Judge Blocks Trump Admin’s Mass Firings at Education Department’s Office of Civil Rights

5Mind. The Meme Platform

The court found that the staff cuts are likely unconstitutional and must be reversed.

A federal judge has ruled that the Trump administration may not carry out mass firings at the Education Department’s Office of Civil Rights (OCR), finding that such an action likely violates both the Constitution and administrative law.

U.S. District Judge Myong Joun in Massachusetts granted a preliminary injunction on June 18, blocking the Education Department’s March 11 large-scale reduction in force (RIF), which shuttered seven of OCR’s 12 regional offices and cut over half of its workforce.

The judge found that the plaintiffs in the case—two students with active OCR civil rights complaints and the nonprofit Victim Rights Law Center (VRLC)—would suffer irreparable harm if the layoffs were allowed to stand. He concluded that the firings had severely undermined OCR’s ability to enforce federal civil rights laws protecting students from discrimination based on sex, race, and disability.

“I found that Consolidated Plaintiffs were likely to succeed in their claims that the mass terminations hamstring the Department’s ability to meet its statutory functions and that the RIF effectively eliminates the Department without Congressional approval, in violation of the [Administrative Procedures Act] APA and the Constitution,” the judge wrote in his order.

The two student plaintiffs said they experienced severe race-based and disability-based harassment in school, and had filed complaints with OCR that were still pending when the layoffs hit. They claimed their cases had stalled and that OCR no longer had the personnel to investigate or resolve them in a timely manner, jeopardizing their education.

VRLC, the third plaintiff, argued that the mass firings made it more difficult to fulfill its mission of providing legal assistance to victims of sexual and gender-based violence, since the federal agency responsible for enforcing student protections had lost much of its investigative capacity.

The case stems from the Trump administration’s broader push to make government operations more efficient and less burdensome to taxpayers. In March, Secretary of Education Linda McMahon said that the roughly 50 percent reduction in force was part of the administration’s “commitment to efficiency, accountability, and ensuring that resources are directed where they matter most: to students, parents, and teachers.”

By Tom Ozimek

Read Full Article on TheEpochTimes.com

Contact Your Elected Officials
The Epoch Times
The Epoch Timeshttps://www.theepochtimes.com/
Tired of biased news? The Epoch Times is truthful, factual news that other media outlets don't report. No spin. No agenda. Just honest journalism like it used to be.

‘Yes, Some Children… Died From COVID Shots’, Major Legacy Media Concedes as British Gov. Hides Excess Death Data

‘Yes, Some Children May Have Died From COVID Shots,’ reads The Atlantic headline — a departure from June 2022 article, “Don’t Wait to Get Your Kid Vaccinated.”

Hands Off the Kids: A Future Worth Defending

There is a war against American children. Not a metaphorical war, not a poetic exaggeration, but a deliberate, coordinated assault on innocence itself.

The Use of Women in Today’s Political War

Last month President Donald Trump pardoned 77 people who...

The Russian-US “New Détente” Could Revolutionize The Global Economic Architecture

A renewed Russian-US “New Détente” could reshape the global economy by reducing China’s central role and elevating Russia through its key strategic resources.

They Do Exist!

We are a nation of immigrants and a nation of laws; ignoring one for the other is compassionate to the point of death.

Appeals Court Halts Boasberg’s Contempt Proceedings Over Deportations

A federal appeals court halted Judge Boasberg probe into claims the Trump admin defied his blocks on deporting suspected Venezuelan gang members.

2.5 Million Illegal Immigrants Deported Under Trump Admin: DHS

More than 2.5 million illegal immigrants have left the U.S. under the Trump administration, a “record-breaking achievement” in a year, the DHS said.

Americans Could See up to $2,000 Tax Refunds Next Year, Says Treasury Secretary

Treasury Sec. Scott Bessent says working Americans will receive “very large refunds” next year as new tax cuts from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act take effect.

Federal Judge Orders Release of 2019 Jeffrey Epstein Grand Jury Records

Federal judge in New York orders release of grand jury materials from 2019 investigation of deceased sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Trump Says He Is Pardoning Former Colorado County Clerk Tina Peters

Trump is pardoning Tina Peters, a former Colorado county clerk convicted of election machine tampering in the aftermath of the disputed 2020 election.

Trade Chief Jamieson Greer Indicates Progress on US–India Trade Deal

U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer hinted that the United States and India are making progress on a deal.

Trump Touts Lower Prices, Bigger Paychecks in 1st Stop of National Tour

President Trump told an energetic crowd at a Dec. 9 rally that his administration’s policies are lowering the cost of living nationwide.

Trump Announces $12 Billion Farm Aid Program

Trump made the announcement at a roundtable at the White House to discuss his economic aid package for American farmers.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

MAGA Business Central