Bluefield State failed to monitor certification process in eight sports

Posted on 11/11/21 12:00 PM

Download the November 2021Bluefield State University Public Infractions Decision

Bluefield State committed certification violations over the course of a three-year period when it improperly certified 21 student-athletes across eight sports, according to a decision released by the Division II Committee on Infractions.

As a result of the improper certifications, the 21 student-athletes competed in a total of 225 contests while ineligible and received actual and necessary expenses associated with the contests. The NCAA enforcement staff and school agreed that the violations occurred due to gaps in the school's compliance program and demonstrated that Bluefield State failed to monitor its certification process.

The improper certification violations triggered violations of numerous NCAA rules, which resulted in 28 violations of amateurism certification, academic certification and progress-toward-degree requirements. Specifically, the violations fell into the following categories:

"The violations occurred because Bluefield State did not have the proper resources dedicated to its compliance operations," the committee said in its decision. "Nor did it have the proper systems in place to ensure compliance with NCAA certification legislation." Systemically, the school did not have proper checks and balances in place. All of the certification responsibilities fell on the school's compliance director, who had limited NCAA compliance experience and carried out other sports information responsibilities. The enforcement staff and school agreed that the institution fell short of monitoring responsibilities due to inadequate processes, improper systems and insufficient staffing resources.

This case was resolved through the cooperative summary disposition process, a process in which involved parties collectively submit the case to the committee in written form. All participating parties must agree to the facts and violations of the case for this process to be used instead of a formal hearing.

The committee in its report recognized the school's swift action to reorganize its compliance department and applauded Bluefield State for proactively securing an outside entity to conduct a compliance audit. Bluefield State began implementing the recommendations from the audit before the committee's review of this case.

After considering Bluefield State's cooperation, corrective actions and relevant mitigating factors, the committee prescribed the following penalties:

Members of the Committee on Infractions are drawn from the NCAA membership and members of the public. The members of the panel who reviewed this case are Jessica Chapin, athletics director at American International; John David Lackey, attorney in private practice; Richard Loosbrock, faculty athletics representative at Adams State; Melissa Reilly, senior woman administrator and associate commissioner at the East Coast Conference; Leslie Schuemann, senior woman administrator and deputy commissioner at the Great Midwest Athletic Conference; and Jason Sobolik, assistant athletics director at Minnesota State University Moorhead.