ORDER AND MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
Plaintiffs Richard Nelson and Edwin Jessi-man, professors at the University of Maine at Machias, sue the University of Maine System under Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 (“Title IX”), 20 U.S.C. §§ 1681-1688. Plaintiffs base their claims on the University’s alleged retaliatory employment action. Nelson and Jessiman originally filed a five-count complaint against the University. In a prior order, however, the Court granted Defendant’s Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings as to Counts II (Jessiman’s First Amendment claim), IV (Nelson’s First Amendment claim), and V (Nelson’s breach of contract claim). Defendant now moves for summary judgment on the two remaining claims: Jessiman’s Title IX claim, Count I, and Nelson’s Title IX claim, Count III. For the reasons stated below, the Court grants summary judgment as to Count I, and denies it as to Count III.
I. Summary Judgment
Summary judgment is appropriate in the absence of a genuine issue of any material fact, when the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R.Civ.P. 56(c). Thus it is axiomatic that summary judgment must be denied when disputes remain as to consequential facts— facts upon which the outcome may rely.
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
II. Title IX
The Court detailed the factual circumstances underlying this action in its January 29, 1996 order, and refers to those facts as necessary without now recounting them in their entirety. The Court begins with the applicable standards.
Title IX creates an implied private right of action for plaintiffs subject to discrimination in educational institutions which receive federal funds.
Franklin v. Gwinnett County Public Schools,
No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be 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) 1 .
Courts generally look to Title VII, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e, to supply the legal standards for both Title IX discrimination and retaliation claims.
Brown v. Hot, Sexy and Safer Productions, Inc.,
While the First Circuit has yet to address a Title IX retaliation claim, the court’s treatment of Title IX discrimination claims supports an extension of this analysis to Title IX retaliation claims. For example, in
Lipsett v. University of Puerto Rico,
the First Circuit, applying Title VII principles to a Title IX harassment claim, relied upon: “the legislative history of Title IX, itself, which strongly suggests that Congress meant for similar substantive standards to apply under Title IX as had been developed under Title VII.”
A. Prima Facie Case
As required by the
McDonnell Douglas v. Green,
1. he or she engaged in participation or opposition protected by Title [IX];
2. the employer thereafter subjected the plaintiff to an adverse employment action; and
3. there is a causal connection between the protected activity and the adverse employment action.
See Wyatt,
B. Individual Claims
The University moves for summary judgment on the basis that neither Jessiman nor Nelson have successfully established a prima facie case of retaliatory discrimination under Title IX. As the Plaintiffs present factually distinct claims, the Court address each claim individually, granting summary judgment as to Count I, and denying it as to Count III.
1. Count I: Professor Jessiman
As noted above, in federal discrimination cases, the plaintiff bears the burden of proof to establish a prima facie case. Failure to do so entitles the Defendant to summary judgment. The University concedes for the purposes of summary judgment that Jessiman meets the first prong oppositional conduct requirement. The University challenges only the second and third prong requirements of Jessiman’s prima facie case.
As to the second prong showing, Professor Jessiman contends that the University engaged in adverse employment action in three distinct ways. First Jessiman contends that the University has subjected him to “highly *281 suspect, uninvestigated and unsubstantiated complaints of sexual harassment.” (PL Opp.Sum.J. at 15.) Second he argues that he “has been defamed as a result of an internal [University] review of the very complaints that he raised against a colleague regarding sexual harassment and abusive treatment of students.” (Id.) Last, Jessiman claims “he was reprimanded by the President of the University as a result of that review as if he in fact were the offending party.” (Id.) Jes-siman contends that the University’s actions have resulted in “professional embarrassment and have caused needless anxiety.” (Id. at 16.) The Court does not find, however, that these actions, either individually or as a whole, constitute adverse employment action.
An adverse employment action need not rise to the level of discharge to be actionable.
Connell v. Bank of Boston,
Less clear is whether more subtle employment actions, such as criticisms, reprimands, defamation and other reputational injuries constitute adverse employment action. 6 Divergent authority, nationwide, obscures the parameters of adverse employment action. Nonetheless even under a liberal reading of adverse employment activity, an employee must ultimately show some employment injury. This Court is weary of defining an adverse employment action in a manner which discourages open communication, critical or otherwise, between employers or supervisors and their employees as to the employee’s employment performance.
The First Circuit has not specifically addressed the issue of whether reputational injuries resulting from employment activity, alone, may constitute adverse employment action. That court has, however, intimated that “many things, such as constant rudeness, conspicuous discriminatory acts, etc., could also have an adverse effect upon employment.”
Welsh v. Derwinski,
Despite the broad language used by the First Circuit, this Court is not aware of any court in the First Circuit that has held that mere criticism, or counseling, of an employee constitutes adverse employment action. An actionable retaliation claim requires more.
Fausto v. Welch,
Similarly, courts have held that a letter of reprimand placed in an employee’s file, alone, does not qualify as adverse employment action.
Coney v. Dept. of Human Resources of State of Ga.,
The Court turns to the facts of the instant case, as the First Circuit counsels that “[w]ithin reasonable limits, in order to arrive at a determination [as to an adverse employment action], a case by case review is necessary.”
Welsh,
*283 The Court does not consider mere criticism of an employee to constitute adverse employment action. To the contrary, the critical evaluation of employee performance is often a vital function of any supervisor or responsible administrator. An employer or supervisor must be free, to some extent, to point out an employee’s failings, as with his or her successes. The Court considers this appropriate practice in the employment context, and generally within an employer’s prerogative.
The Court notes that several courts, outside the First Circuit, have construed University action injuring professors’ professional reputations as adverse employment actions.
Passer v. American Chem. Soc’y,
Most analogous to Jessiman’s case is
Howze v. Virginia Polytechnic,
Jessiman’s situation differs from that in Howze in that he was not criticized by a formal committee, but rather by the University President, and that criticism came by way of a letter to Jessiman, not a committee report. In Jessiman’s case neither Nord-strom’s reprimand, nor the complaints in Jes-siman’s EEO file were widely circulated. Furthermore both parties now concede that Nordstrom’s letter was ultimately removed from Jessiman’s file, and therefore it poses no threat to Jessiman’s reputation as would a formal University report. 8
With regard to the student complaints in Jessiman’s EEO file, these letters also do not pose any present threat to Jessimari’s position at the University, as no action has been taken as a result of the letters. Sheryl Lambson, the University EEO Officer, claims that the letters may later be “used by her in the event subsequent complaints were made against Dr. Jessiman to support an argument that a pattern of this type of behavior existed as to Dr. Jessiman.” (Pl.Mot. Sum.J. at 4.) The Court does not foreclose the possibility that Jessiman may have a claim in the future to the extent he is unjustifiably injured due to these complaints. The Court concludes, however, that at present, the University has not taken any adverse employment action cognizable under Title IX. These reports merely sit in a restricted file at the University, and any resulting injury to Jessiman remains too speculative to be actionable.
*284 As the Court finds that the University did not engage in adverse employment activity against Jessiman, he cannot establish a pri-ma facie case under Title IX and the Court need not review the causation requirement. The Court grants Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment.
2. Count III: Professor Nelson
The University moves for summary judgment as to Count III, on the grounds that Professor Nelson can neither satisfy the first prong oppositional conduct requirement nor the third prong causation requirement of a Title IX prima facie case of retaliation,
a. Oppositional Conduct
Defendants claim that Professor Nelson had no reasonable grounds to believe that he opposed conduct in violation of Title IX, and that even if he did believe he was doing so, he never communicated these opinions to anyone involved in the decision to deny him tenure. As to any reports that Nelson did communicate to University officials, such as Dr. Armstrong, then-Vice President of Academic Affairs, the University claims this information was unsubstantiated and mere hearsay, thus undermining any reasonable belief Nelson could legitimately hold as to sexual harassment and discrimination at the University. The University also argues that “Nelson never initiated a sexual harassment complaint on his own behalf, and never initiated a complaint on behalf of any particular individual.” (Def.Mot.Sum.J. at 19.) These arguments however misconstrue the requirements under the first prong.
To satisfy the first prong of a prima facie case for retaliation, the conduct opposed need not necessarily violate Title IX; rather, the plaintiff need only have a good faith belief that a Title IX violation was occurring.
Petitti,
While Nelson’s allegations that Dr. Lehman abused his spouse fall outside the scope of Title his claims concerning the student complaints of sexual harassment relate to prohibited activities under Title IX.
See Hoeppner,
Aside from Nelson’s conversations with Dr. Armstrong, factual issues also remain as to the other means through which Professor Nelson may have communicated his opposition to University practices prohibited under Title IX. Specifically, the extent of Nelson’s role in writing the letters signed by Professor Jessiman remains controverted. While the University notes, and Professor Nelson concedes, that these letters were signed only *285 by Jessiman, the possibility exists that a jury could find that Nelson did aid in the writing of these letters, and that University officials were aware of both his support for Jessi-man’s efforts, and Nelson’s opposition to the University’s sexual discrimination policies in general.
b. Causation
The Defendant contests Nelson’s third prong causation showing as well. Defendant argues that Professor Nelson’s alleged oppositional conduct played no part in the decision to deny his application for tenure. Specifically the University argues that no causal link can be established because: (1) the University officials charged with deciding the fate of Nelson’s tenure application were unaware of his opposition to the alleged faculty discrimination; and (2) the time lag between Nelson’s oppositional actions and the alleged adverse employment action is too attenuated to support a finding of causation. The Court finds neither argument persuasive.
To establish the causation prong, Nelson must show that his protected activity played some role in the adverse action taken against him.
Petitti,
In the absence of direct evidence of causation courts often look to the temporal proximity between the protected activity and the adverse employment action to establish a nexus between the two.
Oliver v. Digital Equipment Corp.,
While Nelson’s causation argument may be largely inferential, a reasonable jury could nonetheless conclude that the University retaliated against Nelson as a result of his oppositional conduct. Accordingly, this issue, as with the first prong inquiry, is preserved for the fact finder. The Court denies Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment as to Count III.
III. Conclusion
For the above state reasons, the Court
(1) GRANTS Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment as to Count I, and;
(2) DENIES Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment as to Count III.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Title DC does provide for certain exemptions, however, none are applicable here. Id. at § 1681(a)(l)-(9).
. Plaintiffs, citing
Franklin v. Gwinnett County Pub. Schs.,
. In
Cohen v. Brown University,
the First Circuit rejected the application of Title VII burden shifting standards to the Title IX disparate treatment claim at issue.
. Adopting Title VII principles to this Title IX claim, the Court first turns to the burden-shifting rubric employed under Title VII.
See e.g., Lipsett,
McDonnell Douglas
sets forth a three-stage process.
. The First Circuit has noted that a complainant’s initial burden of establishing a prima facie case is "not onerous.”
Lipsett,
. The Court notes that prevailing caselaw supports an expansive construction of adverse employment action. Courts have found, for example, that even lateral transfers, without a reduction in pay or benefits can constitute adverse employment action if the employer relocates an employee to an undesirable location in an office,
Trout v. Hidalgo,
. Plaintiff also cites
Saunders v. Southland Corp.,
.
Passer v. American Chem. Soc’y,
. The University, itself, concedes that Nelson presents a "few instances which could arguably qualify as protected activity.” (Def.Mot.SumJ. at 19.) The Court need not go beyond this showing to establish that genuine issues of material fact remain as to this prong of Nelson’s prima facie case for retaliation.
