Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Apr 28
Education Department resolves 30 percent fewer discrimination cases after Trump-era overhaul
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Apr 28

Education Department resolves 30 percent fewer discrimination cases after Trump-era overhaul

11 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Apr 28
  • Around 20,000 students are awaiting updates on their complaints, as the department faced a record number of cases in 2025.
  • Officials attribute the slowdown to staff cuts, a 43-day government shutdown, and a backlog from the previous administration. The White House proposes a 35 percent budget cut and nearly halving civil rights staff.
  • Education Secretary Linda McMahon is set to testify before the Senate, addressing recent restructuring aimed at efficiency, including new investigative teams for disability and race-based complaints.
Can the civil rights office recover from its massive case backlog?
Why were 90% of school discrimination complaints dismissed last year?
What does the new focus on DEI mean for other discrimination cases?
Are states now the primary enforcers of school civil rights?
How did a plan to boost efficiency cost taxpayers millions?