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re: Ole Miss pushing its luck with the NCAA
Posted on 7/27/17 at 11:45 pm to matthew25
Posted on 7/27/17 at 11:45 pm to matthew25
We will see, one of us will be correct and going by past performance it certainly will not be either of you two clowns.
When the NCAA purposefully leaves student athletes unnamed and masked it is their intention it stays that way.
I would look for #39's inbound suit being filed shortly.
Unless OM notified the students in the NOA and gave them time to appeal the release of their directory information they committed a clear FERPA violation, it is black letter law, not my opinion. There are 9 exceptions to the below and none of them were met.
Now reflect on who has been the most accurate on this from day one.
When the NCAA purposefully leaves student athletes unnamed and masked it is their intention it stays that way.
I would look for #39's inbound suit being filed shortly.
Unless OM notified the students in the NOA and gave them time to appeal the release of their directory information they committed a clear FERPA violation, it is black letter law, not my opinion. There are 9 exceptions to the below and none of them were met.
quote:
However, schools must tell parents and eligible students about directory information and allow parents and eligible students a reasonable amount of time to request that the school not disclose directory information about them.
Now reflect on who has been the most accurate on this from day one.
Posted on 7/28/17 at 7:59 am to cave canem
There is no private cause of action for FERPA violations. All that the student whose privacy rights under FERPA have been infringed can do is to file a complaint with the U.S. Department of Education. The Education Department then can investigate and reprimand the school of there is an intentional violation. If not intentional, the department will usually recommend policy changes and improvements to procedures to protect the student's privacy. If the school does not correct its practices and policies and/or continues to violate privacy rights, the federal funds for student loans can be cut off. Rarely would that ever happen.
This post was edited on 7/28/17 at 8:01 am
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