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  • Date:

    EducationCounsel Alert on DOJ “DEI” Programs, ESSA Waivers, and the Bipartisan FY26 Education Funding Bill (Aug. 6, 2025)

    EducationCounsel published a comprehensive review of recent updates on (i) the Department of Justice issuing guidance on DEI programs; (ii) efforts by the Department of Education to invite states to apply for broad Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) waivers; and (iii) the Senate Appropriations Committee voted to approve the Bipartisan FY26 Education Funding Bill.

    Topics:

    Admissions | Athletics & Sports | Compliance & Risk Management | Compliance Programs, Policies & Procedures | Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Diversity in Employment | Faculty & Staff | Gender Equity in Athletics | Gender Identity & Sexual Orientation Discrimination | Race and National Origin Discrimination | Sex Discrimination | Students

  • Date:

    Department of Justice Memorandum for Federal Funding Recipients Regarding Unlawful Discrimination (Jul. 30, 2025)

    The Department of Justice (“DOJ” or the Department) released new guidance clarifying that entities receiving federal funding must comply with federal antidiscrimination laws, regardless of whether their policies are labeled as Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) initiatives. The guidance emphasized that using protected characteristics such as race, sex, religion, or national origin to provide advantages or impose disadvantages are generally prohibited. The guidance provides a detailed, non-exhaustive list of policies and practices the DOJ considers unlawful. These include programs that grant preferential treatment based on protected characteristics, such as scholarships or internships reserved for a specific racial group based on “geographic targeting,” hiring or promotion practices that prioritize “underrepresented” candidates, and segregated facilities or resources. The guidance also targets facially neutral policies that function as proxies for protected characteristics; such, requiring job applicants to demonstrate “cultural competence, “lived experience,” or submit “diversity statements” in ways that advantage individuals based on race or sex. Similarly, recruitment efforts that target specific geographic areas or institutions for their demographic makeup are flagged as potentially unlawful. While the guidance generally prohibited sex-based separation, it includes a notable exception for sex-separated athletic competitions and intimate spaces, warning that allowing males, “including those self-identifying as women”, to access female-only restrooms, locker rooms, or teams may violate Title IX and create a hostile environment under Title VII. The guidance also criticized the use of protected characteristics in selection processes, such as “diverse slate” hiring mandates, contract awards based on race or sex, and program participation quotas tied to demographic categories. The Department also prohibits trainings that stereotype, exclude, or penalize participants based on protected traits; for instance, programs that frame “white privilege” or “toxic masculinity” as inherent characteristics are unlawful. The DOJ concludes by offering a set of recommended best practices aimed at minimizing legal risk: using neutral, merit-based selection criteria, avoiding demographic quotas, documenting legitimate rationales behind institutional decision making, analyzing facially neutral criteria for discriminatory effects, and using nondiscrimination clauses in contracts with third parties. The guidance further affirmed that individuals who refuse to participate in or object to potentially discriminatory programs are protected from retaliation. The DOJ urged all federal funding recipients to review and revise any discriminatory policies to avoid legal liability and loss of funding. 

    Topics:

    Admissions | Athletics & Sports | Compliance & Risk Management | Compliance Programs, Policies & Procedures | Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Diversity in Employment | Faculty & Staff | Gender Equity in Athletics | Gender Identity & Sexual Orientation Discrimination | Race and National Origin Discrimination | Sex Discrimination | Students

  • Date:

    U.S. Department of Justice Notice of Findings Regarding the University of California, Los Angeles (Jul. 29, 2025)

    The Department of Justice’s (DOJ) Civil Rights Division determined that the University of California, Los Angeles (the University) violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 by failing to adequately address antisemitic harassment during and after a protest encampment on campus in spring 2024. The DOJ’s Notice of Violation outlined three key findings. First, the notice claimed that Jewish and Israeli students were subject to severe, pervasive, and objectively offensive harassment, including assaults, verbal abuse, and physical exclusion from campus spaces, on the basis of their race, religion, or national origin. Second, notice claimed that the University had actual notice of this hostile environment, having received at least eleven formal complaints and issued public statements acknowledging Jewish students’ fears and physical exclusion. Third, the notice claimed that the University responded with deliberate indifference, taking no meaningful action to eliminate the hostile environment for nearly a week, despite having both legal and policy authority to dismantle the encampment earlier. The DOJ concluded that the University’s free speech concerns were misplaced because the conduct in question included physical assaults, intimidation, and denial of access, which are not protected by the First Amendment. DOJ officials condemned the inaction and warned that legal action will follow if the University does not enter into a voluntary resolution agreement by August 5, 2025.  

    Topics:

    Constitutional Issues | Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Enforcement of Non-Discrimination Laws | Equal Protection | External Counsel | First Amendment & Free Speech | General Counsel | Race and National Origin Discrimination

  • Date:

    Department of Education Title VI Investigation into Duke University Law Journal (Jul. 28, 2025)

    The Department of Education’s (the Department) Office for Civil Rights (OCR) launched an investigation into Duke University (the University) and the Duke Law Journal (the Journal) for allegedly violating Title VI by considering race, color, or national origin in the Journal’s editor selection process. The investigation follows reports that the University’s Law Journal circulated a supplemental grading rubric to affinity groups, awarding extra points to applicants who referenced underrepresented racial or ethnic backgrounds in their personal statements. At the same time, Secretary Linda McMahon and Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. issued a joint letter to the University demanding a review and overhaul of any race-based practices in hiring, admissions, scholarships, including at Duke Health. The letter calls for the creation of a “Merit and Civil Rights Committee” empowered by the University’s Board of Trustees to implement and enforce reforms in cooperation with the federal government.  

    Topics:

    Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Diversity in Employment | External Investigations | Faculty & Staff | Investigations | Race and National Origin Discrimination | Student Organizations | Students

  • Date:

    Department of Justice Title VII Investigation into George Mason University Over Faculty Resolution in Support of President Gregory Washington (Jul. 25, 2025)

    The Department of Justice (“DOJ” or the Department) expanded an ongoing investigation into George Mason University (the University) by reviewing a Faculty Senate resolution that praised the University’s President Gregory Washington’s efforts to align faculty and staff demographics with the student body. The DOJ expressed concern that the resolution suggests unlawful “race- or sex-motivated hiring decisions” in violation of Title VII. The Department’s letter requested copies of “the Faculty Senate resolution, any proposed drafts of that resolution, and all written communications . . . between any Faculty Senate members or between Faculty Senate members and President Washington or any members of his Office’s staff.” The letter stated its intent to submit a more detailed information request next week. This action marks the fifth federal probe into the University within the past few weeks. 

    Topics:

    Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Diversity in Employment | External Investigations | Faculty & Staff | Investigations | Race and National Origin Discrimination

  • Date:

    Department of Justice Letter Re: State of Tennessee v. Department of Education (Jul. 25, 2025)

    The Department of Justice (the Department) sent a memorandum to Congress stating that it does not intend to defend the constitutionality of funding mechanisms for Hispanic Serving Institutions (HSIs) being challenged in State of Tennessee v. Department of Education, effectively aligning the government with the plaintiffs’ position in the case. Plaintiffs in the case allege that federal programs offering aid to HSIs, as defined as enrolling at least 25% full-time equivalent Hispanic undergraduates, are unlawful. In the memorandum, the Department wrote that it “has determined that those provisions violate the equal-protection component of the Fifth Amendment’s Due Process Clause” and further explained that “the government lacks any legitimate interest in differentiating among universities based on whether ‘a specified number of seats in each class’ are occupied by ‘individuals from the preferred ethnic groups.”’ 

    Topics:

    Contracts | Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Grants, Contracts, & Sponsored Research | Race and National Origin Discrimination

  • Date:

    Department of Justice Title VI Investigation into George Mason for Admissions Process (Jul. 21, 2025)

    The Department of Justice (the Department) launched a compliance review investigation into George Mason University (the University) to assess whether its admissions policies violate Title VI by discriminating on the basis of race, color, or national origin. The Department emphasized that any racially segregated access to programs or student life, as well as any race-based advantages in admissions or indifference to a racially hostile environment, would violate federal law. The investigation will examine whether the university’s admissions practices and scholarship distributions involve discrimination and evaluate its response to antisemitism allegations on campus. The Department has ordered the University to submit records, data, certifications, and other materials by August 1. 

    Topics:

    Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | External Investigations | Investigations | Race and National Origin Discrimination

  • Date:

    Department of Justice Title VII Investigation into George Mason University’s Hiring Practices (Jul. 17, 2025)

    The Department of Justice (the Department) opened an investigation into George Mason University (the University) to assess whether its faculty hiring and promotion practices violate Title VII. The Department is investigating whether race and sex have been “motivating factors” in hiring decisions, citing internal communications from the University’s President that date back to 2020-2022 in which he promoted diversity in hiring and expressed institutional commitments to racial equity. The president addressed the investigation in a letter to the University community, stating that his past comments came as responses to the national reckoning on racial justice that followed the murder of George Floyd, and further articulated that at the time of his statements, the University was operating under the “One Virginia Plan”—an initiative, which remains in effect through the end of 2025, that required all state agencies to develop strategic plans to promote inclusivity in hiring, compensation, and operations.  

    Topics:

    Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Diversity in Employment | External Investigations | Faculty & Staff | Investigations | Race and National Origin Discrimination

  • Date:

    Department of Education Opens Title VI Investigation into George Mason University (Jul. 10, 2025)

    U.S. Department of Education has announced a Title VI investigation into George Mason University after multiple professors at the University filed a complaint with the Office for Civil Rights (OCR) alleging that the University illegally used race-based hiring and promotion practices from 2020 through the present. The complaint alleged that the University created a racially hostile environment in violation of Title VI by way of several policies and practices that constituted racial discrimination, including the University’s DEI policies, the presence of “Equity Advisors,” the use of race-conscious promotion criteria, and the creation of diversity hiring directives. Additionally, the complaint makes note of a campus-wide email sent by the University president in March 2025 announcing the renaming of the “Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion” office and stating that no University policy changes were needed to comply with civil rights laws.  

    Topics:

    Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Diversity in Employment | External Investigations | Faculty & Staff | Investigations | Race and National Origin Discrimination

  • Date:

    HHS OCR Notice of Title VI Violation Against Harvard University (June 30, 2025)

    The Department of Health and Human Services Office for Civil Rights (OCR) announced its determination that Harvard University violated Title VI of the Civil Rights Act by acting with deliberate indifference to the severe, pervasive, and objectively offensive harassment of Jewish and Israeli students resulting in a hostile environment on campus. OCR identified that beginning in October 2023 to the present, the University failed to adequately address harassment including threats, vandalism, and physical intimidation targeting Jewish and Israeli students. OCR relied on the University’s policies and procedures, conclusions from the University’s internal Task Force, findings from U.S. Congressional Task Force, and media reports in arriving at its determination. OCR concluded that the University had substantial control over the students who committed the harassment as well as the property where the harassment occurred, but nonetheless acted with deliberate indifference toward the affected students. Finally, OCR found that the University neglected to control protests and enforce consistent disciplinary measures, denied the harmed students’ equal access to educational opportunities and safe access to campus facilities, and harmed students’ overall physical and emotional wellbeing on campus. OCR noted that the findings from this investigation do not address the current ongoing investigation into the Harvard Law Review.

    Topics:

    Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Race and National Origin Discrimination