DOE Tightens Campus Safety, Shakes Up Federal Bureaucracy
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Shifting gears, the Department announced six new interagency agreements, handing off programs to break up the federal bureaucracy and push control to states. The Labor Department now manages over $20 billion in K-12 grants like Title I for low-income students, plus higher ed prep programs amid a 700,000 skilled job shortage yearly. Interior takes Native American education, Health and Human Services child care for college parents, and State world language initiatives. Secretary McMahon called it “cutting through red tape to refocus on students and families.”
These changes spark pushback—20 Democratic-led states sued, arguing it's unlawful without Congress, while the Department sees it as a pilot proving efficiency.
For Americans, this means safer campuses and streamlined aid, but potential funding delays worry families. Businesses gain from workforce-aligned training; states face new fights over vouchers starting 2027 under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. Schools must adapt to new agency overseers.
Experts note 71 lawsuits challenge these shifts, with Supreme Court eyes on Title IX transgender rights probes.
Watch the Brown review deadline and state lawsuits unfolding. For details, visit ed.gov. If you're at a college, report safety issues via FSA.
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