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The Trump administration’s mass layoffs at the U.S. Department of Education go into effect today. Former Department of ...
Despite the lack of staffing, the Education Department's workload just grew. After President Trump signed his massive tax and spending bill into law, the agency was tasked with implementing two new ...
The U.S. Supreme Court allowed the Education Department to proceed with mass layoffs. But some workers slated to be let go ...
Nearly 1,400 department workers are being fired as part of a broad reduction-in-force (RIF) that began on March 11. Days ...
Twenty-one Democratic attorneys general have filed a lawsuit challenging the Trump administration's dismissal of over 1,300 ...
President Donald Trump's job isn't to employ as many bureaucrats as possible. It's to deliver effective and efficient ...
The Department of Education began sending notices to employees that it plans to resume shrinking the department after the ...
The Supreme Court is allowing President Donald Trump to put his plan to dismantle the Education Department back on track and ...
The Trump administration is moving forward with sweeping plans to dismantle the U.S. Department of Education, a move advocates say will disproportionately affect students with disabilities. A Supreme ...
Higher education policy advocates and laid-off staffers warned that the department was already struggling to keep up with the overload of civil rights complaints and financial aid applications. With ...
And that funding has strings attached, which is where the Education Department comes in. The agency's layoffs have three main areas of potential impact for K-12 schools.
On July 14, the U.S. Supreme Court allowed the Trump administration to carry on with its massive Education Department layoffs while a lawsuit proceeds. An exception temporarily shielded her job.