Portz v. St. Cloud State University

U.S. District Court, District of Minnesota

Portz v. St. Cloud State University

Trial Court Opinion

                   UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                          
                      DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                              


ALEXIE PORTZ, JILL KEDROWSKI, ABIGAIL                                    
KANTOR, MARILIA ROQUE DIVERSI,        Civil No. 16-1115 (JRT/LIB)        
FERNANDA QUINTINO DOS SANTOS,                                            
MARIA HAUER, HALEY BOCK, KAITLYN                                         
BABICH, ANNA LINDELL, and KIERSTEN                                       
ROHDE, individually and on behalf of all  MEMORANDUM OPINION             
those similarly situated,              AND ORDER GRANTING                
                                     DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR              
                       Plaintiffs,    RELIEF FROM JUDGMENT               

v.                                                                       

ST. CLOUD STATE UNIVERSITY and                                           
MINNESOTA STATE COLLEGES AND                                             
UNIVERSITIES,                                                            

                      Defendants.                                        


    Sharon L. Van Dyck, VAN DYCK LAW FIRM, PLLC, 5775 Wayzata Boulevard, 
    Suite 700, Saint Louis Park, MN 55416; Donald Chance Mark, Jr. and Jamie 
    Pahl Briones, FAFINSKI MARK & JOHNSON, P.A., 775 Prairie Center Drive, 
    Suite 400, Eden Prairie, MN 55344, for Plaintiffs.                   

    Elizabeth  C.  Kramer  and  Joseph  D.  Weiner,  MINNESOTA  ATTORNEY 
    GENERAL’S  OFFICE,  445  Minnesota  Street,  Suite  1100,  Saint  Paul,  MN 
    55101, for Defendants.                                               

    Plaintiffs brought this class action against Defendants St. Cloud State University 
(“SCSU”) and Minnesota State Colleges and Universities (“MNSCU”), alleging gender 
discrimination in SCSU’s past and present allocation of athletic opportunities, treatment, 
and  benefits  for  female  student-athletes  in  violation  of  Title  IX  of  the  Education 
Amendments Act of 1972 (“Title IX”).                                      

    After a bench trial, the Court found that SCSU was violating Title IX and issued a 
permanent injunction requiring SCSU to comply with the statute on a program-wide basis.  
Following an appeal and partial reversal of the injunction by the Eighth Circuit, the parties 
moved to dissolve or modify the injunction.  The Court dissolved the portion of the 

permanent injunction relating to athletic participation opportunities but modified the 
remaining portion relating to treatment and benefits.                     
      Defendants now move the Court to dissolve the remaining part of the permanent 

injunction relating to the equitable allocation of athletic-related treatment and benefits.  
Because the Court finds that SCSU is now  in compliance with Title IX, it will grant 
Defendants’ Motion for Relief and dissolve the injunction.                
                          BACKGROUND                                     

    The factual background of this case has been discussed at length in the Court’s 
prior orders, so the Court will describe only the facts necessary to assess SCSU’s Motion 
for Relief.  See Portz v. St. Cloud State Univ. (“Portz I”), 
401 F. Supp. 3d 834
, 840–54 (D. 
Minn. 2019), aff’d in part, rev’d in part, vacated in part, 
16 F.4th 577
 (8th Cir. 2021) (Portz 

II); Portz v. St. Cloud State Univ. (“Portz III”), No. 16-1115, 
2022 WL 4095912
, at *1–4 (D. 
Minn. Sept. 7, 2022).  Plaintiffs are female student-athletes who attend or recently 
attended SCSU and were members of SCSU’s varsity intercollegiate Women’s tennis or 
Women’s Nordic skiing teams.  Portz I, 401 F. Supp. 3d at 840–41.  Plaintiffs represent a 
class certified as “all present, prospective, and future female students at [SCSU] who are 

harmed by and want to end [SCSU’s] sex discrimination in: (1) the allocation of athletic 
participation opportunities . . . and (3) the allocation of benefits provided to varsity 
athletes.”  
Id. at 841
.  SCSU is a university in the MNSCU system.  
Id. at 840
 (citation 
omitted).                                                                 

    Following a bench trial in 2018, the Court found that SCSU violated Title IX in its 
inequitable allocation of athletic participation opportunities, treatments, and benefits 
based on gender since 2014.  
Id. at 869
.  Accordingly, the Court issued a permanent 

injunction requiring SCSU to comply with Title IX by providing its female students with an 
equitable opportunity to participate in varsity intercollegiate athletics and with equitable 
athletic-related treatments and benefits.  
Id.
 at 869–70.                 
    SCSU appealed the Court’s permanent injunction.  (Notice of Appeal to 8th Cir., 

Sept. 3, 2019, Docket No. 391.)  During the appeal, every six months SCSU filed reports 
with updates on its compliance efforts, as required by the permanent injunction.  (Letter 
to District Judge, Feb. 3, 2020, Docket No. 445; Letter to District Judge, Aug. 5, 2020, 
Docket No. 484; Letter to District Judge, Feb. 5, 2021, Docket No. 511; Letter to District 

Judge, Aug. 5, 2021, Docket No. 524; Letter to District Judge, Feb. 4, 2022, Docket No. 
550;  Letter  to  District  Judge,  July  25,  2022,  Docket  No.  573.)    The  reports  include 
information about SCSU’s efforts to comply with Title IX.                 
    The Eighth Circuit affirmed the Court’s conclusion that SCSU failed to comply with 
Title IX in its allocation of athletic participation opportunities but reversed the Court’s 

conclusion regarding treatment and benefits.  Portz II, 
16 F.4th at 585
.  As a result, the 
Eighth Circuit vacated the portion of the injunction relating to treatment and benefits.  
Id.
  
Thereafter, SCSU filed a motion to dissolve the injunction and Plaintiffs filed a motion to 
modify the injunction to be consistent with the Eighth Circuit’s ruling.  (Defs.’ Mot. 

Dissolve Inj., Nov. 19, 2021, Docket No. 532; Pls.’ Mot. Modify Inj., Jan. 14, 2022, Docket 
No. 541.)                                                                 
    The Court dissolved the part of the injunction relating to the provision of athletic 

participation opportunities because SCSU was in full compliance with Title IX.  Portz III, 
2022 WL 4095912
, at *11.  However, the Court reinstated the portion of the permanent 
injunction relating to treatment and benefits because SCSU was not in compliance with 
Title IX even though the university was providing equitable equipment and supplies, 

medical services, locker rooms, practice facilities, and competitive facilities.  
Id.
 at *8–11.  
Indeed, SCSU failed to produce more than conclusory statements regarding its efforts to 
comply with Title IX regarding its travel and per diem policies and practices and thus failed 
to overcome the Court’s previous conclusion that compared to the Women’s teams, the 

Men’s teams traveled “more frequently, more comfortably, [and] for longer periods of 
time”  while  funded  by  SCSU.    
Id.
  at  *9–10.    Accordingly,  the  Court  reinstated  the 
permanent injunction to require SCSU to immediately implement equitable athletic-
related treatment and benefits, particularly travel and per diem policies and practices, 
between its Women’s and Men’s teams.  Id. at *11.                         

    Since the reinstatement of the modified permanent injunction, SCSU has provided 
reports every six months on its compliance with the permanent injunction.  (Letter to 
District Judge (“February 2023 Report”), Feb. 22, 2023, Docket No. 599; Letter to District 
Judge (“August 2023 Report”), Aug. 22, 2023, Docket No. 609; Letter to District Judge 

(“February 2024 Report”), Feb. 12, 2024, Docket No. 623; Letter to District Judge (“June 
2024 Report”), June 7, 2024, Docket No. 636.)  Each report includes information about 
SCSU’s efforts to comply with the Court’s injunction, particularly focusing on efforts to 

equalize its travel and per diem policies and practices.                  
    The February 2023 Report includes a copy of SCSU’s new Athletics Team Travel 
Policy (“Policy”), which provides guidance on the frequency and length of travel for SCSU’s 
student-athletes, travel accommodations, and travel funding.  (February 2023 Report at 

2, 4–8; see also 2d Decl. Holly Schreiner (“2d Schreiner Decl.”) Ex. 4, Oct. 19, 2023, Docket 
No. 622.)  The Policy enumerates the following, in relevant part:         
      1.  The Director of Athletics must approve all team travel.        
      2.  A request for team travel must be accompanied by a form providing certain 

      information including the names of individuals on the trip, departure and 
      return date/time, mode of transportation, lodging, contact information for the 
      coaching staff traveling with the team, and, when possible, a travel itinerary.   
      3.  Guidance on allowable and non-allowable expenses.              
      4.  Guidance on different modes of transportation and the requirement that 

      the Director of Athletics approve the mode of transportation used.  
      5.  Guidance on the permitted length of travel for each mode of transportation. 
      6.  Guidance on the situations permitting overnight stay.          
      7.  Guidance  on  the  number  of  student-athletes  assigned  to  a  room  for 

      overnight  stay, which instructs that  generally no  more  than  two student-
      athletes may be assigned per room, but in special circumstances the Director 
      of Athletics may authorize more than two student-athletes per room. 

      8.  Guidance on the permitted hotel rate and per diem meal rate.   
(Id.)  Despite the university’s efforts with the new Policy, however, at the time of the 
February 2023 Report, SCSU did not have the data to back up the equity it claimed to have 
achieved.                                                                 

    The August 2023 Report, on the other hand, does provide such data.  That report 
includes a spreadsheet compiling data from every trip for the 2022–23 academic year.  
(August 2023 Report Ex. 3.)  The data is derived from travel forms that were completed 
for each trip and details the sport/team, competition dates, departure and return dates, 

opposing team and location of the competition, mode of transportation (bus, plane, van), 
hotel information, number of student-athletes assigned per hotel room—albeit minimal, 
and the number of student-athletes who traveled.  (Id.)  Additionally, the report notes 
that all team travel expenses for transportation and accommodations were covered by 
each team’s budget, with one exception: the Men’s baseball team used its foundation 

funds to cover two bus trips for Spring 2023 because of weather and to avoid disparities 
between Men’s and Women’s team travel expenses.  (Id. Ex. 4 (“1st Schreiner Decl.”) ¶ 5.)   
    The February 2024 Report asserts that SCSU ’s efforts to comply with Title IX had 
not changed since the August 2023 Report.1  (February 2024 Report Ex. 1 at 2.)  The report 

includes the same data provided in the August 2023 Report but for the 2023–24 academic 
year, and it includes more data on the number of student-athletes that were assigned per 
room, as the August 2023 Report was largely lacking in that category.  (Id. at 5–6.)  

Additionally, SCSU represents to the Court that it reviewed the collected travel forms and 
receipts and determined that there is equitable treatment between Women’s and Men’s 
teams regarding per diem because all teams complied with the per diem requirement for 
the 2023–24 academic year.  (Id. at 3–4.)                                 

    The June 2024 Report provides the most recent data for the 2023–24 academic 
year.  (See June 2024 Report.)  In total, the Women’s teams took 86 trips and the Men’s 
teams took 50 trips.  (Id. at 1.)  The trips for the Women’s teams account for 1,504 trips 
for female student-athletes, and the trips for the Men’s teams account for 1,139 trips for 



    1 While SCSU’s practices and policies appear to be largely unchanged, SCSU’s Policy was 
amended in October 2023.  (2d Schreiner Decl. Ex. 4.)  One notable difference is that the amended 
Policy permits two student-athletes per hotel room instead of three.  (Id. at 6.  Cf. February 2023 
Report at 7.)                                                             
male student-athletes.  (Id.)  By the Court’s calculation, the breakdown of the mode of 
transportation for the 2023–24 academic year is as follows:2              

                        Plane    Bus      Van       Self-                
                                                    Transport            
  Number of Women’s Team  3 / 47  63 / 1,235  17 / 183  3 / 27           
  Trips  /  Total  Number  of                                            
  Female Student-athletes                                                
  Number  of  Men’s  Team  1 / 34  45 / 1,077  4 / 28  0 / 0             
  Trips  /  Total  Number  of                                            
  Male Student-athletes                                                  

(Id. Ex. 1 at 1–4.)  The report states that the data generally shows equity in the length of 
the trips and the overnight accommodations.  (Id. at 1.)  The hotels are of similar caliber, 
and the number of student-athletes assigned per room is consistently two, except there 
were three student-athletes assigned per room for two Women’s teams trips and one 
Men’s team trip.  (Id. at 1–2, Ex. 1 at 1, 3.)                            





    2 The Court formulated the following chart to present the data on the number of trips 
taken by the Women’s and Men’s teams, the number of student-athletes who traveled each trip, 
and the mode of transportation used.  For example, three Women’s teams traveled by plane and 
47 student-athletes traveled on those three trips.                        
    The chart calculations for trips taken by plane and bus are derived from the summary data 
in Defendants’ June 2024 Report.  (June 2024 Report Ex. 1 at 4.)  Because the summary chart 
does not include the number of trips taken by van and self-transportation, the Court adopts 
Plaintiffs’ calculations in their response letter.  (Letter to District Judge at 3 (“Pls.’ June 2024 
Letter”), June 21, 2024, Docket No. 637.)                                 
                           DISCUSSION                                    
I.   STANDARD OF REVIEW                                                   

    The determination of whether to dissolve or modify an injunction rests primarily 
with the district court that issued it in the first place.  United States v. Northshore Mining 
Co., 
576 F.3d 840
, 848–49 (8th Cir. 2009).  “The district court may exercise this power 
when  it  realizes  that  the  injunctive  relief  is  no  longer  needed  due  to  intervening 

circumstances.”  
Id. at 849
.  A permanent injunction should not be extended beyond the 
time required to remedy the legal violations.  Tyler v. Murphy, 
135 F.3d 594, 597
 (8th Cir. 
1998).                                                                    

II.  ANALYSIS                                                             
    Title IX provides, in relevant part, that “[n]o 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).  Title IX applies to athletic programs.  See 
34 C.F.R. § 106.41
(c).  The main remaining challenge to SCSU’s athletic program relates to 
the allocation of athletic-related treatment and benefits based on gender, specifically 
with respect to travel and per diem policies and practices.  In addition, Plaintiffs bring 

forth two new concerns regarding the lack of equitable competitive facilities and athletic 
participation opportunities that were not previously at issue.  The Court will address the 
current injunction first, and Plaintiffs’ new concerns second.            
    A.   Treatment and Benefits                                          
    In assessing whether equal treatment and benefits are conferred to male and 

female athletes, § 106.41(c) of the federal regulations lays out what have been commonly 
referred to as the “Laundry List” factors to assist in the Court’s assessment.  See 
34 C.F.R. § 106.41
(c).  These factors include:                                      
         (2) The provision of equipment and supplies;                    
         (3) Scheduling of games and practice time;                      
         (4) Travel and per diem allowance;                              
         (5) Opportunity to receive coaching and academic tutoring;      
         (6) Assignment and compensation of coaches and tutors;          
         (7)  Provision  of  locker  rooms,  practice  and  competitive    
         facilities;                                                     
         (8) Provision of medical and training facilities and services;  
         (9) Provision of housing and dining facilities and services;    
         (10) Publicity.                                                 

34 C.F.R. § 106.41
(c)(2)–(10).  Courts must weigh these factors on a program-wide basis 
for all men’s and women’s athletic teams.  1979 Interpretation, 
44 Fed. Reg. 71,413
, 
71,417 (Dec. 11, 1979); see also Portz II, 
16 F.4th at 581
.  An institution will be in 
compliance if the “compared program components are equivalent, that is, equal or equal 
in effect.”  1979 Interpretation at 71,415.  Benefit and treatments need not be identical 
provided that the “overall effect of any differences is negligible.”  
Id.
  If the treatment and 
benefits are not equal, an institution may still be in compliance if “the differences are the 
result of nondiscriminatory factors,” such as “unique aspects of particular sports,” or 
“legitimately sex-neutral factors related to special circumstances of a temporary nature.”  
Id. at 71,415–16.                                                         
    The Court must determine whether the permanent injunction relating to athletic-
related  treatment  and  benefits  is  still  appropriate.    Since  the  Court  modified  the 

injunction, SCSU has documented the changes it has made to its travel and per diem 
policies in its six-month reports.  These reports contain the most updated information 
regarding SCSU’s compliance efforts in the record.  Miller v. Honkamp Krueger Fin. Servs., 
Inc., 
9 F.4th 1011
, 1015 n.3 (8th Cir. 2021) (relying on current facts because “[t]he purpose 

of a preliminary injunction is not to remedy past harm but to protect plaintiffs from 
[future] irreparable injury.”).  SCSU has made steady improvements to its travel and per 
diem policy and practices over the years.  In particular, SCSU’s formal, written Policy 

addresses many of the Court’s concerns by providing guidance on the frequency that 
SCSU’s student-athletes travel, the accommodations provided when student-athletes 
travel, the length of travel, and the funding of that travel to prevent inequities between 
male and female athletes.  SCSU also collected travel forms for the 2022–23 and 2023–24 

academic years, which provides data on traveling teams, the competition dates, the 
length of travel, the travel location, the mode of transportation used, hotel information, 
the number of student-athletes assigned per hotel room, and the number of student-
athletes who traveled.                                                    

    Reviewing the data, the Court finds that SCSU’s travel practices between the Men’s 
and Women’s teams comply with Title IX.  First, the Men’s and Women’s teams took an 
equitable number of trips.  In fact, the Women’s teams traveled 36 more times than the 
Men’s teams.3  Second, the Men’s and Women’s teams traveled to comparable places—
generally to schools in Minnesota and the surrounding states.  Third, the Men’s and 

Women’s teams took comparable modes of transportation.  The Women’s teams traveled 
by plane three times, by bus 63 times, by van 17 times, and self-transported three times.  
By comparison, the Men’s teams traveled by plane one time, by bus 45 times, by van four 
times, and did not self-transport.  Although the Women’s teams traveled by van and self-

transported  more  than  the  Men’s  teams,  which  Plaintiffs  argue  is  inherently  less 
comfortable than traveling by bus, this makes sense considering the Women’s teams 
traveled more than the Men’s teams.  Indeed, traveling more puts increased strain on the 

team’s resources, and the fact that the team chose alternative modes of transportation 
to adapt to their higher travel needs does not make the use of other transportation forms 
inequitable.  Fourth, the hotel arrangements were comparable between the Men’s and 
Women’s teams.  And fifth, the number of student-athletes assigned per room was 

equitable.  Two student-athletes were consistently assigned per room on all the trips 
regardless of gender, aside from three instances—on two Women’s teams trips and one 
Men’s team trip.                                                          




    3 The Women’s teams appear to travel more often than the Men’s teams to compensate 
for the Women’s teams not having facilities of their own to host home meets, particularly the 
Women’s track and field team which comprises a third of SCSU’s female student-athletes.  (Pls.’ 
June 2024 Letter 2–4.)                                                    
    In  addition  to  the  travel  form,  SCSU  started  collecting  receipts  for  per  diem 
expenses to ensure compliance with the Policy, which the Court agrees demonstrates 

equity between the Men’s and Women’s teams.  Finally, SCSU represented that SCSU paid 
for almost all teams’ travels, except for the Men’s baseball team in Spring 2023 which 
traveled twice by bus through its foundation funds.4                      
    In sum, SCSU has provided evidence of compliance with Title IX in its provision of 

athletic-related  treatment  and  benefits  on  an  ongoing  basis.    Despite  Plaintiffs’ 
contention that additional monitorship is necessary to ensure compliance, the Court finds 
that continued monitorship is unnecessary because the injunction does not require SCSU 

to set up procedures for monitoring compliance and, as Title IX remains the law, the Court 
presumes that SCSU, like any law-abiding entity, will comply with the law in the future.  
See Portz III, 
2022 WL 4095912
, at *6.                                    
    SCSU has provided an academic years’ worth of data on its travel and per diem 

policies and practices. The Court concludes this data demonstrate that the university 



    4 Plaintiffs contend that it was inequitable for the Men’s baseball team to use foundation 
funds for travel in Spring 2023 because the funding was “over and above the amount SCSU 
budgeted for that team,” and those funds are not equally available for Women’s teams.  (Pls.’ 
Mem. Opp’n Defs.’ Mot. Dissolve Inj. at 10, Oct. 5, 2023, Docket No. 618.)  The Court rejects 
Plaintiffs’ argument that if SCSU permits teams to use supplemental funds for in-season travel, 
the university must also make available supplemental funds for teams that do not have such 
funding.  Compliance with Title IX does not automatically require an institution to provide 
supplemental funding.  Instead, Title IX requires the institution to provide male and female 
student-athletes with equal opportunities on a program-wide basis.  
34 C.F.R. § 106.41
(c).  SCSU 
has done so.                                                              
treats male and female student-athletes equitably.  Accordingly, because SCSU’s legal 
violation of Title IX’s treatment and benefits requirement has been remedied, there is no 

need to maintain the permanent injunction.  See Tyler, 
135 F.3d at 597
.  Accordingly, the 
Court will dissolve the permanent injunction.                             
    B.   Remaining Concerns                                              
    Plaintiffs  urge  the  Court  to  maintain  the  injunction  because  SCSU  does  not 

currently  provide  equitable  competitive  facilities  or  equitable  athletic  participation 
opportunities.                                                            
    First, Plaintiffs argue that SCSU does not provide equitable competitive facilities, 

specifically for the Women’s softball team.  Plaintiffs point out that the Court previously 
noted that SCSU’s plan to move the Women’s softball team from Selke Field to the Husky 
Dome was adequate and, in addition to the other improvements made, demonstrated 
that SCSU provides equitable competitive facilities.  Portz III, 
2022 WL 4095912
, at *9.  

However, although SCSU reports that there will be a longer delay in moving the Women’s 
softball team, they will be playing in Husky Stadium for the 2025 season.  (Letter to District 
Judge (“July Letter”) at 1–2, July 19, 2024, Docket No. 639; Letter to District Judge 
(“August Letter”) Exs. 2, 3, Aug. 9, 2024, Docket No. 643.)               

    Despite Plaintiffs’ concerns, Husky Stadium is an adequate facility for Women’s 
softball, as it has “permanent restrooms and concessions, a press box, and . . . is [near] 
the softball team’s locker rooms.”  See Portz III, 
2022 WL 4095912
, at *9.  Furthermore, 
the facility will be NCAA compliant.  Indeed, Husky Stadium’s field specifications will be 
190 (R) x 220 (C) x 200 (L), the fencing will be six feet tall, and there will be six-foot fencing 

over the Dugouts, which will meet the NCAA’s requirements.5  (July Letter Ex. 1 at 2; 
August Letter Ex. 2.).  Moreover, SCSU plans to implement NCAA recommendations, such 
as  including  Warning  Tracks,  Bullpens,  and  protective  covering  over  the  Dugouts.6  
(August Letter Ex. 2.)  And although the fencing is temporary and must be constructed 

before practices and games, SCSU implemented a policy that prohibits student-athletes 
from constructing and deconstructing the fence.  (Id. Ex. 1.)  Instead, SCSU’s Sports 
Facilities team and maintenance staff will be responsible for doing so, which will alleviate 

concerns regarding student-athletes being responsible for basic field set-up that falls 
under the responsibility of Sports Facilities and Athletics.  (Id.)       
    While the plan is still underway, it is not hypothetical.  SCSU has represented to 
the Court under oath that it is moving forward with this plan.  If SCSU fails to do so, 

Plaintiffs may bring another action.                                      




    5  The  2024–25  NCAA  Guidelines  differentiate  existing  construction  and  “new 
construction.”  2024 and 2025 Rules Book, NCAA Softball 15 (October 2023), https://www.ncaa 
publications.com/productdownloads/SR24.pdf.  Existing construction must be 190 (R) x 220 (C) x 
190 (L) and new construction must be 200 (R) x 220 (C) x 200 (L).  
Id.
  At the August 6, 2024 status 
conference, Ms. Schreiner testified under oath that the NCAA informed her that the Husky 
Stadium renovation is considered existing construction, and thus is NCAA compliant if the field 
specifications are 190 (R) x 220 (C) x 200 (L).                           
    6    
Id.
 at 13–14, 19.                                               
    Second, Plaintiffs claim that SCSU has fallen out of compliance with the injunction’s 
requirement to “provide substantially equitable athletic participation opportunities.”  

(Pls.’ Letter to District Judge at 4–5, Apr. 10, 2024, Docket No. 626.)  But because the 
Court  dissolved  the  portion  of  the  injunction  relating  to  the  allocation  of  athletic 
participation opportunities, see Portz III, 
2022 WL 4095912
, at *11, the Court will not 
reconsider this issue.                                                    

                          CONCLUSION                                     

    SCSU has demonstrated that it is in full compliance with Title IX.  Therefore, the 
Court will dissolve the permanent injunction, thus ending the Court’s jurisdiction over this 
matter.  The Court expects SCSU to provide fully equitable opportunities and facilities to 
its Women athletes going forward and importantly, to be fully compliant with Title IX. 

ORDER

    Based on the foregoing, and all the files, records, and proceedings herein, IT IS 

HEREBY ORDERED that:                                                      
    1.   Defendants’  Motion  for  Relief  from  Judgment  [Docket  No.  612]  is 
GRANTED; and                                                              
     2.     The permanent injunction is DISSOLVED. 
     LET JUDGMENT BE ENTERED ACCORDINGLY. 

DATED:  August 14, 2024                           bay   (rabbi 
at Minneapolis, Minnesota.                         JOHN R. TUNHEIM 
                                            United States District Court 

                                    -17- 

Trial Court Opinion

                   UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                          
                      DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                              


ALEXIE PORTZ, JILL KEDROWSKI, ABIGAIL                                    
KANTOR, MARILIA ROQUE DIVERSI,        Civil No. 16-1115 (JRT/LIB)        
FERNANDA QUINTINO DOS SANTOS,                                            
MARIA HAUER, HALEY BOCK, KAITLYN                                         
BABICH, ANNA LINDELL, and KIERSTEN                                       
ROHDE, individually and on behalf of all  MEMORANDUM OPINION             
those similarly situated,              AND ORDER GRANTING                
                                     DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR              
                       Plaintiffs,    RELIEF FROM JUDGMENT               

v.                                                                       

ST. CLOUD STATE UNIVERSITY and                                           
MINNESOTA STATE COLLEGES AND                                             
UNIVERSITIES,                                                            

                      Defendants.                                        


    Sharon L. Van Dyck, VAN DYCK LAW FIRM, PLLC, 5775 Wayzata Boulevard, 
    Suite 700, Saint Louis Park, MN 55416; Donald Chance Mark, Jr. and Jamie 
    Pahl Briones, FAFINSKI MARK & JOHNSON, P.A., 775 Prairie Center Drive, 
    Suite 400, Eden Prairie, MN 55344, for Plaintiffs.                   

    Elizabeth  C.  Kramer  and  Joseph  D.  Weiner,  MINNESOTA  ATTORNEY 
    GENERAL’S  OFFICE,  445  Minnesota  Street,  Suite  1100,  Saint  Paul,  MN 
    55101, for Defendants.                                               

    Plaintiffs brought this class action against Defendants St. Cloud State University 
(“SCSU”) and Minnesota State Colleges and Universities (“MNSCU”), alleging gender 
discrimination in SCSU’s past and present allocation of athletic opportunities, treatment, 
and  benefits  for  female  student-athletes  in  violation  of  Title  IX  of  the  Education 
Amendments Act of 1972 (“Title IX”).                                      

    After a bench trial, the Court found that SCSU was violating Title IX and issued a 
permanent injunction requiring SCSU to comply with the statute on a program-wide basis.  
Following an appeal and partial reversal of the injunction by the Eighth Circuit, the parties 
moved to dissolve or modify the injunction.  The Court dissolved the portion of the 

permanent injunction relating to athletic participation opportunities but modified the 
remaining portion relating to treatment and benefits.                     
      Defendants now move the Court to dissolve the remaining part of the permanent 

injunction relating to the equitable allocation of athletic-related treatment and benefits.  
Because the Court finds that SCSU is now  in compliance with Title IX, it will grant 
Defendants’ Motion for Relief and dissolve the injunction.                
                          BACKGROUND                                     

    The factual background of this case has been discussed at length in the Court’s 
prior orders, so the Court will describe only the facts necessary to assess SCSU’s Motion 
for Relief.  See Portz v. St. Cloud State Univ. (“Portz I”), 
401 F. Supp. 3d 834
, 840–54 (D. 
Minn. 2019), aff’d in part, rev’d in part, vacated in part, 
16 F.4th 577
 (8th Cir. 2021) (Portz 

II); Portz v. St. Cloud State Univ. (“Portz III”), No. 16-1115, 
2022 WL 4095912
, at *1–4 (D. 
Minn. Sept. 7, 2022).  Plaintiffs are female student-athletes who attend or recently 
attended SCSU and were members of SCSU’s varsity intercollegiate Women’s tennis or 
Women’s Nordic skiing teams.  Portz I, 401 F. Supp. 3d at 840–41.  Plaintiffs represent a 
class certified as “all present, prospective, and future female students at [SCSU] who are 

harmed by and want to end [SCSU’s] sex discrimination in: (1) the allocation of athletic 
participation opportunities . . . and (3) the allocation of benefits provided to varsity 
athletes.”  
Id. at 841
.  SCSU is a university in the MNSCU system.  
Id. at 840
 (citation 
omitted).                                                                 

    Following a bench trial in 2018, the Court found that SCSU violated Title IX in its 
inequitable allocation of athletic participation opportunities, treatments, and benefits 
based on gender since 2014.  
Id. at 869
.  Accordingly, the Court issued a permanent 

injunction requiring SCSU to comply with Title IX by providing its female students with an 
equitable opportunity to participate in varsity intercollegiate athletics and with equitable 
athletic-related treatments and benefits.  
Id.
 at 869–70.                 
    SCSU appealed the Court’s permanent injunction.  (Notice of Appeal to 8th Cir., 

Sept. 3, 2019, Docket No. 391.)  During the appeal, every six months SCSU filed reports 
with updates on its compliance efforts, as required by the permanent injunction.  (Letter 
to District Judge, Feb. 3, 2020, Docket No. 445; Letter to District Judge, Aug. 5, 2020, 
Docket No. 484; Letter to District Judge, Feb. 5, 2021, Docket No. 511; Letter to District 

Judge, Aug. 5, 2021, Docket No. 524; Letter to District Judge, Feb. 4, 2022, Docket No. 
550;  Letter  to  District  Judge,  July  25,  2022,  Docket  No.  573.)    The  reports  include 
information about SCSU’s efforts to comply with Title IX.                 
    The Eighth Circuit affirmed the Court’s conclusion that SCSU failed to comply with 
Title IX in its allocation of athletic participation opportunities but reversed the Court’s 

conclusion regarding treatment and benefits.  Portz II, 
16 F.4th at 585
.  As a result, the 
Eighth Circuit vacated the portion of the injunction relating to treatment and benefits.  
Id.
  
Thereafter, SCSU filed a motion to dissolve the injunction and Plaintiffs filed a motion to 
modify the injunction to be consistent with the Eighth Circuit’s ruling.  (Defs.’ Mot. 

Dissolve Inj., Nov. 19, 2021, Docket No. 532; Pls.’ Mot. Modify Inj., Jan. 14, 2022, Docket 
No. 541.)                                                                 
    The Court dissolved the part of the injunction relating to the provision of athletic 

participation opportunities because SCSU was in full compliance with Title IX.  Portz III, 
2022 WL 4095912
, at *11.  However, the Court reinstated the portion of the permanent 
injunction relating to treatment and benefits because SCSU was not in compliance with 
Title IX even though the university was providing equitable equipment and supplies, 

medical services, locker rooms, practice facilities, and competitive facilities.  
Id.
 at *8–11.  
Indeed, SCSU failed to produce more than conclusory statements regarding its efforts to 
comply with Title IX regarding its travel and per diem policies and practices and thus failed 
to overcome the Court’s previous conclusion that compared to the Women’s teams, the 

Men’s teams traveled “more frequently, more comfortably, [and] for longer periods of 
time”  while  funded  by  SCSU.    
Id.
  at  *9–10.    Accordingly,  the  Court  reinstated  the 
permanent injunction to require SCSU to immediately implement equitable athletic-
related treatment and benefits, particularly travel and per diem policies and practices, 
between its Women’s and Men’s teams.  Id. at *11.                         

    Since the reinstatement of the modified permanent injunction, SCSU has provided 
reports every six months on its compliance with the permanent injunction.  (Letter to 
District Judge (“February 2023 Report”), Feb. 22, 2023, Docket No. 599; Letter to District 
Judge (“August 2023 Report”), Aug. 22, 2023, Docket No. 609; Letter to District Judge 

(“February 2024 Report”), Feb. 12, 2024, Docket No. 623; Letter to District Judge (“June 
2024 Report”), June 7, 2024, Docket No. 636.)  Each report includes information about 
SCSU’s efforts to comply with the Court’s injunction, particularly focusing on efforts to 

equalize its travel and per diem policies and practices.                  
    The February 2023 Report includes a copy of SCSU’s new Athletics Team Travel 
Policy (“Policy”), which provides guidance on the frequency and length of travel for SCSU’s 
student-athletes, travel accommodations, and travel funding.  (February 2023 Report at 

2, 4–8; see also 2d Decl. Holly Schreiner (“2d Schreiner Decl.”) Ex. 4, Oct. 19, 2023, Docket 
No. 622.)  The Policy enumerates the following, in relevant part:         
      1.  The Director of Athletics must approve all team travel.        
      2.  A request for team travel must be accompanied by a form providing certain 

      information including the names of individuals on the trip, departure and 
      return date/time, mode of transportation, lodging, contact information for the 
      coaching staff traveling with the team, and, when possible, a travel itinerary.   
      3.  Guidance on allowable and non-allowable expenses.              
      4.  Guidance on different modes of transportation and the requirement that 

      the Director of Athletics approve the mode of transportation used.  
      5.  Guidance on the permitted length of travel for each mode of transportation. 
      6.  Guidance on the situations permitting overnight stay.          
      7.  Guidance  on  the  number  of  student-athletes  assigned  to  a  room  for 

      overnight  stay, which instructs that  generally no  more  than  two student-
      athletes may be assigned per room, but in special circumstances the Director 
      of Athletics may authorize more than two student-athletes per room. 

      8.  Guidance on the permitted hotel rate and per diem meal rate.   
(Id.)  Despite the university’s efforts with the new Policy, however, at the time of the 
February 2023 Report, SCSU did not have the data to back up the equity it claimed to have 
achieved.                                                                 

    The August 2023 Report, on the other hand, does provide such data.  That report 
includes a spreadsheet compiling data from every trip for the 2022–23 academic year.  
(August 2023 Report Ex. 3.)  The data is derived from travel forms that were completed 
for each trip and details the sport/team, competition dates, departure and return dates, 

opposing team and location of the competition, mode of transportation (bus, plane, van), 
hotel information, number of student-athletes assigned per hotel room—albeit minimal, 
and the number of student-athletes who traveled.  (Id.)  Additionally, the report notes 
that all team travel expenses for transportation and accommodations were covered by 
each team’s budget, with one exception: the Men’s baseball team used its foundation 

funds to cover two bus trips for Spring 2023 because of weather and to avoid disparities 
between Men’s and Women’s team travel expenses.  (Id. Ex. 4 (“1st Schreiner Decl.”) ¶ 5.)   
    The February 2024 Report asserts that SCSU ’s efforts to comply with Title IX had 
not changed since the August 2023 Report.1  (February 2024 Report Ex. 1 at 2.)  The report 

includes the same data provided in the August 2023 Report but for the 2023–24 academic 
year, and it includes more data on the number of student-athletes that were assigned per 
room, as the August 2023 Report was largely lacking in that category.  (Id. at 5–6.)  

Additionally, SCSU represents to the Court that it reviewed the collected travel forms and 
receipts and determined that there is equitable treatment between Women’s and Men’s 
teams regarding per diem because all teams complied with the per diem requirement for 
the 2023–24 academic year.  (Id. at 3–4.)                                 

    The June 2024 Report provides the most recent data for the 2023–24 academic 
year.  (See June 2024 Report.)  In total, the Women’s teams took 86 trips and the Men’s 
teams took 50 trips.  (Id. at 1.)  The trips for the Women’s teams account for 1,504 trips 
for female student-athletes, and the trips for the Men’s teams account for 1,139 trips for 



    1 While SCSU’s practices and policies appear to be largely unchanged, SCSU’s Policy was 
amended in October 2023.  (2d Schreiner Decl. Ex. 4.)  One notable difference is that the amended 
Policy permits two student-athletes per hotel room instead of three.  (Id. at 6.  Cf. February 2023 
Report at 7.)                                                             
male student-athletes.  (Id.)  By the Court’s calculation, the breakdown of the mode of 
transportation for the 2023–24 academic year is as follows:2              

                        Plane    Bus      Van       Self-                
                                                    Transport            
  Number of Women’s Team  3 / 47  63 / 1,235  17 / 183  3 / 27           
  Trips  /  Total  Number  of                                            
  Female Student-athletes                                                
  Number  of  Men’s  Team  1 / 34  45 / 1,077  4 / 28  0 / 0             
  Trips  /  Total  Number  of                                            
  Male Student-athletes                                                  

(Id. Ex. 1 at 1–4.)  The report states that the data generally shows equity in the length of 
the trips and the overnight accommodations.  (Id. at 1.)  The hotels are of similar caliber, 
and the number of student-athletes assigned per room is consistently two, except there 
were three student-athletes assigned per room for two Women’s teams trips and one 
Men’s team trip.  (Id. at 1–2, Ex. 1 at 1, 3.)                            





    2 The Court formulated the following chart to present the data on the number of trips 
taken by the Women’s and Men’s teams, the number of student-athletes who traveled each trip, 
and the mode of transportation used.  For example, three Women’s teams traveled by plane and 
47 student-athletes traveled on those three trips.                        
    The chart calculations for trips taken by plane and bus are derived from the summary data 
in Defendants’ June 2024 Report.  (June 2024 Report Ex. 1 at 4.)  Because the summary chart 
does not include the number of trips taken by van and self-transportation, the Court adopts 
Plaintiffs’ calculations in their response letter.  (Letter to District Judge at 3 (“Pls.’ June 2024 
Letter”), June 21, 2024, Docket No. 637.)                                 
                           DISCUSSION                                    
I.   STANDARD OF REVIEW                                                   

    The determination of whether to dissolve or modify an injunction rests primarily 
with the district court that issued it in the first place.  United States v. Northshore Mining 
Co., 
576 F.3d 840
, 848–49 (8th Cir. 2009).  “The district court may exercise this power 
when  it  realizes  that  the  injunctive  relief  is  no  longer  needed  due  to  intervening 

circumstances.”  
Id. at 849
.  A permanent injunction should not be extended beyond the 
time required to remedy the legal violations.  Tyler v. Murphy, 
135 F.3d 594, 597
 (8th Cir. 
1998).                                                                    

II.  ANALYSIS                                                             
    Title IX provides, in relevant part, that “[n]o 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).  Title IX applies to athletic programs.  See 
34 C.F.R. § 106.41
(c).  The main remaining challenge to SCSU’s athletic program relates to 
the allocation of athletic-related treatment and benefits based on gender, specifically 
with respect to travel and per diem policies and practices.  In addition, Plaintiffs bring 

forth two new concerns regarding the lack of equitable competitive facilities and athletic 
participation opportunities that were not previously at issue.  The Court will address the 
current injunction first, and Plaintiffs’ new concerns second.            
    A.   Treatment and Benefits                                          
    In assessing whether equal treatment and benefits are conferred to male and 

female athletes, § 106.41(c) of the federal regulations lays out what have been commonly 
referred to as the “Laundry List” factors to assist in the Court’s assessment.  See 
34 C.F.R. § 106.41
(c).  These factors include:                                      
         (2) The provision of equipment and supplies;                    
         (3) Scheduling of games and practice time;                      
         (4) Travel and per diem allowance;                              
         (5) Opportunity to receive coaching and academic tutoring;      
         (6) Assignment and compensation of coaches and tutors;          
         (7)  Provision  of  locker  rooms,  practice  and  competitive    
         facilities;                                                     
         (8) Provision of medical and training facilities and services;  
         (9) Provision of housing and dining facilities and services;    
         (10) Publicity.                                                 

34 C.F.R. § 106.41
(c)(2)–(10).  Courts must weigh these factors on a program-wide basis 
for all men’s and women’s athletic teams.  1979 Interpretation, 
44 Fed. Reg. 71,413
, 
71,417 (Dec. 11, 1979); see also Portz II, 
16 F.4th at 581
.  An institution will be in 
compliance if the “compared program components are equivalent, that is, equal or equal 
in effect.”  1979 Interpretation at 71,415.  Benefit and treatments need not be identical 
provided that the “overall effect of any differences is negligible.”  
Id.
  If the treatment and 
benefits are not equal, an institution may still be in compliance if “the differences are the 
result of nondiscriminatory factors,” such as “unique aspects of particular sports,” or 
“legitimately sex-neutral factors related to special circumstances of a temporary nature.”  
Id. at 71,415–16.                                                         
    The Court must determine whether the permanent injunction relating to athletic-
related  treatment  and  benefits  is  still  appropriate.    Since  the  Court  modified  the 

injunction, SCSU has documented the changes it has made to its travel and per diem 
policies in its six-month reports.  These reports contain the most updated information 
regarding SCSU’s compliance efforts in the record.  Miller v. Honkamp Krueger Fin. Servs., 
Inc., 
9 F.4th 1011
, 1015 n.3 (8th Cir. 2021) (relying on current facts because “[t]he purpose 

of a preliminary injunction is not to remedy past harm but to protect plaintiffs from 
[future] irreparable injury.”).  SCSU has made steady improvements to its travel and per 
diem policy and practices over the years.  In particular, SCSU’s formal, written Policy 

addresses many of the Court’s concerns by providing guidance on the frequency that 
SCSU’s student-athletes travel, the accommodations provided when student-athletes 
travel, the length of travel, and the funding of that travel to prevent inequities between 
male and female athletes.  SCSU also collected travel forms for the 2022–23 and 2023–24 

academic years, which provides data on traveling teams, the competition dates, the 
length of travel, the travel location, the mode of transportation used, hotel information, 
the number of student-athletes assigned per hotel room, and the number of student-
athletes who traveled.                                                    

    Reviewing the data, the Court finds that SCSU’s travel practices between the Men’s 
and Women’s teams comply with Title IX.  First, the Men’s and Women’s teams took an 
equitable number of trips.  In fact, the Women’s teams traveled 36 more times than the 
Men’s teams.3  Second, the Men’s and Women’s teams traveled to comparable places—
generally to schools in Minnesota and the surrounding states.  Third, the Men’s and 

Women’s teams took comparable modes of transportation.  The Women’s teams traveled 
by plane three times, by bus 63 times, by van 17 times, and self-transported three times.  
By comparison, the Men’s teams traveled by plane one time, by bus 45 times, by van four 
times, and did not self-transport.  Although the Women’s teams traveled by van and self-

transported  more  than  the  Men’s  teams,  which  Plaintiffs  argue  is  inherently  less 
comfortable than traveling by bus, this makes sense considering the Women’s teams 
traveled more than the Men’s teams.  Indeed, traveling more puts increased strain on the 

team’s resources, and the fact that the team chose alternative modes of transportation 
to adapt to their higher travel needs does not make the use of other transportation forms 
inequitable.  Fourth, the hotel arrangements were comparable between the Men’s and 
Women’s teams.  And fifth, the number of student-athletes assigned per room was 

equitable.  Two student-athletes were consistently assigned per room on all the trips 
regardless of gender, aside from three instances—on two Women’s teams trips and one 
Men’s team trip.                                                          




    3 The Women’s teams appear to travel more often than the Men’s teams to compensate 
for the Women’s teams not having facilities of their own to host home meets, particularly the 
Women’s track and field team which comprises a third of SCSU’s female student-athletes.  (Pls.’ 
June 2024 Letter 2–4.)                                                    
    In  addition  to  the  travel  form,  SCSU  started  collecting  receipts  for  per  diem 
expenses to ensure compliance with the Policy, which the Court agrees demonstrates 

equity between the Men’s and Women’s teams.  Finally, SCSU represented that SCSU paid 
for almost all teams’ travels, except for the Men’s baseball team in Spring 2023 which 
traveled twice by bus through its foundation funds.4                      
    In sum, SCSU has provided evidence of compliance with Title IX in its provision of 

athletic-related  treatment  and  benefits  on  an  ongoing  basis.    Despite  Plaintiffs’ 
contention that additional monitorship is necessary to ensure compliance, the Court finds 
that continued monitorship is unnecessary because the injunction does not require SCSU 

to set up procedures for monitoring compliance and, as Title IX remains the law, the Court 
presumes that SCSU, like any law-abiding entity, will comply with the law in the future.  
See Portz III, 
2022 WL 4095912
, at *6.                                    
    SCSU has provided an academic years’ worth of data on its travel and per diem 

policies and practices. The Court concludes this data demonstrate that the university 



    4 Plaintiffs contend that it was inequitable for the Men’s baseball team to use foundation 
funds for travel in Spring 2023 because the funding was “over and above the amount SCSU 
budgeted for that team,” and those funds are not equally available for Women’s teams.  (Pls.’ 
Mem. Opp’n Defs.’ Mot. Dissolve Inj. at 10, Oct. 5, 2023, Docket No. 618.)  The Court rejects 
Plaintiffs’ argument that if SCSU permits teams to use supplemental funds for in-season travel, 
the university must also make available supplemental funds for teams that do not have such 
funding.  Compliance with Title IX does not automatically require an institution to provide 
supplemental funding.  Instead, Title IX requires the institution to provide male and female 
student-athletes with equal opportunities on a program-wide basis.  
34 C.F.R. § 106.41
(c).  SCSU 
has done so.                                                              
treats male and female student-athletes equitably.  Accordingly, because SCSU’s legal 
violation of Title IX’s treatment and benefits requirement has been remedied, there is no 

need to maintain the permanent injunction.  See Tyler, 
135 F.3d at 597
.  Accordingly, the 
Court will dissolve the permanent injunction.                             
    B.   Remaining Concerns                                              
    Plaintiffs  urge  the  Court  to  maintain  the  injunction  because  SCSU  does  not 

currently  provide  equitable  competitive  facilities  or  equitable  athletic  participation 
opportunities.                                                            
    First, Plaintiffs argue that SCSU does not provide equitable competitive facilities, 

specifically for the Women’s softball team.  Plaintiffs point out that the Court previously 
noted that SCSU’s plan to move the Women’s softball team from Selke Field to the Husky 
Dome was adequate and, in addition to the other improvements made, demonstrated 
that SCSU provides equitable competitive facilities.  Portz III, 
2022 WL 4095912
, at *9.  

However, although SCSU reports that there will be a longer delay in moving the Women’s 
softball team, they will be playing in Husky Stadium for the 2025 season.  (Letter to District 
Judge (“July Letter”) at 1–2, July 19, 2024, Docket No. 639; Letter to District Judge 
(“August Letter”) Exs. 2, 3, Aug. 9, 2024, Docket No. 643.)               

    Despite Plaintiffs’ concerns, Husky Stadium is an adequate facility for Women’s 
softball, as it has “permanent restrooms and concessions, a press box, and . . . is [near] 
the softball team’s locker rooms.”  See Portz III, 
2022 WL 4095912
, at *9.  Furthermore, 
the facility will be NCAA compliant.  Indeed, Husky Stadium’s field specifications will be 
190 (R) x 220 (C) x 200 (L), the fencing will be six feet tall, and there will be six-foot fencing 

over the Dugouts, which will meet the NCAA’s requirements.5  (July Letter Ex. 1 at 2; 
August Letter Ex. 2.).  Moreover, SCSU plans to implement NCAA recommendations, such 
as  including  Warning  Tracks,  Bullpens,  and  protective  covering  over  the  Dugouts.6  
(August Letter Ex. 2.)  And although the fencing is temporary and must be constructed 

before practices and games, SCSU implemented a policy that prohibits student-athletes 
from constructing and deconstructing the fence.  (Id. Ex. 1.)  Instead, SCSU’s Sports 
Facilities team and maintenance staff will be responsible for doing so, which will alleviate 

concerns regarding student-athletes being responsible for basic field set-up that falls 
under the responsibility of Sports Facilities and Athletics.  (Id.)       
    While the plan is still underway, it is not hypothetical.  SCSU has represented to 
the Court under oath that it is moving forward with this plan.  If SCSU fails to do so, 

Plaintiffs may bring another action.                                      




    5  The  2024–25  NCAA  Guidelines  differentiate  existing  construction  and  “new 
construction.”  2024 and 2025 Rules Book, NCAA Softball 15 (October 2023), https://www.ncaa 
publications.com/productdownloads/SR24.pdf.  Existing construction must be 190 (R) x 220 (C) x 
190 (L) and new construction must be 200 (R) x 220 (C) x 200 (L).  
Id.
  At the August 6, 2024 status 
conference, Ms. Schreiner testified under oath that the NCAA informed her that the Husky 
Stadium renovation is considered existing construction, and thus is NCAA compliant if the field 
specifications are 190 (R) x 220 (C) x 200 (L).                           
    6    
Id.
 at 13–14, 19.                                               
    Second, Plaintiffs claim that SCSU has fallen out of compliance with the injunction’s 
requirement to “provide substantially equitable athletic participation opportunities.”  

(Pls.’ Letter to District Judge at 4–5, Apr. 10, 2024, Docket No. 626.)  But because the 
Court  dissolved  the  portion  of  the  injunction  relating  to  the  allocation  of  athletic 
participation opportunities, see Portz III, 
2022 WL 4095912
, at *11, the Court will not 
reconsider this issue.                                                    

                          CONCLUSION                                     

    SCSU has demonstrated that it is in full compliance with Title IX.  Therefore, the 
Court will dissolve the permanent injunction, thus ending the Court’s jurisdiction over this 
matter.  The Court expects SCSU to provide fully equitable opportunities and facilities to 
its Women athletes going forward and importantly, to be fully compliant with Title IX. 

ORDER

    Based on the foregoing, and all the files, records, and proceedings herein, IT IS 

HEREBY ORDERED that:                                                      
    1.   Defendants’  Motion  for  Relief  from  Judgment  [Docket  No.  612]  is 
GRANTED; and                                                              
     2.     The permanent injunction is DISSOLVED. 
     LET JUDGMENT BE ENTERED ACCORDINGLY. 

DATED:  August 14, 2024                           bay   (rabbi 
at Minneapolis, Minnesota.                         JOHN R. TUNHEIM 
                                            United States District Court 

                                    -17- 

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