Author: greenecodemocratcom

  • School Board presented four finalists for superintendent’s position

    Shown above Dr. Jessica Constant, Mr. Demond Mullins,  Ms. Taurus Brown and Dr. Timothy Thurman

    At its December 15, 2025 regular meeting, the Greene County Board of Education received four applicant finalists for the position of Superintendent. Ms. Susan Salter, special consultant with the Alabama Association of School Boards (AASB), led the superintendent search for Greene County School System. She presented the following finalist detailing their experiences and education: Dr. Jessica Constant, currently Assistant Superintendent of Teaching and Learning, Phenix City Schools; Mr. Demond Mullins currently Director of Curriculum and Federal Programs, Lowndes County Schools; Ms. Taurus Brown Smith currently Education Administrator Alabama Department of Education, Office of School Improvement; Dr. Timothy Thurman currently Superintendent Linden City Schools.

    Ms. Salter noted that applications were received from 39 candidates with 28 completions. Applications were received from Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, Illinois, Arizona and Missouri. AASB reviewed all applicants and a committee determined the top candidates. AASB vetted all candidates. Salter narrated to the board the credentials and work experiences of each finalist, in alphabetical order. through a public Power Point presentation. The board has scheduled interviews with each finalist for Thursday, December 18, beginning at 10: am in the Central Office. The interviews are open to the public, but only board members may participate in the interviews. Dr. Jessica Constant’s experiences include Coordinator of Student Services, Tuscaloosa City Schools; Experiences in Hale County Schools – Principal, Greensboro High School; Principal Akron Community School; Assistant Principal, Greensboro Middle School; Teacher, Greensboro East Elementary. Education – Doctorate in Education Management; Education Specialist; Master’s Education Administration and Supervision; Master’s Education Leadership; Bachelor’s Elementary Education.

    Mr. Demond Mullins’ experiences include Director of Curriculum and Federal Programs, Lowndes County Schools; Principal Johnson Elementary, Jeff Davis High School, Montgomery County Schools; Principal Hazelwood Elementary, Lawrence County Schools; Assistant Principal Bob Jones High School, Madison City Schools; Assistant Principal, Forest Avenue Magnet Elementary, Montgomery County Schools; Teacher, Seth Johnson Elementary, Montgomery County Schools; Teacher, Westwood Elementary, Tuscaloosa County schools.
    Education – Education Specialist, Master’s Education Leadership; Bachelor’s Elementary Education; currently Ph.D candidate.

    Ms. Taurus Brown Smith’s experiences include Principal Payne Elementary, Selma City Schools; Teacher, Selma City Schools. Education – National Board Certification, Early Childhood Generalist; Master’s Elementary Education; Master’s Education Administration; Bachelor’s Elementary Education.
    Dr. Timothy Thurman’s experiences include Assistant Superintendent Linden City Schools; Principal Linden High School; Teacher and Coach Perry County Schools; Director Perry County Alternative School. Education: Doctorate Educational Leadership; Master’s Education Administration; Bachelor’s Elementary Education.

  • Newswire : Haiti’s transitional government adopts key law to hold a general election for first time since 2016

    Haiti’s transitional presidential council has backed an electoral law in the latest step toward holding a general election for the first time in nearly a decade.
    The approval late Monday means that the government can finally publish an official and long-awaited electoral calendar, after fears that the council would try to push back the tentative dates to stay in power longer.
    Council President Laurent Saint-Cyr called the move a “major decision” for Haiti.
    “We must finally offer the Haitian people the opportunity to freely and responsibly choose those who will lead them,” he wrote on X. “By taking this decisive step, while remaining fully committed to restoring security, we reaffirm our dedication to putting Haiti back on the path to democratic legitimacy and stability.”
    The adoption of the electoral law came as some council members have pushed for the ouster of Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aimé, including Fritz Alphonse Jean, who was recently sanctioned by the U.S. government.
    Some believe that U.S. visa restrictions, like the one imposed on Jean, are being used as a threat to try and influence Haiti’s politics.
    Three of seven council members with voting powers weren’t present for Monday’s meeting, where the electoral law was approved, including Jean, according to Le Nouvelliste newspaper.
    Council member Frinel Joseph, who voted in favor of the law, said that it marked “a decisive turning point” in the transition of power and that it provided Haiti “with the necessary legal and political framework for holding elections.”
    Haiti’s Provisional Electoral Council has said it plans to hold the first round of voting in August and the final round in December next year, although ongoing gang violence could push back those dates.
    Meanwhile, the transitional presidential council is supposed to step down by Feb. 7 to give way to democratic rule.
    Haiti last held a general election in 2016 and hasn’t had a president since Jovenel Moïse was killed at his private residence in July 2021.
    The transitional presidential council was appointed after the killing, and the prime ministers that have served since the killing have been nominated by the council.

     

  • Newswie : With seats of Congressional Black Caucus members under attack, Trump again targets Rep. Ilhan Omar

     Rep. Ilhan Omar (D. MN)

    By Lauren Burke, NNPA Congressional Corespondent

     


    On December 4, during a White House cabinet meeting, President Trump launched into a hateful, racist rant against Congressional Black Caucus member Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN).
    “Those Somalians should be out of here. They’ve destroyed our country. And all they do is complain, complain, complain. You have her – she’s always talking about ‘the constitution provides me with uhhhh,’” Trump ranted, speaking of Congresswoman Omar.
    Trump has targeted Rep. Omar and other members of Congress’s “Squad” before and during his first term in office. Those attacks by Trump included Reps. Ayanna Pressley, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Many political observers wonder if Trump’s latest rant was a strategy to deflect from bad economic news. Either way, Trump’s latest racist tirade isn’t new.
    Rep. Omar’s family fled Somalia during a war and then earned asylum in the U.S. in 1995. She became a U.S. citizen at age 17 and has represented Minnesota’s 5th congressional district since 2019.
    In 2019, Trump said that the congressional group nicknamed “the squad” should “go back and help fix the totally broken and crime-infested places from which they came.” During his 2024 campaign for the White House, Trump made anti-immigration rants a predictable part of his campaign rallies.
    The Congressional Black Caucus responded to the latest attacks by Trump and other Republicans in an era of brazen anti-Blackness.
    “From the recently leaked texts of Republican officials using the n-word and praising Hitler to President Trump’s comments in the Cabinet Room, it’s beyond clear that the Republican Party’s racism truly knows no bounds,” wrote the Congressional Black Caucus in a press release in defense of Rep. Omar on December 4.
    The attacks heighten the tension of national political discourse. The level of political vitriol would appear to have real-world applications. Great Britain’s paper The Independent exclusively reported on Dec. 8, a serious threat to Rep. Omar. The Congresswoman has had to add personal security to her team in recent years.
    “A 30-year-old Florida man is facing up to a half-decade in federal prison after confessing to posting violent threats on social media that promised to decapitate Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar, murder her ‘monkey children,’ then eat the kids ‘for protein,’ according to plea agreement papers reviewed by The Independent,” the Dec. 8 post by the newspaper relayed. The news arrived days after Trump’s attacks, though the matter appeared to be related to comments the Congresswoman may have made after the murder of Charlie Kirk.
    The latest attack on Rep. Omar is only one of a series of pressures on the Congressional Black Caucus. Several members are now facing challenges to their power as several members are facing sudden redistricting changes in states with Republican Governors. These include Missouri, Texas, and Indiana.
    In August, Texas Republicans began the back-and-forth onslaught that became the current partisan redistricting fight. California answered the call by passing a ballot initiative that will likely lead to the elimination of several GOP congressional seats. In Virginia, there is open talk by Democrats of altering the congressional delegation in a way that could produce ten Democrats in the Virginia delegation out of eleven.
    Several members of the CBC, including Rep. Emanuel Cleaver (D-MO), Al Green (D-TX), Andre Carson (D-IN), Jasmine Crockett (D-TX), and Marc Veasey (D-TX) are dealing with the special challenge of chasing district lines for partisan reasons.
    Rep. Crockett was drawn out of her own district during the GOP-driven map redraw in Texas. On the evening of December 8, Crockett announced she would be running against Republican Senator John Cornyn for U.S. Senate in 2026.
    The race was forced in part by the onslaught of redistricting fights that are likely to get more complicated in the early part of next year.

  • Newswire :Rural America faces the first cut as ACA support hits a high

    By Stacy M. Brown
Black Press USA Senior National Correspondent

    Out across the long stretches of the country—where the roads narrow, the hospitals disappear, and the winters sit heavy—health insurance is not an abstraction. It is a quiet bargain that keeps families from slipping into ruin. That bargain is now on the edge of collapse.
    Enhanced Affordable Care Act subsidies are set to expire at the end of the year, and rural Americans stand to suffer most. These subsidies, introduced during the pandemic and extended through 2025, lowered premiums, expanded coverage, and pushed enrollment to historic highs. Without congressional action, the cost of insurance will rise sharply, and the hardest hit will be communities that already live miles from the nearest clinic, where a single medical bill can decide a family’s direction for a generation.
    The math alone tells a story of quiet devastation. Rural counties, according to reporting in the files, saw some of the greatest gains in coverage after the enhanced subsidies took effect. In states that rejected Medicaid expansion, these subsidies became the last remaining thread tying people to affordable care. When that thread snaps, millions will confront premiums that double almost overnight. Families who once paid modest monthly amounts could face bills they simply cannot meet. Hospitals in regions where uncompensated care already threatens survival will be forced closer to closure.
    The Congressional Budget Office projects that without an extension of the subsidies through 2026, the number of uninsured Americans will climb by millions in the first years after expiration. Premiums would, on average, rise by more than 100%. For middle-income families, the return of the so-called subsidy cliff will mean costs that outpace budgets already worn thin by inflation and stagnant wages.
    Yet the geography of the harm is not evenly drawn. Rural communities lean heavily on marketplace coverage. They have fewer employers offering insurance, fewer doctors, fewer mental health providers, and hospitals that operate on margins so narrow they can be undone by a single year of unpaid care. When subsidies disappear, these communities are the first to fall. Their residents are older, sicker, and poorer. Their choices are fewer. Their safety nets are thinner.
    The political battle around them grows louder by the day. Senators Bernie Moreno of Ohio and Susan Collins of Maine have introduced legislation that would extend the subsidies for two years but add new restrictions, including mandatory premiums for all enrollees and an income cap of $200,000 per household. Moreno, in a written statement, accused Democrats of creating a system that favored insurance companies over patients. “I am willing to work with anyone to finally bring down costs for all Americans and hope my colleagues across the aisle will commit to doing the same,” he said.
    Collins said the proposal aims to help families avoid sudden, unaffordable premium increases. A statement from her office said Congress must “pursue practical solutions that increase affordability without creating sudden disruptions in coverage.”
    But rural America, which lives with the consequences of every delay, every stalemate, and every partisan declaration, does not have the luxury of waiting.
    The reporting in the files paints a stark portrait: when insurance becomes too expensive, people delay care, skip treatment, or abandon coverage entirely. High-deductible plans—an alternative promoted by several Republican lawmakers—leave families drowning in out-of-pocket costs. Studies cited in KFF Health News show that patients with these plans often end up buried in medical debt, even when insured, and rural families, with their lower incomes and limited access to providers, are especially vulnerable.
    It is in these regions where the distance between lawmaking and lived experience is measured not in political rhetoric but in ambulance rides, in shuttered emergency rooms, in the unpaid bills that arrive like uninvited visitors at the end of each month.
    And yet, nationwide approval of the ACA is at its highest level since the law was enacted. Gallup’s latest findings show 57 percent of Americans support the ACA, driven by a sharp rise among independents. The survey, conducted as the shutdown ended and Congress prepared for another vote, suggests that the public understands what is at stake. It also shows how deeply the law has become woven into American life, especially in regions where alternatives do not exist.
    But approval alone will not keep rural hospitals open or preserve the coverage gains of the last several years. The national fight now moves toward a deadline that will not wait. When it arrives, rural America will feel it first, and it will feel it hardest.
    As one Gallup passage captures, “Approval has been at or above 50 percent in most years since 2017, but the law was less popular before

  • Newswire : U. S. Supreme Court allows Texas to use racially gerrymandered map for 2026 Midterms 

    Texas legislator holding redistricting map

    By Joe Jurado, NewsOne


    In news that can be filed under “disappointing, but not surprising,” the U.S. Supreme Court issued a 6-3 ruling allowing Texas to use its recently redistricted map in the 2026 midterms. 
    According to CBS News, the ruling came after a panel of federal judges struck down the map last month. In the original ruling, the judges found the map unconstitutional, believing it was racially gerrymandered. In an unsigned order, the Supreme Court said it “has repeatedly emphasized that lower federal courts should ordinarily not alter the election rules on the eve of an election,” and the district court “violated that rule here.” 
    “The District Court improperly inserted itself into an active primary campaign, causing much confusion and upsetting the delicate federal-state balance in elections,” the order continued.
    So the Supreme Court’s logic boils down to “it doesn’t matter if it’s wrong, they already did it, so just accept it.” 
    Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan pushed back against the ruling in a written dissent. “The court issued a 160-page opinion recounting in detail its factual findings. Yet this Court reverses that judgment based on its perusal, over a holiday weekend, of a cold paper record.” Kagan wrote. “We are a higher court than the District Court, but we are not a better one when it comes to making such a fact-based decision,” she added. 
    “We won! Texas is officially—and legally—more red,” Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said in a statement celebrating the ruling. “The new congressional districts better align our representation in Washington D.C. with the values of our state,” Abbott added. “This is a victory for Texas voters, for common sense, and for the U.S. Constitution.”
    Texas Democrats were far less celebratory of the ruling, and for good reason. Over the summer, Texas Democrats used every measure at their disposal to block the Texas redistricting effort. They filibustered, fled the state to break quorum, and their efforts even resulted in state Rep. Nicole Collier being held as a political prisoner on the House floor.  
     “The Supreme Court failed Texas voters today, and they failed American democracy. This is what the end of the Voting Rights Act looks like: courts that won’t protect minority communities even when the evidence is staring them in the face,” Texas state House Democratic Leader Rep. Gene Wu said in a statement. 
    The Texas map triggered a nationwide redistricting battle. In July, Abbott called a special session focused on redistricting at the request of President Donald Trump. The GOP controls the House by a narrow margin, with Democrats only needing a net gain of three seats to flip control during next year’s midterms. The Texas state legislature eventually passed a map that added five new districts that favor Republicans. 
    While the Supreme Court is allowing Texas to utilize its redistricted map, the gains made within it have largely been neutralized by California’s redistricting effort. California Gov. Gavin Newsom was the first Democratic leader to throw a counterpunch when he announced the “Election Rigging Response Act “in August. That move triggered a special election last month focused solely on Prop 50, which transfers control of the state’s congressional maps from an independent redistricting committee to the state legislature through the end of the decade. California voters overwhelmingly approved the measure, and Newsom intends to implement a map that directly cancels out the gains made in Texas. 
    Virginia’s Democrat-led General Assembly also announced a surprise redistricting effort last month that aims to create two to three more seats in the House, with Chicago and Maryland also considering redrawing their maps. 
    So while the Supreme Court’s ruling undeniably hurts Democratic voters in Texas, the electoral math for flipping control of the House is still reasonably close.

  • Doug Jones to launch 2026 gubernatorial campaign Friday with Birmingham kickoff rally

     

    Former Senator Doug Jones speaks at the 60th Commemoration of the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing Friday, Sept. 15, 2023, in Birmingham, Ala.  AP Pool Photo/Butch Dill

    By Bill Britt, Alabama Political Reporters

    Former U.S. Senator Doug Jones will officially kick off his 2026 gubernatorial campaign Friday evening at The Theodore in Birmingham, marking the most significant Democratic entry into a statewide race in more than a decade.
    The rally, scheduled from 5 to 7 p.m. CST, will feature performances by six-time Grammy Award–winning singer-songwriter Jason Isbell and DJ Slim Robb, underscoring the campaign’s effort to build excitement ahead of what insiders say will be one of the most consequential elections in recent Alabama history.
    Jones, who shocked the nation on December 12, 2017, when he defeated Roy Moore to become the first Democrat elected to the U.S. Senate from Alabama in 25 years, enters the governor’s race with deep national recognition and what party officials describe as “full confidence” from Democratic leadership. A senior strategist told APR the launch represents “a moment when Democrats across Alabama and across the country are lined up behind one candidate,” framing Jones as the party’s best chance to reset the state’s political trajectory.
    The campaign says Friday’s event is designed to evoke the broad coalition that powered Jones’ 2017 victory—young voters, suburban moderates, African American communities, and independents frustrated by political dysfunction. “Doug has always believed Alabama is at its strongest when people come together across lines that normally divide us,” a close ally said. “This campaign will reflect that belief in every county we visit.”
    Doors open at 5 p.m. at The Theodore, located at 3211 2nd Avenue South in Birmingham. The kickoff will conclude at 7 p.m. Jones will be joined by his wife, Louise Jones, longtime supporters, and additional guests expected to be announced as the event nears.
    With Republicans preparing for what could be a bruising primary season, Jones’ entry signals that Democrats believe the 2026 governor’s race presents a real opportunity. Whether that optimism takes hold will begin to come into focus Friday night, as Jones makes his opening case why he is ready to lead Alabama into a better tomorrow for all.


    Doug Jones campaign reports $105K raised from 800 Alabama donors

    The campaign committee supporting Doug Jones’s bid for governor reported a strong early fundraising effort this week, filing its first financial disclosure with the Alabama Secretary of State.
    According to the report, Doug for Alabama raised more than $105,000 from over 800 Alabama residents. The committee was organized three business days after Jones announced his candidacy on November 24, 2025, making the filing an early snapshot of donor activity at the outset of the campaign.
    The disclosure shows a broad base of in-state contributors, an indicator often watched closely in statewide races as campaigns work to establish momentum and demonstrate organizational strength. Early fundraising totals can play an important role in signaling viability, particularly in a contest expected to draw significant attention ahead of the 2026 election cycle.
    Campaign officials said the report reflects only the initial phase of fundraising, as the campaign continues building its statewide operation and preparing for future outreach and events.

  • Annual Christmas Parade and Christmas tree lighting held

    The Eutaw Area Chamber of Commerce and the City of Eutaw held the annual Christmas Parade for Greene County, Tuesday December 9, 2025. Eutaw Mayor Corey Cockrell served as Grand Marshal. Cockrell is the 4th African American to serve as Mayor of Eutaw, Alabama.
    This year’s Christmas Parade theme, Festival of Lights, featured a variety of decorated trees on the Old Courthouse Square, sponsored by various local businesses and organizations. Many businesses also decorated their storefronts lifting the Spirit of Christmas.The lighting of the Christmas Tree on the Thomas Gilmore Courthouse Square followed the parade. Many gathered to view this special event.
    Other parade participants riding on beautifully decorated floats and vehicles, or walking in unison, included elected and appointed officials, representatives of churches, non-profit organizations, businesses, housing authorities, local school band, fire departments, ambulance service, and Debutantes sponsored by the Greene County Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. and more. Even Santa and the Grinch rode in the local parade. The children enjoyed all the candy thrown from the floats.
    An exceptionally large crowd was out to view the festivities and purchase snacks from the vendors.

  • Greene County Commission approves purchase of pothole repair machine

    The Greene County Commission at their regular monthly meeting on December 8, 2025, approved purchase of a $344,000 machine to repair potholes, which can be operated by one person. The Commission hopes to secure a bank loan from Merchants and Farmers Bank to buy the machine. Payments will be made from the quarterly funds allocated to the County Commission from the Racing Commission from proceeds of gaming at the Palace. Several commissioners pointed out the value of this machine in repairing roads across the county.
    Earlier in the meeting, the Commission approved an allocation of the unrestricted portion of the funds provided by the Racing Commission to the Greene County Commission suggested by Commissioner Allen Turner. Turner’s proposal was modified to allocate 45% to the General Fund, 15% to the Highway Department, 15% to matching funds required to receive state or Federal grants, 15% to other agencies, and 10% for the Commissioner’s discretionary funds.
    The Greene County Commission modified Turner’s suggested distribution of these funds coming from simulcasting of horse and greyhound dog racing and historical horse racing machines operated at the Palace, under the administration of the Greene County Racing Commission. The Commission will use the 15% allocation to the Highway Department to finance purchase of the pothole fixing machine.
    The Commission approved an extension of time to apply for an exemption to pay for garbage collection, based on age and income, until December 31, 2025. This will allow more people, who qualify for the exemption to apply and secure this benefit.
    In other business, the Commission:
    • Approved purchase of a full-page advertisement in the Greene County Democrat Annual Progress issue.
    • Approved the 2025 holiday schedule for staff.
    • Approved appointments to the Greene County Industrial Development Authority (GCIDA) of Kurt Turner for District 4, Darrell Jones for District 5 and Loretta Webb Wilson for District 3.
    • Approved Rodgerick Williams, new CEO/Administrator at the GCHS to the EMS Ambulance Board to replace Dr. Marcia Pugh.
    • Tabled action for a member on the GreenThumb Board for District 2.
    • Approved travel for Highway Department staff to attend training in Huntsville, Alabama.
    • Approved Financial Report for November 30, 2025, as presented by the CFO.

  • Newswire : From Tulsa to Ghana, Mother Fletcher’s long Journey comes to a close at 111

    By Stacy M. Brown
    Black Press USA National Correspondent

    Mother Viola Fletcher, who carried the memory of Tulsa’s shame and the nation’s unfinished business longer than any other living soul, died on November 24 at age 111. She stood as the oldest known survivor of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, the burning of Greenwood, and the attempted erasure of Black prosperity that white mobs tried to silence forever.
    Tulsa Mayor Monroe Nichols said her death marks a moment of mourning for a city still learning how to reckon with its own truth. “Today, our city mourns the loss of Mother Viola Fletcher, a survivor of one of the darkest chapters in our city’s history,” Nichols stated. “Mother Fletcher endured more than anyone should, yet she spent her life lighting a path forward with purpose.”
    She spent that long life fighting for justice that too many leaders tried to bury along with the bodies from Black Wall Street. In Greenwood, she was a child watching terror reshape a world that had promised her nothing but possibility. For more than a century, she bore witness so the country could never again pretend not to know. “Her legacy will be carried forward with the courage and conviction she modeled every day of her life,” Nichols said.
    Mother Fletcher’s mission reached the halls of Congress when she demanded reparations for survivors and descendants of the massacre. She testified with a steadiness that shamed a nation still unwilling to repair what it helped set ablaze. She reminded lawmakers she had lived through state-sponsored violence and had lived long enough to see the excuses that followed. She co-authored her memoir “Don’t Let Them Bury My Story”  with her grandson, refusing to allow America the comfort of forgetting.
    She left her words in the archives of Oklahoma State University through oral histories that insisted history would not escape the sound of her voice. Her labor began early. During World War II, she worked in a shipyard as an assistant welder. Later, she cleaned houses with a determination that carried her well into her eighties. She built a life out of the ashes she was never meant to rise from.
    The world took notice of her strength. During a 2021 journey to Ghana, she received the title “NaaLamiley,” translated as someone strong enough to stand the test of time. Her vision inspired the Viola Ford Fletcher Foundation, which promotes education, health, and economic opportunity. Community members honored her in ways large and small, including the gift of custom dentures created to recognize her legacy and impact.
    Three years ago, she stood with her brother, Hughes Van Ellis, known as Uncle Red, inside Ghana’s embassy in Washington. She was 108 then. He was 101. Both were sworn in as citizens of Ghana in a ceremony filled with music, dancing children, and the full weight of ancestral return. It was the first time anyone had been sworn in as a citizen inside the Ghanaian embassy. “I’m so grateful to all. I thank you so much for this honor,” Fletcher said before signing her citizenship papers. Her brother echoed her sentiment. “I’m so thankful to Ghana, and all of you,” Ellis stated.
    Oklahoma State Rep. Regina Goodwin attended the ceremony, along with journalist Tiffany Cross and Ambassador Erieka Bennett. Bennett spoke of heritage that surpasses borders. “You don’t have to be born in Africa to be an African,” Bennett declared. “Africa is born in you.”
    Cross spoke of feeling the presence of ancestors moving through the room, a presence made sharper by the endurance of Fletcher and Ellis. Goodwin said their lives proved that the African spirit cannot be broken. “This is what it’s all about,” Cross stated. “The spirit of Africa, its powerful and rich history.”
    Their citizenship ceremony became more than a celebration. It became a reminder that the diaspora carries stories the world still needs to hear, and that the road home is long but never closed. Bennett told the gathering that Ghana opens its doors to all who seek connection. “Welcome home,” she said.

  • Newswire : Fate of Civil Rights Office unknown as Trump continues to dismantle Department of Education 

    By Lauren Burke, NNPA

    A busy news week heading into the Thanksgiving holiday has distracted from a continuing effort by the Trump Administration to relocate, and in some cases end, the U.S. Department of Education. It has long been known that Trump and his policy advisors want to dismantle the department — but the acceleration over the last week has taken some by surprise.
    The U.S. Department of Education was established in 1979 under President Jimmy Carter. It was created to unify and elevate federal efforts to support public schools and protect students’ civil rights. It has also been the department that has amplified the national education policy.
    “The Trump Administration cannot close a federal agency without an act of Congress. Nevertheless, the Trump Administration is intent on breaking the law and dismantling the Department of Education,” Rep. Bobby Scott, the senior Democrat on the House Committee on Education and Workforce, said in a written statement on Nov. 20.
    “Today’s announcement is part and parcel of the Trump Administration’s larger agenda to reduce federal enforcement of civil rights laws and eliminate support for low-income communities. A core function of ED is to protect and defend students’ civil rights,” Rep. Scott added.
    Since taking office again in January, the Trump Administration has made its central focus to dismantle civil rights policies passed in the 1960s. The undoing of civil rights protections and a theme of anti-Blackness is now a cornerstone policy during Trump’s second term in office.
    Trump has reversed the 2015 “Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing” (AFFH) rule, a civil-rights tool aimed at reducing segregation and racial disparities in housing. Trump has also ended disparate-impact liability in civil-rights enforcement, and in 2025, Trump signed an executive order instructing federal agencies to deprioritize enforcement of “disparate-impact” theory — a legal standard used to challenge policies that, while neutral on their face, disproportionately harm protected groups. Trump has also ended key DEI and affirmative-action programs in federal hiring and rescinded Executive Order 11246 (initially signed in 1965), which required federal contractors to maintain affirmative-action programs to promote diversity in hiring.
    “The federal government must retain its central role in enforcing students’ civil rights, because historically, when states had no federal oversight, we saw segregation of public schools, a refusal to educate students with disabilities, and a lack of resources for low-income communities,” Rep. Scott also pointed out in his Nov. 19 statement.
    At a committee hearing on the morning of November 20, Rep. Summer Lee, who represents parts of Pittsburgh, made a pointed observation. As Republicans held a hearing on career and technical education, Rep. Lee pointed out the irony of the Department of Education being dismantled by President Trump in the background.
    “Republicans can’t simultaneously hold a hearing about how to strengthen students’ skills through career and technical education while also allowing this administration to dismantle the sole agency tasked with expanding the same students’ educational opportunities and protecting their civil rights,” Rep. Lee said.
    One of the remaining mysteries of the Trump Administration’s efforts to destroy the Department of Education is what will happen to the civil rights division within the department. Will the work of the office be destroyed completely or moved to another department in the government? That remains an open question.