An outdoor locker room is at the center of a Title IX lawsuit.

Midland College Softball Coach Tommy Ramos says his girls are not being treated like all the other teams.

“It is truly hard for me to grasp how we can have such beautiful facilities for all the teams except for this one,” said Ramos.

Ramos says the locker rooms and fields are not as nice as the ones used for the baseball program.

“After 19 years of softball this is what we have,” said Ramos as he stared at the inside of his teams locker room in disbelief.

His patience has run out.

“When you have 24 girls in here it’s pretty tight,” Ramos explained. “You can see how cheap these lockers are, these were supposed to be temporary and have been in here since we got this building probably 10 to 12 years ago.”

A portable building is the Midland College softball team's locker room -- a far cry from a stadium just down the road where the men’s team calls home.

“It’s about us wanting to have some pride in our facility, and our girls to experience the same things that those teams and athletes are experiencing – great facilities,” said Ramos.

The list of problems is long.

One bathroom inside, one out, no outdoor lights and very little storage space or room to get ready to name a few.

“I’ve been told [by administrators], they have good grass and a good infield that should be good enough,” Ramos recalled. “I’ve been told if you don’t like this situation there’s other people who would be more willing to take this job.”

Ramos says enough is enough and is hopeful that a jury of his peers will agree.

Coach Ramos also tells us that for the past four years he’s been inviting the administration to come take a tour of the inside of the locker room and to this day no one has.

CBS 7 News tried reaching out to the college for their side of the story, but were told they cannot comment at this time.