician’s or psychologist’s report. LDSS reviews the documentation, makes a recommendation regarding the student’s request, and forwards the application to the president’s office. BU’s president, currently Jon Westling, then reviews the application de novo. When this reevaluation is complete, the president’s office notifies LDSS of the chief administrator’s decision, and LDSS notifies the student of the university’s position regarding accommodations for the student’s disability. There is no avenue of appeal for students whose applications for accommodation have been denied by the president. 6 Most significantly, under the new policy, a student with a learning disability will not be accommodated with a course substitution of any kind under any circumstances.
President Westling, who has no expertise in learning disabilities or accommodations, is the final arbiter of student requests under the new policy. He personally denied twenty-six out of twenty-seven student requests for accommodation under the university’s new evaluation procedure during the 1995— 1996 school year. Several students were denied access to the same accommodations that they had been receiving from the university prior to the implementation of the new policy-
Moreover, in two speeches, delivered in Australia and before the Heritage Foundation in Washington, D.C., President Westling referred to students with learning disabilities as “a plague,” and an indication of “a silent genetic catastrophe,” and he has made similar statements in letters to the New York Times, the Boston Globe, campus newspapers, and students’ parents. Other administrators at BU, including Westling’s assistant, Craig Klafter, have also made derogatory comments, such as referring to students with learning disabilities as “draft dodgers.”
Students with learning disabilities at BU subjectively perceive the university to be a hostile educational environment for the learning-disabled. Plaintiffs claim they have suffered a loss of educational and professional opportunity, and their physical, mental, and emotional well-being has been irreparably harmed.
A. Dismissal of Claims
“Like a battlefield surgeon sorting the hopeful from the hopeless, a motion to dismiss invokes a form of legal triage, a paring of viable claims from those doomed by law.”
Iacampo v. Hasbro Inc.,
1. Hostile Learning Environment (Count TV)
Plaintiffs contend that the defendants’ derogatory speeches and discriminatory conduct have created a “hostile learning environment" for BU students with learning disabilities in violation of the ADA and the Rehabilitation Act. Cmplt. ¶76. Although several district courts have held that
workplace
harassment of a disabled employee violates federal law,
see e.g., Gaither v. Barron,
The analysis begins, of course, with the statutory language.
See Bailey v. United States,
— U.S. -, -,
The language of both Title III of the ADA and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act is substantially similar to Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, 20 U.S.C. §§ 1681-88 (1988),
7
which courts have held is the statutory basis for hostile learning environment claims based on sexual harassment.
See, e.g., Franklin v. Gwinnett County Pub. Schs.,
Persuaded by this line of cases interpreting the analogous language and policies of Title VII and Title IX, I conclude there is a cause of action under the ADA and the Rehabilitation Act for a hostile learning environment when harassment based on a student’s disability has “the purpose or effect of unreasonably interfering with [the] individual’s performance or [of] creating an intimidating, hostile, or offensive environment.”
Brown,
This Court concludes, further, that the flexible Title VII standards for establishing a hostile work environment claim apply to hostile learning environment claims brought under the federal statutes prohibiting discrimination against persons with disabilities.
Brown,
To state a cognizable claim for hostile learning environment harassment under the ADA and Rehabilitation Act, a plaintiff must allege: (1) that she is a member of a protected group, (2) that she has been subject to unwelcome harassment, (3) that the harassment is based on a protected characteristic, her disability, (4) that the harassment is sufficiently severe or pervasive that it alters the conditions of her education and creates an abusive educational environment, and (5) that there is a basis for institutional liability.
See Brown,
Applying these standards, this Court must now decide whether the claim of hostile learning environment discrimination in this case passes muster. Here, the individual plaintiffs are BU students with learning disabilities who claim that the derogatory statements of university administrators, in particular, President Westling, combined with the university’s “draconian” new accommodations policy, has created an abusive learning environment that has altered their educational and professional opportunities.
“[T]he relevant factors must be viewed both objectively and subjectively.”
Brown,
The allegations of the complaint fall short of describing an objectively “hostile” educational environment for students with learning disabilities. Jon Westling’s speeches, which are the only concrete examples of the alleged expressions of “scorn and hostility” toward learning disabled students made by university administrators, were delivered on only two occasions, both off-campus and in nonstudent fora. 8 When read in context, 9 the statements are critiques of the learning disabilities “movement” that are not focused on or addressed to particular BU students. For example, in the speech “Disabling Education: The Culture Wars Go to School,” Westling explores what he identifies as “the distinction between learning disabilities per se and [the] ideological movement that has seized on the existence of some real disabilities and conjured up other[s]”:
We should, in my view, make a strong distinction between diagnoses that rest on clear, specific criteria and corroborating medical and epidemiological evidence, and the penumbra complaints. The latter, much larger category of alleged maladies comprises much of the repertoire of learning disabilities specialists....
These are, it is fair to say, fugitive disorders. For most of them there is no standard test. Their symptomatologies are as vague as those photographs taken of bank robbers by surveillance cameras. That is to say, they do occasionally identify a suspect, but more often they identify a blur. Mostly what these fugitives disorders lack is a grounding in careful medical or scientific inquiry....
What, then, ails the fifteen to twenty percent of the school-age population that is allegedly learning disabled? ... Between 1977 and 1982, the number of learning disabled students in the United States more than doubled (from 797,000 to 1,627,-000). What happened? Did America suffer some silent genetic catastrophe during those decades?
Although these comments, viewed objectively, may certainly be offensive to learning-disabled students, under the
Brown
standard, they are not physically threatening or humiliating.
See Brown,
The complaint is devoid of the sharply-pointed, crudely-crafted, and frequently-launched “slings and arrows” that courts have found sufficient to establish severe and pervasive harassment that alters a plaintiff’s working conditions.
See e.g., Harris,
One court in this district has recently held that “there is enough difference between the work and the school milieu to justify a less rigorous” threshold of offensive conduct when plaintiffs claim that sexual harassment has created a hostile educational environment than when plaintiffs seek to support a hostile workplace sexual harassment claim. Donovan v. Mt. Ida College, No. 96-10289 (D.Mass.1997). Even if the measure of harassment in the educational environment is less rigorous than Title VII’s requirement of “severe and pervasive” conduct, the activity alleged in this complaint would miss the hostile environment mark.
Holding a university president hable for creating a hostile learning environment solely because of an unpopular speech would also have serious First Amendment implications.
See Brown v. Trustees of Boston Univ.,
Assuming
arguendo
that one can state a hostile learning environment claim under Article 114 of the Amendments to the Massachusetts Constitution,
10
plaintiffs’ allegations would also fail to support such a claim.
See Layne v. Superintendent of Mass. Correctional Inst,
Accordingly, Count IV is DISMISSED.
2. Breach of Contract (Count V)
A breach of contract is a failure to perform the terms of an agreement without legal excuse.
See Compagnie de Reassurance d’lle de France v. New England Reinsurance Corp.,
Plaintiffs allege that BU “published and disseminated various brochures, cata-logues, and promotional materials” that described accommodations that students with learning disabilities are eligible to obtain, including course substitutions in math and foreign language. Cmplt. at ¶ 84. Plaintiffs also assert that the published materials assured learning disabled students that “the services and accommodations provided by LDSS would remain available for the remainder of the student’s academic career at BU,” and that these promises were a “significant factor” in the students’ decisions to attend the university. Id. at ¶¶ 84, 85. The complaint alleges that the promotional materials created a contract between the students with learning disabilities and the university, and that the university breached this agreement by prohibiting course substitutions in math and foreign language and by requiring retesting for continued eligibility for accommodations, among other things. Id. at ¶ 87. This Court concludes that plaintiffs have alleged facts that, if true, are sufficient to support its breach of contract claim.
Universities are capable of forming legally cognizable contractual relationships with their students.
See Russell v. Salve Regina College,
Nonetheless, the defendants argue that the Court should exercise extreme care in deciding that the BU’s relationship with its learning disabled students is subject to commercial contract doctrine. Although “there can be no doubt that courts should be slow to intrude into the sensitive area of the student-college relationship,”
Russell,
Defendants’ argument that the university has issued materials with a disclaimer statement which undermines the plaintiffs’ breach of contract claim presents matters outside the four corners of the complaint and must await the summary judgment stage.
The motion to dismiss Count V of the complaint is DENIED.
3. Promissory Estoppel (Count VI)
Plaintiffs allege that defendants made oral promises to certain students with learning disabilities regarding their eligibility for accommodations, and that those students relied on the defendants’ representations. Although the complaint alleges facts sufficient to state a promissory estoppel claim, the standstill agreement
11
to honor any oral promise that university representatives may have made to learning-disabled students renders the promissory estoppel allegation moot.
See Griffith v. Sullivan,
4. Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress (Count VII)
To state a claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress under Massachusetts law, the plaintiff must allege
(1) that the actor intended to inflict emotional distress or that he knew or should have known that emotional distress was the likely result of his conduct; (2) that the conduct was “extreme and outrageous,” was “beyond all possible bounds of decency” and was “utterly intolerable in a civilized community”; (3) that the actions of the defendant were the cause of the plaintiffs distress; and (4) that the emotional distress sustained by the plaintiff was “severe” and of a nature “that no reasonable man could be expected to endure it.”
Agis v. Howard Johnson Co.,
This is not such a case. Plaintiffs claim emotional distress based on the defendants’ imposition of an allegedly discriminatory accommodations policy and on the creation of an allegedly hostile environment for students with learning disabilities. Even when taken as true, the factual allegations of the complaint are not extreme and outrageous enough to give rise to liability for any resulting emotional distress.
Cf. Chakrabarti v. Cohen,
Plaintiffs argue that the defendants’ conduct was sufficiently outrageous because the defendants knew that students with learning disabilities are particularly susceptible to emotional injury. While “the relationship of the plaintiff to the defendant and the knowledge of the plaintiffs sensitivities” is an important consideration in determining whether the challenged conduct satisfies the “extreme and outrageous” conduct requirement,
Russell,
The intentional infliction of emotional distress claim (Count VII) is
DISMISSED. See Fudge,
B. Dismissal of Parties
Defendants assert that the associational plaintiffs should be dismissed as parties in this action for lack of standing, and that former BU President John Silber and Assistant President Craig Klafter should be dismissed because there is no basis in law or fact to include them as defendants. 12
1. Associational Plaintiffs
Four organizations have joined as plaintiffs in this litigation: the Association for Higher Education and Disabilities (“AHEAD”), Children and Adults with Attention Deficit Disorder (“CHADD”), the Orton Dyslexia Society (“ODS”), and the Boston University Law Disability Caucus (“LDC”). AHEAD, which has 2,000 institutional, professional, and student members, is a non-profit organization designed to promote equal access to higher education for people with disabilities. CHADD, with 35,000 members, and ODS, with 10,000 members, are nationwide, nonprofit associations formed to better the lives and further the educational and professional opportunities of persons with attention deficit disorder and dyslexia, respectively. LDC, which was formed incident to the events that triggered the instant lawsuit, is an association consisting of approximately ten learning-disabled BU law students who seek to ensure that the university abides by the federal laws prohibiting discrimination against people with disabilities.
According to the complaint, the membership of each organization “includes persons who are students or would be potential students of Boston University.” In addition, the complaint alleges that each organization “has been, and will be, forced to expend its resources in order to counter the discriminatory acts of the Defendant.” At issue here is whether the allegations of the complaint are sufficient to establish that any of these organizations has standing, either on its own behalf or as a representative of the students, to bring this action.
a. Standing Standard
An association may have standing both to seek redress for injury to itself and/or to vindicate harm to its members.
See Int’l Union, United Auto., Aerospace and Agr. Implement Workers of America v. Brock,
To have standing to sue as a representative of its members, an organization must establish that “(a) its members would otherwise have standing to sue in their own right; (b) the interests it seeks to protect are germane to the organization’s purpose; and (c) neither the claim asserted nor the relief requested requires the participation of individual members in the lawsuit.”
Hunt v. Washington State Apple Advertising Comm’n,
In either case, for the organization to have standing to sue, the association itself or its members must face real, tangible harm: “[a] mere interest in an event — no matter how passionate or sincere the interest and no matter how charged with public import the event — will not substitute for an actual injury.”
AVX Corp.,
b. AHEAD, CHADD, ODS
In the complaint, plaintiffs assert that these organizations expect to expend resources to challenge BU’s accommodations policy. Even if BU’s new procedure has such an indirect economic impact on these associations, this fact is not sufficient to establish that AHEAD, CHADD, and ODS have suffered a redressible injury and, thus, have standing to challenge the defendants’ allegedly discriminatory accommodations policies on their own behalf.
See Warth v. Seldin,
In their memorandum in opposition to the motion to dismiss, plaintiffs assert that AHEAD, CHADD, and ODS have standing to sue on their own behalf not only because of the expected expenditures but also because the referral functions of the organizations have been injured by the need to “provid[e] increased information to their memberships and the general public” as a result of BU’s discriminatory policy.
Cf. Havens Realty Corp. v. Coleman,
Alternatively, plaintiffs argue that AHEAD, CHADD, and ODS have standing to sue as representatives of their members. However, the complaint asserts only that each organization’s membership “includes persons who are students or who would be potential students of Boston University.” The complaint does not allege — as it must— that the “members, or any one of them, are suffering immediate or threatened injury as a result of the challenged action of the sort that would make out a justiciable case had the members themselves brought suit.”
Warth,
c. LDC
Unlike the other associational plaintiffs, LDC meets the three prongs of the Hunt test for representative standing. First, the complaint alleges that LDC consists of approximately ten “students with learning disabilities who attend Boston University School of Law.” Cmplt. ¶23. Because at least one named plaintiff is a member of LDC, the organization has members who are subject to the university’s allegedly discriminatory accommodations policies and who, thus, would have standing to sue in their own right.
Second, inasmuch as the complaint asserts that “the major priority of [LDC] is to ensure that federal laws which protect students with disabilities are enforced by Boston University,” the organization’s purpose is consistent with the interests that the lawsuit seeks to protect.
Finally, the primary forms of relief sought — injunctive and declaratory relief against BU’s implementation of its new accommodations policy — do not require the individual participation of LDC members. This is a proper ease for associational standing.
See Warth,
2. John Silber and Craig Klafter
The complaint asserts ADA, Rehabilitation Act, Article 114, and breach of contract claims against Boston University and against John Westling, John Silber, and Craig Klafter in their official capacities. 13 Defendants have moved to dismiss individual defendants Silber and Klafter.
a. ADA Claims Against Silber and Klafter
The threshold inquiry in determining whether defendants Silber and Klafter should be dismissed is whether and under what circumstances individuals are liable for discrimination under Title III of the ADA, the statutory basis for the plaintiffs’ claims against Silber and Klafter. Title III provides:
No individual shall be discriminated against on the basis of disability in the full and equal enjoyment of the goods, services, facilities, privileges, advantages, or accommodations of any place of public accommodation by any person who owns, leases (or leases to), or operates a place of public accommodation.
42 U.S.C.A. § 12182 (1995) (emphasis added). Although the language of the statute explicitly refers to “persons,” the regulations that implement this statutory section “place[ ] the ADA’s nondiscrimination obligations on ‘public accommodations’ rather than on ‘persons’ or on ‘places of public accommodation.’ ” 28 C.F.R.App. B § 36.104, at 606 (1996). The regulations “alter the language of the statute slightly to read as follows: ‘No individual shall be discriminated against on the basis of disability ...
by any private entity
who owns, leases (or leases to), or operates a
Nearly every court that has decided the issue of individual liability under Title III has found that individuals can be held responsible for violations of these prohibitions against discrimination “if they ‘own, lease[ ] (or lease[] to), or operate[]’ a place of public accommodation.”
Aikins,
The question remains, however, whether the plaintiffs in this case have alleged facts sufficient to establish that defendants Silber and Klafter “operate” BU within the meaning of the statute, and are, thus, liable for violations of the ADA.
In
Neff v. American Dairy Queen Corp.,
To “operate,” in the context of a business operation, means “to put or keep in operation,” The Random House College Dictionary 931 (Rev. ed.1980), “to control or direct the functioning of,” Webster’s II: New Riverside University Dictionary 823 (1988), “to conduct the affairs of; manage,” The American Heritage Dictionary 1268 (3d ed.1992).
Id.
Similarly, in
Howe v. Hull,
[A]n individual may be hable as an operator of a pubhc accommodation where (a) he or she is in a position of authority; (b)wit,bin the ambit of this authority he or she has both the power and discretion to perform potentially discriminatory acts; and (c) the discriminatory acts are the result of the exercise of the individual’s own discretion, as opposed to the implementation of institutional policy or the mandates of superiors.
Id. at 788. Given these persuasive interpretations of what it means to “operate” a place of public accommodation for the purpose of Title III of the ADA, this Court concludes that the plaintiffs have alleged facts sufficient to support an ADA claim against defendant Silber, but that the ADA claim against Craig Klafter must be dismissed.
The complaint asserts that John Silber is the current Chancellor of BU and was “President of Boston University during the formulation of Boston University’s new policy against students with learning disabilities.” Cmplt. ¶26. It also states that Silber is responsible for insuring that the university complies with state and federal law, and that, although Silber has been made aware of the students’ “illegal treatment,” he “nevertheless knowingly has participated in carrying out and continuing the discriminatory policies of Boston University.” Id. When the allegations of the complaint are taken as true and all reasonable inferences are made in favor of the plaintiffs, this Court finds that the facts alleged are sufficient to support an inference that, as the former president and the current Chancellor of BU, Silber is in a position of authority and discretion such that he may be deemed to “operate” the university within the meaning of the ADA.
Whether the allegations of the complaint support plaintiffs’ argument that Craig Klafter “operates” BU presents a much closer question. The complaint labels Craig Klafter as “the assistant to President Westling,” BU’s current president. It maintains that although he, too, “is responsible for insuring that students with disabilities in Boston University are treated in compliance with state and federal law,” Klafter has knowingly “participated in carrying out and continuing” the university’s allegedly discriminatory accommodations policies. Cmplt. ¶27. The complaint alleges, even more specifically, that Klafter “assists Defendant Westling in reviewing student applications for reasonable accommodation.” Id.
Klafter’s alleged role as an “assistant” undermines the plaintiffs’ argument that he exercises the authority, control, or discretion is necessary for one to be deemed an “operator” of a place of public accommodation for the purpose of liability under Title III. In the complaint, plaintiffs allege only that Klafter assists in the perpetration of BU’s discriminatory policy, and, by making such a characterization, plaintiffs have failed to state facts sufficient to support the claim that Klafter is subject to individual liability under the ADA.
Defendants’ motion to dismiss the ADA claims against Silber is DENIED; however, the motion to dismiss the ADA claims against Klafter is ALLOWED.
b. Rehabilitation Act Claims Against Silber and Klafter
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act states:
No otherwise qualified individual with a disability ... shall, solely by reason of her or his disability, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance.
29 U.S.C. § 794(a) (Supp.1996). Because “ ‘Congress imposes the obligations of § 504 upon those who are in a position to accept or reject those obligations as part of the decision whether or not to receive federal funds,’” individuals can be held liable for violations of the Rehabilitation Act if they are “in a position to accept or reject federal assistance” for a program or activity.
Glanz v. Vernick,
On the other hand, plaintiffs have not stated facts to support an inference that Klafter is in a position to control the influx of federal dollars.
See Johnson v. N.Y. Hosp.,
c. Article 1H- Claims Against Silber and Klafter
Article 114 of the Amendments to the Massachusetts constitution prohibits any “otherwise qualified handicapped individual” from being “excluded from the participation in, denied the benefits of, or be[ing] subject to discrimination under any program or activity within the commonwealth.” Although the amendment is modeled after Section 504 of the federal Rehabilitation Act,
see Layne v. Superintendent, Mass. Correctional Inst.,
Because of the seemingly unlimited anti-discrimination obligation that Article 114 imposes, and in light of the Supreme Judicial Court’s finding that “a person whose constitutional rights have been interfered with may be entitled to judicial relief’ directly under the state constitution,
Phillips v. Youth Dev. Program, Inc.,
The defendants’ motion to dismiss the Article 114 claims against defendants Silber and Klafter is DENIED.
d. Breach of Contract Claims Against Silber and Klafter
The breach of contract claims against John Silber and Craig Klafter must be dismissed as a matter of law. The complaint alleges only that defendant BU published and disseminated promotional materials regarding the accommodations that BU students with learning disabilities are entitled to receive and that plaintiffs relied on these representations. Because “the officer ordinarily is not hable for the corporation’s breach of contract” under Massachusetts law,
Union Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Chrysler Corp.,
IV. CLASS CERTIFICATION
A. Legal Standard
“An action may be brought as a class action if it meets the criteria set out in Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.”
Mattoon v. City of Pittsfield,
One or more members of a class may sue or be sued as representative parties on behalf of all only if (1) the class is so numerous that joinder of all members is impracticable, (2) there are questions of law or fact common to the class, (3) the claims or defenses of the representative parties are typical of the claims or defenses of the class, and (4) the representative parties will fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class.
In addition to these prerequisites of numer-osity, commonality, typicality, and adequacy, plaintiffs seeking class action status must also satisfy one of the three parts of Rule 23(b).
See
Fed. R.Civ.P. 23(b);
Mattoon,
B. Rule 23(a) Prerequisites
1. Numerosity
The first certification hurdle is a showing that there is a class of persons which “is so numerous that joinder of all members is impracticable.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(a)(1). The complaint alleges that 480 learning-disabled students were enrolled at BU during the 1995-1996 school year, and that these students would be subject to the university’s new “discriminatory” procedure if they sought accommodation from the university. Because it would be impracticable to join as plaintiffs the nearly five hundred BU students with learning disabilities who may seek accommodations under the university’s new policy, there is a class of currently-enrolled, learning-disabled students that is sufficiently numerous to satisfy Rule 23(a)(1).
2. Commonality and Typicality
“The ‘typicality’ and ‘commonality’ prerequisites of Rule 23 do not require that all of the putative class members share identical claims”; rather “[t]hese prerequisites mandate only that complainants’ claims be common, and not in conflict.”
Hassine v. Jeffes,
Closely related to commonality, the typicality prerequisite “focuses primarily on the extent to which the proposed class representatives encompass the claim of the other class members.”
Lintemuth v. Saturn Corp.,
Defendants argue that the representative plaintiffs in this ease do not have “typical” claims because the plaintiffs allegedly have various learning disabilities, which give rise to different statutory rights and modes of accommodation. Several courts have analyzed ADA and Rehabilitation Act claims on a ease-by-case basis and have refused to confer class action status for actions involving the denial of reasonable accommodations.
See, e.g., Chandler v. City of Dallas,
The plaintiffs here are not challenging the university’s failure to accommodate particular students, nor are they seeking to secure a specific accommodation for any particular type of learning disability. Rather, the plaintiffs assert that BU’s blanket accommodations policy — requiring recent documentation, subjecting requests to a multi-tiered and unappealable review process, and prohibiting course-substitutions — is itself discriminatory and thus inconsistent with state and federal law. As current students with learning disabilities who are subject to the university’s allegedly discriminatory new policy, the named representatives’ claims are typical of those of the class. 16
3. Adequacy
In making the required determination regarding the adequacy of the named plaintiffs as class representatives, a court must decide “first, whether any potential conflicts exist between the named plaintiffs and the prospective class members, and, second, whether the named plaintiffs and their counsel will prosecute their ease vigorously.”
In re Bank of Boston,
C. Rule 23(b)(2)
The plaintiffs seek class certification pursuant to Fed.R. Civ.P. 231(b)(2) on the ground that BU has acted or refused to act in a manner generally applicable to the class, “thereby making appropriate final injunctive relief or corresponding declaratory relief with respect to the class as a whole.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 231(b)(2). It is well-established that, more than the precise number of individual members who can claim entitlement to relief, “the conduct complained of is the benchmark for determining whether a(b)(2) class exists.”
Yaffe v. Powers,
Defendants maintain that this Court should refuse to certify a Rule 23(b)(2) class of plaintiffs because the plaintiffs do not need to proceed as a class in order to obtain the requested injunctive and declaratory relief. In
Dionne v. Bouley,
The danger of mootness is great enough in the instant litigation to necessitate class certification. Students graduate, transfer, drop
D. Scope of the Class
Plaintiffs have proposed that the class consist not only of learning-disabled students who are currently enrolled at BU, but also of individuals with learning disabilities who “were deterred from applying to or enrolling in Boston University or will be so deterred in the future.”
Plaintiffs Proposed Order,
at 2. It is here that this Court will invoke its discretion to limit the unnecessary. Even if deterred applicants to BU have standing to sue the university, their inclusion in the class does little either to further the plaintiffs’ goal of obtaining declaratory and injunctive relief or to resolve the problem of mootness. Nothing is gained by conferring membership on individuals with learning disabilities who have been deterred. In the exercise of its discretion, this Court restricts the certified class to students with learning disabilities who are currently enrolled at BU.
See Andrews v. Bechtel Power Corp.,
ORDER
The Court orders as follows:
(1)Defendants’ motion to dismiss is ALLOWED with respect to Counts IV, VI, and VII; and is DENIED with respect to Count V.
(2) By agreement, plaintiffs Freedman and LaBrogue are dismissed.
(3) The Court ALLOWS defendants’ motion to dismiss AHEAD, CHADD and CDS, but DENIES their motion to dismiss LDC. AHEAD, CHADD, and ODS are invited to submit amicus briefs.
(4) The Court ALLOWS plaintiffs’ motion to certify a plaintiff class pursuant to Fed. R.Civ.P. 23(b)(2) to include the following:
all students with learning disabilities and/or attention deficit disorder who are currently enrolled at Boston University.
(5) The motion to dismiss Silber is ALLOWED with respect to Count V only.
(6) The motion to dismiss Klafter is ALLOWED as to all claims except the claim for equitable relief under Article 114 (Count III).
Notes
. Plaintiffs seek certification for a class consisting of
"[a]ll persons with learning disabilities and/or attention deficit disorder who have been, are, or will be denied their legal rights under the ADA, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, or Article 114 of the Amendments to the Massachusetts Constitution as a result of Defendants' policies and practices, including
1) all students with learning disabilities already enrolled in Boston University or accepted to enroll on or after January, 1995;
2) all students who were enrolled at Boston University but have transferred as a result of new policies toward learning disabled students; and
3) all individuals with learning disabilities who were deter from applying to or enrolled in Boston University or will be so deterred in the future.”
. The Association on Higher Education and Disabilities ("AHEAD”); Children and Adults with Attention Deficit Disorders ("CHADD”); Orton Dyslexia Society ("ODS” ); and Boston University Law Disability Caucus (“LDC”).
. Boston University; Jon Westling, current president of BU; John Silber, former president and current Chancellor or BU; and Craig Klafter, assistant to President Westling.
. In summary, Counts I, II, and III accuse the defendants of violating plaintiffs, rights under the ADA, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, and Article 114 of the Massachusetts Constitution, respectively. Count IV claims that defendants have created a hostile learning environment for students with learning disabilities. Count V alleges that defendants breached a contract with plaintiffs; Count VI claims that plaintiffs are entitled to relief under a theory of promissory estoppel, Finally, Count VII asserts that defendants intentionally inflicted emotional distress upon the plaintiffs named in this lawsuit.
.In deciding this motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), the Court looks only at the allegations contained within the complaint, and does not consider any additional facts alleged in the parties’ memoranda or exhibits.
See Canney
v.
City of Chelsea,
. BU retorts that the president's denial is reviewable by a subordinate university official. Even if such a review constitutes an effective appeal right, the Court assumes for the purpose of this motion that plaintiffs allegation is correct.
. In relevant part, Title IX provides:
No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, he excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance....
20 U.S.C. § 1681(a) (1988).
. The complaint references statements from two speeches, "Getting the Government Out of Higher Education," and "Disabling Education: The Culture Wars Go to School," which were given in 1995 in Australia and at a Heritage Foundation meeting in the District of Columbia. Although the plaintiffs allege generally that "[o]ther Boston University administrators, including Defendant Klafter, have made similar discriminatory public statements,” they do not allege facts pertaining to statements made by any administrator other than Westling.
. The First Circuit has suggested that, in deciding a motion to dismiss a hostile environment claim, a court can consider the context and content of allegedly abusive statements.
See Brown,
. Article 114 provides:
"No otherwise qualified handicapped individual shall, solely by reason of his handicap, be excluded from the participation in, denied the benefits of, or be subject to discrimination under any program or activity within the commonwealth.”
Mass. Const, amend, art. CXIV.
. The University has agreed to hold certain aspects of the challenged policy in abeyance during the 1996-1997 school year, and to honor students' claims that they were promised an accommodation if such promise is verified by the prom-isor. Because the standstill agreement was filed in court, I take judicial notice of its provisions.
. The defendants also sought dismissal of plaintiffs Freedman and LaBraque, students whose claims against BU for injunctive and declaratory relief were allegedly mooted by their transfer to a different university. The plaintiffs concede that these students claims are moot. Thus, the Court allows defendants’ motion to dismiss the two plaintiffs.
. Plaintiffs do not seek compensatory damages from these individual defendants.
. In relevant part, the enforcement provision of Title III of the ADA states:
(1) Availability of remedies and procedures. The remedies and procedures set forth in section 204(a) of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (42 U.S.C.2000a-3(a)) are the remedies and procedures this title provides to any person who is being subjected to discrimination on the basis of disability.... Nothing in this section shall require a person with a disability to engage in a ftitile gesture if such person has actual notice that a person or organization covered by this title does not intend to comply with its provisions.
42 U.S.C.S. § 12188(a) (Supp.1996) (emphasis added). Section 204(a) of the Civil Rights Act provides:
Whenever any person has engaged or there are reasonable grounds to believe that any person is about to engage in any act or practice prohibited by section 203 [42 USCS § 2000A-2], a civil action for preventive relief, including an application for a permanent or temporary injunction, restraining order, or other order, may be instituted by the person aggrieved ...
42 U.S.C.S. § 2000a-3 (1989) (emphasis added).
. Because plaintiffs do not assert individual liability for monetary damages, this Court does not address whether Article 114 can be the basis of a claim for compensatory relief.
. The individual plaintiffs also include the Law Disability Caucus ("LDC"), an organization that is currently comprised of learning-disabled students at BU.
. At the hearing on class certification, the named plaintiffs clarified that they so not seek certification with respect to claims for compensatory damages. This Court considers certification only in regard to the plaintiffs, requests for prospective relief.
See Santiago v. City of Phila.,
