Chattanooga Times Free Press

Diversity ban has led to job cuts at state universiti­es

- BY ACACIA CORONADO

AUSTIN, Texas — A ban on diversity, equity and inclusion initiative­s in higher education has led to more than 100 job cuts across university campuses in Texas, a hit echoed or anticipate­d in numerous other states where lawmakers are rolling out similar policies during an important election year.

Universiti­es throughout Texas rushed to make changes after Republican Gov. Greg Abbott signed the law last year. On April 2, the president of the 52,000-student University of Texas at Austin — one of the largest college campuses in the U.S. — sent an email saying the school was shuttering the Division of Campus and Community Engagement and eliminatin­g jobs in order to comply with the ban, which went into effect on Jan. 1.

More than 60 University of Texas at Austin staff members were terminated as a result of the law, according to the Texas Conference of the American Associatio­n of University Professors. The group said it compiled the list based on affected employees who had reached out and that the number could be greater. University officials declined to confirm the number of positions eliminated.

Officials at other schools, in response to inquiries from The Associated Press, indicated that a total of 36 positions were eliminated between Texas A&M University in College Station; Texas Tech University in Lubbock; Texas State University in San Marcos; The University of Houston; Sam Houston State University in Huntsville; and Sul Ross State University in Alpine. Officials said no one was let go; people were assigned to new jobs, some resigned and vacant positions were closed.

Earlier this week, University of Texas at Dallas officials announced that approximat­ely 20 associate jobs would be eliminated in compliance with the law. University officials declined to comment on how many of those positions are currently filled.

Texas House of Representa­tives Speaker Dade Phelan, a Republican, applauded the University of Texas actions in a post on social media. “It is a victory for common sense and proof that the Legislatur­e’s actions are working,” Phelan wrote.

Texas is among five states that have recently passed legislatio­n targeting DEI programs. At least 20 others are considerin­g it.

Florida was the first to implement a ban, last year, with the vocal backing of then-Republican presidenti­al candidate Gov. Ron DeSantis, who often derides DEI and similar diversity efforts as “woke” policies of the left. In response to the law, the University of Florida last month announced more than a dozen terminatio­ns.

Universiti­es of Wisconsin regents reached a deal with Republican lawmakers in December to limit DEI positions at the system’s two dozen campuses in exchange for getting funds for staff raises and constructi­on projects. The deal imposed a hiring freeze on diversity positions through 2026, and shifted more than 40 diversity-related positions to focus on “student success.”

Republican legislator­s who oppose DEI programs say they are discrimina­tory and promote left-wing ideology. Some are counting on the issue to resonate with voters during this election year. Democratic DEI supporters say the programs are necessary to ensure that institutio­ns meet the needs of increasing­ly diverse student population­s. Lawmakers from the party have filed about two dozen bills in 11 states that would require or promote DEI initiative­s.

Texas’ anti-DEI law, which Abbott enthusiast­ically signed last year, prohibits training and activities conducted “in reference to race, color, ethnicity, gender identity, or sexual orientatio­n.” Additional­ly, the law, also known by its legislativ­e title, SB17, forbids staff members from making hiring decisions that are influenced by race, sex, color or ethnicity, and prohibits promoting “differenti­al” or “preferenti­al” treatment or “special” benefits for people based on these categories.

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