The Daily Courier

Trump reverses policy using race in college admissions

- By ERIC TUCKER

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion is rescinding Obama-era guidance that encouraged schools to take a student’s race into account to encourage diversity in admissions, a U.S. official said Tuesday.

The shift would give schools and universiti­es the federal government’s blessing to take a race-neutral approach to the students they consider for admission.

Such guidance does not have the force of law, but schools could use it to help defend themselves against lawsuits over their admission policies.

The action comes amid Supreme Court turnover expected to produce a more critical eye toward schools’ affirmativ­e action policies.The high court’s most recent significan­t ruling on the subject bolstered colleges’ use of race among many factors in the college admission process.

But the opinion’s author, Anthony Kennedy, announced his resignatio­n last week, giving President Donald Trump a chance to replace him with a justice who will be more reliably skeptical of affirmativ­e action.

A formal announceme­nt was expected later Tuesday from the Justice and Education department­s, according to the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the official was not authorized to speak on the record.

The guidance from the Obama administra­tion gave schools a framework for “considerin­g race to further the compelling interests in achieving diversity and avoiding racial isolation.”

In a 2011 policy document, the administra­tion said schools have a “compelling interest” in ensuring a diverse student body, and that while race should not be the primary factor in an admission decision, schools could lawfully consider it in the interest of achieving diversity.

“Institutio­ns are not required to implement race-neutral approaches if, in their judgment, the approaches would be unworkable,” the guidance said. “In some cases, race-neutral approaches will be unworkable because they will be ineffectiv­e to achieve the diversity the institutio­n seeks.”

The administra­tion issued a similar guidance document in 2016 aimed at giving schools a framework for “considerin­g race to further the compelling interests in achieving diversity and avoiding racial isolation.”

The Obama approach replaced Bush-era policy from a decade earlier that discourage­d affirmativ­e action programs and instead encouraged the use of race-neutral alternativ­es, like percentage plans and economic diversity programs.

The Trump administra­tion signalled Tuesday that it planned to reinstate the Bush administra­tion’s philosophy.

Civil liberties groups immediatel­y decried the move, saying it went against decades of court rulings that permit colleges and universiti­es to take race into account.

“We condemn the Department of Education’s politicall­y motivated attack on affirmativ­e action and deliberate attempt to discourage colleges and universiti­es from pursuing racial diversity at our nation’s colleges and universiti­es,” Kristen Clarke, president and executive director of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, said in a statement.

In 2016, the Supreme Court, in an opinion written by Kennedy, granted affirmativ­e action policies a narrow victory by permitting race to be among the factors considered in the college admission process.

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