These are the big news from Tuesday, April 2, 2024. I've been out of pocket, so still catching up myself. I was in New Mexico at the New Mexico Association for Bilingual Education keynoting at this year's conference. Folks came up to me expressing concerns about Texas and where it's headed politically.
Everyone already knew about the dismantling of diversity offices and initiatives at the University of Texas at Austin. This was because it made national headlines. See, for example, Katherine Mangan's article in the Chronicle of Higher Education posted below.
There are concerns that SB 17 implementation has exceeded the bounds of law. Student organizations, for example, were not supposed to be impacted, but they have been impacted. Emilio Zamora and I made note of these in a February 13, 2024 article in the Texas Observer. Some of my own students have been impacted. They are worried about how they are going to fund their education. Concerned about fellow faculty, as well, who similarly just lost their jobs.
I know folks are looking at Texas right now—as they should. Texas-like anti-diversity proposals could easily spread to other states throughout the nation (Bryant & Appleby, 2024).
This attack on diversity will most definitely have serious impacts on student recruitment, faculty hiring, viewpoint diversity, student and faculty of color's sense of belonging, and our reputation, as a whole. My colleagues in New Mexico expressed in no uncertain terms that Texans are appearing in their schools, escaping the state's bigotry and stance against trans children and youth. "For real," I asked. "For real," they said. They're also doing their best to serve all the women seeking abortions and the young people in need of gender conforming care. They also said that anti-immigrant sentiment is surfacing in ways that they haven't seen before. What Texas does has obvious repercussions far beyond Texas' borders.
And why April 2nd? It goes beyond not wanting to move aggressively forward on April Fool's Day so that folks wouldn't think of this as a bad joke. Regardless, we're all reeling again for a second time (at least) since last January (Jones, 2024). It all feels so rushed. Like whiplash. It's traumatic.
I'll assemble and post current links in my next post.
-Angela Valenzuela
References
Bryant, J. & Appleby, C. (2024, April 3). These states’ Anti-DEI legislation may impact higher education. https://www.bestcolleges.com/news/anti-dei-legislation-tracker/
Jones, C. (2024, Jan. 23). Students and staff reeling at UT-Austin after DEI ban goes into effect: 'UT has over complied a lot.' San Antonio Express-News https://www.mysanantonio.com/news/local/article/ut-dei-ban-sb17-18592242.php
Zamora, E. & Valenzuela, A. (2024, Feb. 13). Anti-DEI Law implementation has been a disaster, Texas Observer. https://texasedequity.blogspot.com/2024/02/anti-dei-law-implementation-has-been.html
After DEI Ban, UT-Austin Eliminates a Division and Lays Off Its Former Diversity Staff
The University of Texas at Austin announced on Tuesday that it was closing its Division of Campus and Community Engagement and laying off an unspecified number of people who had been working in DEI-related roles. In a joint news release, the Texas chapters of the American Association of University Professors and the NAACP said that at least 60 people were losing their jobs, about 40 in the division alone.
“Some have received these pink slips even though they have received assignments and are no longer working in DEI-designated jobs,” the statement said. Most of the layoffs are expected to take effect over the next three months.
The layoffs were announced a week after state Sen. Brandon Creighton, the Republican sponsor of Senate Bill 17, notified public colleges that they had until May 3 to submit statements describing how they were complying with specific requirements of the law. Those include eliminating all diversity, equity, and inclusion offices and officers, ending all diversity training, and banning any preferences based on race, sex, color, ethnicity, or national origin.
The job cuts include all three full-time staff members at the university’s Women’s Community Center, according to a source at the university who spoke to The Chronicle and asked not to be identified. Her job ends on July 5, and she said she didn’t want to risk losing her position and benefits before then. The center that will be closing had already been significantly overhauled to comply with SB 17, one of the nation’s most stringent anti-DEI laws.
News of the dismissals came as the university’s president, Jay Hartzell, announced in a campuswide email that the flagship would be closing the Division of Campus and Community Engagement and distributing most of its programs to other divisions. The Women’s Community Center had been part of that division.
The university declined to confirm how many or which jobs were being cut.
The state Senate’s Committee on Education plans to conduct a hearing next month at which chancellors and general counsels at public colleges across the state will be asked to describe their compliance efforts, according to Creighton. He said that, while he was encouraged by the progress made on some campuses, he worried “that many institutions may choose to merely rename their offices or employee titles.” (UT’s Division of Campus and Community Engagement was previously known as the Division of Diversity and Community Engagement, one of dozens of name changes that took place statewide after SB 17 was signed into law.)
Colleges that violate the law, Creighton warned, could have their funding frozen and face legal ramifications.
Hartzell wrote in his email on Tuesday that the university had been examining its programs to ensure that they complied with SB 17 by the date it took effect, January 1, “but we knew that more work would be required to utilize our talent and resources most effectively in support of our teaching and research missions and, ultimately, our students.”
In January the flagship closed its 20-year-old Gender and Sexuality Center and opened the Women’s Community Center in the same space, with the same staff.
“Our mission is to be a place for Longhorns of all genders to connect, find resources, and get support around experiences of intersection,” the center announced in an Instagram post at the time.
The center said that, to comply with SB 17, which bans diversity, equity, and inclusion programs at Texas’ public colleges, it was eliminating all training and workshops related to race, sexual orientation, and gender identity. That included training for people seeking to be designated as allies.
In addition to the three full-time positions that are being eliminated in the women’s center, a shared administrative position was cut, according to the source who spoke with The Chronicle.
The center’s rebranding raised concerns that LGBTQ students might not know the program was there, in part, to support them, and that it might also alienate students who don’t identify as women.
Critics have complained that the university is over-complying with the anti-DEI law, eliminating programs that would have withstood legal scrutiny to avoid the danger of losing funding. Also among the recent cuts, the university closed its multicultural-engagement center and ended a scholarship program for undocumented students. On Tuesday, Brandelyn Franks Flunter, the multicultural center’s director, posted a message on Facebook saying she was among those being fired.
Read other items in this The Assault on DEI package.
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