Washington Examiner

Biden Education Department doled out over $1 billion for DEI programs

Since 2021, President Joe Biden’s⁤ Department​ of Education⁢ has ⁤awarded over $1 billion in ‌grants focused on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI), according‌ to a​ report by Parents‍ Defending Education.The breakdown of these funds reveals that nearly‌ half—approximately $490 million—was⁢ allocated towards DEI hiring initiatives, while over‍ 30%⁢ (around⁢ $343 million)⁢ supported DEI programming. Additionally,about $169 ​million was directed towards‌ mental health programs with a DEI focus. the report indicates that this funding trend reflects the Biden‍ management’s inclination ⁣to promote progressive educational ideologies rather than⁤ conventional teaching methods. North Carolina received the largest share of DEI grants, followed by California, Florida,‍ South ⁤Carolina,⁣ and Michigan, with a total of 42 states‍ and D.C. benefiting from 229 grants aimed at enhancing DEI ⁣efforts in education.


Biden Education Department doled out over $1 billion in DEI-related grants

President Joe Biden’s Department of Education dolled out over $1 billion in diversity, equity, and inclusion grants since 2021, a new Parents Defending Education report shows.

Almost half, $489,883,797.81, went to DEI hiring while over 30%, $343,337,286, went to DEI programming, and another $169,301,221 went to DEI-based mental health and social-emotional learning programs.

“You reap what you sow, and it is very clear that this Administration’s Department of Education has been incentivizing the advancement of far-left ideologies into American schools in place of rigorous, proven methods of instruction,” PDE researcher Rhyen Staley told the Washington Examiner.

The top five states with the most DEI grants during Biden’s tenure were North Carolina (with $160,871,561), California (with $118,186,920), Florida (with $74,822,150), South Carolina (with $71,893,882), and Michigan (with $48,018,832).

In total, 42 states and Washington, D.C., received $1,002,522,304.81 in DEI funding from 229 grants.

A number of grants were allocated to initiatives promoting race-based recruitment, hiring, and training, often incorporating race-based affinity groups. Such practices have been the subject of Title VII civil rights complaints accusing school districts of racial discrimination by offering race-exclusionary opportunities.

PDE recently filed two Title VII complaints, first reported on by the Washington Examiner, alleging “racial discrimination” after white employees were reportedly excluded from an employment opportunity at Acalanes Union High School District in Oakland, California, and race-segregated employee affinity groups were created at Boston Public Schools.

Several grants were issued for youth activism programming widely used in ethnic studies courses, while others focused on “anti-racism,” “equity-centered education,” “culturally responsive” programs, and other initiatives relating to DEI and critical race theory.

One of the grants highlighted by Parents Defending Education gave $3,973,175 to the School District of Philadelphia for a restorative justice program, whose program adviser is a far-left activist and former Communist Party USA member.

Staley, who authored the report, said: “The only people or groups to benefit from the enormous amount of grant funding are the universities, administrators, and DEI consultants, at the expense of children’s education. This needs to change by placing children’s learning at the forefront of education, instead of prioritizing race-based policies and DEI.”

The PDE report comes just over a month before President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration. He previously vowed to cut the Department of Education.

Frederick M. Hess, a senior fellow and director of education policy studies for the American Enterprise Institute, told the Washington Examiner that under the Biden administration, the department became “a political entity frequently engaged in promoting particular ideological nostrums” that he called “massively problematic.”

Hess said he thinks “it’d be fine” if Trump kept his promise to cut the department because “the Department of Education is extraordinarily bureaucratic. It creates extraordinary amounts of red tape for the nation’s schools, especially relative to the money it actually provides.”

The Washington Examiner reached out to the Department of Education for comment.



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