Federal civil rights data holds schools accountable. Under Trump, it’s 6 months late
News
For more than 50 years, the Education Department has revealed a host of realities about how students are being treated in every public school across America: which kids are being bullied, which ones are being harassed and which students can access the internet, among other things. The agency’s Civil Rights Data Collection is intended to do just that — help keep schools accountable.
The latest information, collected about the 2023-24 school year, was supposed to be published last December, according to the Education Department’s own deadline.
The agency hasn’t responded to multiple requests from NPR asking what’s behind the delay.
Details
Federal bureaucracy can be slow, and delays aren’t always cause for concern, but advocates are on edge in the midst of recent plans the Trump administration announced to move the Office for Civil Rights — which houses the Civil Rights Data Collection (CRDC) team — from the Education Department to the Department of Justice.
That planned transfer follows months of federal action that upends the way students’ civil rights have been protected in the past: The Trump administration has cracked down on initiatives related to diversity, equity and inclusion, for example, and prioritized investigating schools that allow transgender athletes to compete in women’s sports.
“This administration has repeatedly applied civil rights law in ways that ignore or dismiss the very real inequities that persist in our education system,” says Denise Forte, president and CEO of EdTrust, a think tank focused on addressing education inequity. The delay in releasing the CRDC data, she says, “raises serious concerns, particularly as this administration seeks to downplay the impacts of racism and economic inequality in public education.”
Analysis
A former Education Department employee who worked on the CRDC tells NPR the team is still intact. However, its future is unclear: While the Trump administration has announced the Office for Civil Rights is moving to the Justice Department, the process could take months, like other plans to outsource parts of the Education Department’s work. The former employee, who asked not to be named out of fear of professional repercussions, said part of the delay may have to do with the 2025 government shut
The department also has been winding down its operations since the Trump administration took office, cutting about half the department’s overall staff last year.
Lindsay Kubatzky, director of policy and advocacy at the National Center for Learning Disabilities, agrees with Forte’s assessment that a delay in this data may have to do with the Trump administration’s chipping away at systems that have historically helped hold schools accountable for protecting students’ civil rights. “This administration unfortunately has proposed a lot of policies that would make it less transparent on how students with disabilities in particular are being served in public
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