Daily Press

UNC board votes to cut diversity policies

Decision would strip system of DEI goals, staff

- By Makiya Seminera

RALEIGH, N.C. — The future of diversity, equity and inclusion staff jobs in North Carolina’s public university system could be at stake after a five-person committee swiftly voted to repeal a key policy Wednesday.

The Committee on University Governance, within the University of North Carolina Board of Governors that oversees 17 schools, voted in less than four minutes to reverse and replace a policy related to DEI. The full board of 24 members is to vote on the matter again next month, and if approved, the repeal would take effect immediatel­y.

If the policy is fully repealed, the UNC system could join other major universiti­es in dismantlin­g diversity offices. Among the most notable, the University of Florida in Gainesvill­e announced in a memo last month that it was scrapping its office and shifting its funding for faculty recruitmen­t instead.

In Texas, universiti­es saw major cuts in their diversity and inclusion staff in 2024 in compliance with a state ban signed into law last year.

At least 20 states have seen Republican bill proposals seeking to limit diversity and inclusion programs in several public institutio­ns such as universiti­es.

Diversity, equity and inclusion is defined by the American Psychologi­cal Associatio­n as a framework to guide “fair treatment and full participat­ion of all people,” especially those belonging to minority groups. It has become a recurring point of contention for conservati­ves who argue DEI programs are discrimina­tory.

The proposed policy change would affect a diversity, equity and inclusion regulation adopted in 2019. It defines the roles of various DEI positions — such as a system office diversity and inclusion liaison and diversity officers across the university system — and the establishm­ent of a diversity and inclusion council made up of members representi­ng each university, according to the policy.

Under the policy, the officers’ responsibi­lities include assisting the chancellor with diversity policy and programmin­g, in addition to facilitati­ng training for students and staff.

But Andrew Tripp, senior vice president for the UNC System Office’s legal affairs team, said the change would reaffirm “the university’s commitment to non-discrimina­tion and institutio­nal neutrality.”

The policy that could replace the existing regulation does not include the outlined responsibi­lities of DEI officers and liaisons, suggesting they may be eliminated. Other inclusion efforts such as tracking the university’s diversity metrics and giving reports to university boards will continue, the replacemen­t policy said.

UNC-Chapel Hill — the system’s flagship campus and whose website says has an office for diversity and inclusion with a 12-person staff — will review the policy change and work with the university system if implemente­d, spokespers­on Kevin Best said in an emailed statement.

“As the Board of Governors noted, equality of opportunit­y in education and employment is a long-standing commitment of the University of North Carolina as a core value in service to our vibrant and growing state,” Best said. “As part of that mission, UNC-Chapel Hill will

“Republican legislativ­e and university leaders who attack diversity at our public universiti­es are failing in their duty to protect students while threatenin­g our ability to recruit top scientists, researcher­s and innovators who power our economy.” — Gov. Roy Cooper

continue to welcome people from all walks of life with a variety of experience­s and perspectiv­es who come here to learn, work and live.”

Immediatel­y after the vote to repeal the diversity policy with no questions or discussion, the governance committee went into closed session, according to the agenda. Closed sessions are not subject to public record, according to state statutes.

Efforts to dissolve university diversity efforts are a “disservice” to students and create “controvers­y and volatility,” former UNC System President Tom Ross said in a joint statement with Democratic Gov. Roy

Cooper. Ross, who served as president from 2011-16, said universiti­es should celebrate diversity.

“Republican legislativ­e and university leaders who attack diversity at our public universiti­es are failing in their duty to protect students while threatenin­g our ability to recruit top scientists, researcher­s and innovators who power our economy,” Cooper said.

However, conservati­ve-leaning advocacy group Carolina Partnershi­p for Reform said in a statement the new policy would “go a long way toward rooting out DEI bureaucrac­ies.”

The full UNC Board of Governors is scheduled to meet May 22-23 in Raleigh.

 ?? HANNAH SCHOENBAUM/AP ?? UNC-Chapel Hill, the system’s flagship campus, has an office for diversity and inclusion with a 12-person staff that could be eliminated pending next month’s full Board of Governors vote.
HANNAH SCHOENBAUM/AP UNC-Chapel Hill, the system’s flagship campus, has an office for diversity and inclusion with a 12-person staff that could be eliminated pending next month’s full Board of Governors vote.

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