Critics have said that Trump’s order conflicts with the promise of returning education to schools and states.
A federal judge in New Hampshire has restricted the ability of the administration of US President Donald Trump to cut funds to public schools participating in diversity, equity and inclusion efforts.
The Landya McCafferty District Judge in Concord issued a preliminary court order on Thursday that prevented the United States Department of Education from enforcing its policy against members of three groups, including national education, the largest teacher.
The NEA, its local affiliate from New Hampshire and the Black Educators Development Center demanded after the Department of Education in February in February cuts for education institutes that were dedicated to efforts.
In a letter, he said that the federal law prevented schools from considering race as a factor in areas such as admissions, hiring and promotion, payment, financial aid, scholarships and awards, housing and graduation ceremonies.
McCafferty, a designated or Democratic President Barack Obama, refused to issue an application that blocks policy injuries throughout the country, but said that a prevention order was justified to be implemented, its members
At the beginning of April, the Trump administration ordered the K-12 schools (Garden of Infants to 12th grade) throughout the country that will certify within 10 days that federal civil rights laws followed and end the practices of Dei de Disiminatory, as a condition to receive federal federal.
He followed a memorandum of February 14 where the Trump administration said it was giving us schools and universities 14 days to eliminate diversity initiatives or the risk of losing federal money.
In the memorandum, the Department of Education also gave an ultimatum to stop using “racial preferences” as a factor in admissions, financial aid, hiring or other areas.
Since then, United States schools have been fighting to determine what practices could conflict with anti-dei orders.
The APRIL certification letter, however, caused a decline of the critics who said that conflict with Trump’s promise to return education to schools and states.
“Is it what the Trump administration calls local control? It cannot be said that it is giving control to the states and then dictates how they direct their schools,” said Keri Rodrigues, president of the National Union of Parents, to The Associated Press Thesth.
The American Federation of Teachers, a National Teacher Union, also said that it is demanding to block the February 14 memorandum, saying that it violates the first and fifth amendment.
The president of the union, Randi Weingarten, told the AP in early April that the certification requirement is illegal, and added that the federal law prohibits the White House of charges and universities to teach, and that federal money cannot process.
“He is wielding a Cudel of billions in federal aid to dozens of millions of children, or all races and ethnicities, to force Kowtow educators to their policy and ideology.”