ReportWire

Tag: Linda McMahon

  • Trump’s Latest Target In His Anti-DEI Rampage: Blind Workers

    [ad_1]

    The Department of the Army plans to “limit” a longstanding contracting preference the federal government has given to blind vendors, according to a notice scheduled to be published in the federal register this week.

    The notice states that Army dining halls will no longer give blind applicants the same priority after the Trump administration determined doing so “adversely affects the interests of the United States.”

    The decision was made by Trump’s education secretary, Linda McMahon, the former professional wrestling CEO, according to the notice. The Education Department oversees what’s known as the Randolph-Sheppard Vending Facility Program, which was created during the Great Depression to help integrate blind workers into the U.S. workforce due to discrimination.

    An Education Department spokesperson, Madi Biedermann, said in an emailed statement that McMahon had reviewed the Department of the Army’s proposal and approved it.

    “The Army reports significant price and efficiency issues due to the requirement, impacting military readiness and imposing undue burdens on the Army,” Biedermann said.

    The change at the Army appears to be part of the Trump administration’s broader attack on government policies aimed at boosting underrepresented groups in the country’s workforce. Advocacy groups representing workers with disabilities could end up suing in an attempt to stop it, arguing the change is unlawful.

    HuffPost reported during the government shutdown that the Education Department planned to lay off a group of blind staffers who administer the Randolph-Sheppard program within the federal government, putting its future in doubt. The layoffs were stopped — at least temporarily — due to the deal Democrats reached with Republicans to reopen the government.

    The notice states that the Department of the Army currently has at least 23 dining facility contracts that were awarded through the program. There are more than 1,000 licensed blind vendors across the country, many of them helping provide concessions on military bases.

    “Based on the Department of the Army’s representations, it is clear that the Randolph-Sheppard priority hinders the Department of the Army’s ability to act swiftly, efficiently, and cost-effectively in procuring and managing [dining] contracts, which negatively impacts the availability and quality of food options for the nation’s warfighters,” it states.

    Although the notice alludes to some examples the department cast as wasteful, it does not mention any comprehensive analysis finding the preference for blind vendors has hurt the Army.

    Trump’s secretary of the Army, Daniel Driscoll, has criticized the program in the past. He appeared on a podcast in October and claimed the program was being abused and taken advantage of by people who don’t actually have disabilities, forcing the Defense Department to pay more than necessary for chicken.

    “It’s been interpreted over the years to basically mean we have to prioritize blind people when we go out for our chicken contracts,” Driscoll said.

    One Education Department employee previously told HuffPost that they were appalled by Driscoll’s portrayal of the program as wasteful.

    “The mentality of these people is if we have a disability and we have a job, we’re taking it away from an able-bodied person,” they said.

    This story has been updated with comment from the Education Department.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • McMahon says federal school aid will keep flowing as Education Department hands off some duties to other agencies

    [ad_1]

    Education Secretary Linda McMahon told CBS News on Tuesday that federal money to support low-income students and special education will continue to flow as the Education Department shifts some of its grant programs to other agencies, amid the Trump administration’s push to wind down the department altogether.

    The agency announced Tuesday that the Department of Labor will now manage many of the Education Department’s grants to elementary and secondary schools, including the Title I program, which hands out billions of dollars to aid schools with large numbers of low-income students. 

    A handful of other shifts were also unveiled Tuesday. Certain higher education grants will be moved to the Department of Labor, the Department of the Interior will now handle Native American education grants, the State Department will run some international education programs, and the Department of Health and Human Services will take over a small child care grant program and a panel that reviews foreign medical schools.

    McMahon said the department has not decided how to handle some of its other major responsibilities, including its special education grants and its Office for Civil Rights.

    But programs that support low-income students, students with special needs and civil rights will remain in place, even if they’re moved to different agencies, McMahon told CBS News chief Washington correspondent Major Garrett on “The Takeout.”

    “They will all still be done,” McMahon said. “They were done before there was a Department of Education, and they will continue to be done.”

    “Special education will not be abandoned,” McMahon added.

    She said the Education Department will still oversee the programs that are being moved to other agencies, and their funding will come from the department’s budget.

    McMahon said permanently moving the Education Department’s responsibilities elsewhere would require congressional approval. But the department has argued that it does have the legal authority to essentially contract out some of its duties to other parts of the federal government.

    She referred to the moves as a “pilot program” and a “proof of concept.”

    “I want to prove to Congress that these transfers of programs are more efficient and that they work,” McMahon said. “And so if we can do that, then hopefully … we can get Congress to vote and to codify those transfers and make it a permanent move.”

    President Trump has taken aim at the Education Department for months, signing an executive order in March directing the department to start closing itself down to the maximum extent required by law. The department has also moved to slash its workforce.

    The administration has argued that the Department of Education is overly bureaucratic and many of its tasks should be overseen by states and localities.

    “The Trump Administration is fully committed to doing what’s best for American students, which is why it’s critical to shrink this bloated federal education bureaucracy while still ensuring efficient delivery of funds and essential programs,” White House spokesperson Liz Huston said Tuesday, adding that “students and teachers don’t need Washington bureaucrats micromanaging their classrooms.”

    Tuesday’s moves drew pushback from the American Federation of Government Employees, which represents thousands of Education Department staffers.

    “Students, educators and families depend on the Department’s comprehensive support for schools, from early learning through graduate programs,” the union said in a press release that called the changes “unlawful” and an “insult” to students. “That national mission is weakened when its core functions are scattered across other federal or state agencies that are not equipped or positioned to provide the same support and services as ED staff.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Trump’s Inner Circle Implodes: How McMahon and Rollins Tried to Oust Wiles

    [ad_1]

    Unsurprisingly, Duffy’s name had not been on the transition’s list of possible transportation secretaries. Lutnick had recommended a former senior executive at Uber named Emil Michael for the role, and Elon Musk had seconded that suggestion, believing Michael’s experience at a big tech company that had revolutionized urban transportation would make him an ideal candidate to shake up the federal agency. Trump, however, had never heard of the guy—and that made him a nonstarter.

    When Lutnick found out Trump was leaning toward Duffy for the role, he tried to shut the idea down. Making a case against him on the lack of merits wasn’t working—sir, the man has no relevant experience—so Lutnick tried to appeal to the president‑elect’s ego instead, tasking his team with searching through Duffy’s hundreds of television appearances to find any criticism of Trump. It took a while, as Duffy and his wife, Rachel, were unabashed Trump enthusiasts and had been for years. Lutnick’s team had to go back nearly a decade—to the early days of the 2016 Republican presidential primary—to find anything Duffy had said that was remotely negative about Donald Trump.

    Lutnick finally found a September 2015 interview in which the then‑congressman had said he didn’t believe Trump was a real conservative and didn’t think he would win the party’s nomination. But even back then, Duffy had praised Trump for “boldly speaking and saying things that the conservative wing wished that their leaders would say.”

    As weak as Lutnick’s effort to dig up dirt turned out to be, that one stray comment from almost ten years earlier nearly cost Duffy the job. Trump, reconsidering the pick, called Duffy and his wife, Rachel, and they were able to convince the president‑elect that Sean had long since changed his views on Trump’s conservative bona fides. On November 18, Trump made his decision final: “The husband of a wonderful woman, Rachel Campos‑Duffy, a STAR on Fox News, and the father of nine incredible children, Sean knows how important it is for families to be able to travel safely, and with peace of mind.”

    Excerpted from Retribution by Jonathan Karl. Copyright © 2025 by Jonathan Karl. Reprinted by permission of Dutton, an imprint of Penguin Group. All rights reserved.

    [ad_2]

    Jonathan Karl

    Source link

  • Colleges are fighting to prove their return on investment

    [ad_1]

    WASHINGTON (AP) — For a generation of young Americans, choosing where to go to college — or whether to go at all — has become a complex calculation of costs and benefits that often revolves around a single question: Is the degree worth its price?

    Public confidence in higher education has plummeted in recent years amid high tuition prices, skyrocketing student loans and a dismal job market — plus ideological concerns from conservatives. Now, colleges are scrambling to prove their value to students.

    Borrowed from the business world, the term “return on investment” has been plastered on college advertisements across the U.S. A battery of new rankings grade campuses on the financial benefits they deliver. States such as Colorado have started publishing yearly reports on the monetary payoff of college, and Texas now factors it into calculations for how much taxpayer money goes to community colleges.

    “Students are becoming more aware of the times when college doesn’t pay off,” said Preston Cooper, who has studied college ROI at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank. “It’s front of mind for universities today in a way that it was not necessarily 15, 20 years ago.”

    Most bachelor’s degrees are still worth it

    A wide body of research indicates a bachelor’s degree still pays off, at least on average and in the long run. Yet there’s growing recognition that not all degrees lead to a good salary, and even some that seem like a good bet are becoming riskier as graduates face one of the toughest job markets in years.

    A new analysis released Thursday by the Strada Education Foundation finds 70% of recent public university graduates can expect a positive return within 10 years — meaning their earnings over a decade will exceed that of a typical high school graduate by an amount greater than the cost of their degree. Yet it varies by state, from 53% in North Dakota to 82% in Washington, D.C. States where college is more affordable have fared better, the report says.

    It’s a critical issue for families who wonder how college tuition prices could ever pay off, said Emilia Mattucci, a high school counselor at East Allegheny schools, near Pittsburgh. More than two-thirds of her school’s students come from low-income families, and many aren’t willing to take on the level of debt that past generations accepted.

    Instead, more are heading to technical schools or the trades and passing on four-year universities, she said.

    “A lot of families are just saying they can’t afford it, or they don’t want to go into debt for years and years and years,” she said.

    Education Secretary Linda McMahon has been among those questioning the need for a four-year degree. Speaking at the Reagan Institute think tank in September, McMahon praised programs that prepare students for careers right out of high school.

    “I’m not saying kids shouldn’t go to college,” she said. “I’m just saying all kids don’t have to go in order to be successful.”

    Lowering college tuition and improving graduate earnings

    American higher education has been grappling with both sides of the ROI equation — tuition costs and graduate earnings. It’s becoming even more important as colleges compete for decreasing numbers of college-age students as a result of falling birth rates.

    Tuition rates have stayed flat on many campuses in recent years to address affordability concerns, and many private colleges have lowered their sticker prices in an effort to better reflect the cost most students actually pay after factoring in financial aid.

    The other part of the equation — making sure graduates land good jobs — is more complicated.

    A group of college presidents recently met at Gallup’s Washington headquarters to study public polling on higher education. One of the chief reasons for flagging confidence is a perception that colleges aren’t giving graduates the skills employers need, said Kevin Guskiewicz, president of Michigan State University, one of the leaders at the meeting.

    “We’re trying to get out in front of that,” he said.

    The issue has been a priority for Guskiewicz since he arrived on campus last year. He gathered a council of Michigan business leaders to identify skills that graduates will need for jobs, from agriculture to banking. The goal is to mold degree programs to the job market’s needs and to get students internships and work experience that can lead to a job.

    A disconnect with the job market

    Bridging the gap to the job market has been a persistent struggle for U.S. colleges, said Matt Sigelman, president of the Burning Glass Institute, a think tank that studies the workforce. Last year the institute, partnering with Strada researchers, found 52% of recent college graduates were in jobs that didn’t require a degree. Even higher-demand fields, such as education and nursing, had large numbers of graduates in that situation.

    “No programs are immune, and no schools are immune,” Sigelman said.

    The federal government has been trying to fix the problem for decades, going back to President Barack Obama’s administration. A federal rule first established in 2011 aimed to cut federal money to college programs that leave graduates with low earnings, though it primarily targeted for-profit colleges.

    A Republican reconciliation bill passed this year takes a wider view, requiring most colleges to hit earnings standards to be eligible for federal funding. The goal is to make sure college graduates end up earning more than those without a degree.

    Others see transparency as a key solution.

    For decades, students had little way to know whether graduates of specific degree programs were landing good jobs after college. That started to change with the College Scorecard in 2015, a federal website that shares broad earnings outcomes for college programs. More recently, bipartisan legislation in Congress has sought to give the public even more detailed data.

    Lawmakers in North Carolina ordered a 2023 study on the financial return for degrees across the state’s public universities. It found that 93% produced a positive return, meaning graduates were expected to earn more over their lives than someone without a similar degree.

    The data is available to the public, showing, for example, that undergraduate degrees in applied math and business tend to have high returns at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, while graduate degrees in psychology and foreign languages often don’t.

    Colleges are belatedly realizing how important that kind of data is to students and their families, said Lee Roberts, chancellor of UNC-Chapel Hill, in an interview.

    “In uncertain times, students are even more focused — I would say rightly so — on what their job prospects are going to be,” he added. “So I think colleges and universities really owe students and their families this data.”

    ___

    The Associated Press’ education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Trump administration’s war on public schools comes to Detroit with unpublicized education chief visit

    [ad_1]

    U.S. Department of Education

    Linda McMahon is on a 50-state “Returning Education to the States Tour.”

    U.S. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon is visiting Renaissance High School in Detroit on Monday, raising alarms among teachers who say the Trump administration’s education agenda threatens the future of public schools.

    McMahon, the former World Wrestling Entertainment executive whom President Donald Trump tasked with dismantling the U.S. Department of Education, is on a 50-state “Returning Education to the States Tour.” Since August, she has been on the road promoting “school choice” and the rollback of diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives, often spotlighting charter schools.

    During her tour in Oklahoma in August, McMahon joined Gov. Kevin Stitt for an anti-DEI bill signing.

    “That same commitment to students is reflected in the state’s new law ending DEI mandates — ensuring education is grounded in merit, not radical ideology,” McMahon said. “It was encouraging to be in the Sooner State to support this important step toward state-driven education reform.”

    Joining McMahon at Renaissance High School at about 2 p.m. is Michigan House Speaker Matt Hall, a Republican whose refusal to pass a budget has left schools statewide facing layoffs and uncertainty.

    McMahon’s stop at Renaissance High School was not announced to the public, unlike her openly publicized appearances at Hillsdale College and a Republican Party barbecue in Midland later Monday. That’s likely no accident because some of her visits have drawn protests from parents concerned about her plans to eradicate the department, cut federal education spending, and roll back civil rights enforcement.

    “The superintendent just made the board aware that there was a request for a visit but I’m not sure what is supposed to take place other than a tour,” Detroit Public Schools Community District school board member Monique Bryant tells Metro Times. “We are all pretty much in agreement that it was worth approving the visit and moving forward.”

    She adds, “We’re all hoping there’s just an interest in touring some of the great schools we have in the district. But as a board member, I have my concerns, and like all the teachers and administrators, I am very cautious.”

    Board member Bishop Corletta Vaughn says the district vetted the visit carefully.

    “We had concerns when the invitation came,” Vaughn says. “It was thoroughly vetted to make sure it was benign and that there is nothing egregious taking place under the table. There is nothing we have been able to vet that has caused alarm. We have a strong team there in case something goes awry.”

    Teachers in the district were less diplomatic. Two educators who asked not to be named for fear of retaliation say they are frustrated that McMahon was being welcomed with open arms.

    “We’re all really concerned about what she’s doing here,” one teacher tells Metro Times. “No one has said anything to us, other than she’s coming.”

    Another teacher was more blunt: “It’s a slap in the face to public school teachers. Why would you accept an invitation from someone who wants to destroy schools? It’s offensive and demeaning.”

    McMahon’s visit comes as the Trump administration pushes to slash billions from public education, while converting federal funds into block grants that critics say will weaken protections for low-income and special education students. The administration has already frozen and unfrozen $6 billion in K-12 funding and in March announced layoffs of nearly half of the Department of Education’s workforce, prompting unions and civil rights organizations to warn of devastating consequences, especially to students in lower-income districts.

    Civil rights enforcement has been among the first casualties, with the department shuttering regional offices, including the one in Cleveland that handled Michigan cases. Advocates warn that in high-poverty districts like Detroit, families will face longer waits for investigations into discrimination, disability rights, and language access complaints.

    The stakes are particularly high in Detroit, where public schools are losing students and resources to competing charter systems. In 2023-24, roughly 45,000 students attended Detroit Public Schools Community District, while 48,000 were enrolled in charters and another 12,000 used Schools of Choice to attend other districts.

    Because funding follows students, each child who leaves DPSCD takes state dollars with them, draining a district that serves mostly low-income students.

    Amid those challenges, McMahon will be accompanied by Hall, a Republican whose refusal to pass a budget has left schools statewide facing layoffs and uncertainty. Democrats have blasted Hall for holding up negotiations.

    “Schools all over the state have been forced into an impossible position and are scrambling to plan for the upcoming year — all because of the inaction and implacability of one man, Republican Speaker Matt Hall,” Senate Majority Leader Winnie Brinks, D-Grand Rapids, said in a statement.

    Also on Monday, McMahon is scheduled to appear at the Midland County Republican Party’s annual Bill Schuette Barbeque, where she’ll share the stage with GOP lawmakers and the president of the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, a free-market think tank that has long attacked teachers’ unions and championed charters schools.

    The campaign stop only deepens the blow for educators who see her visit as a threat to Detroit’s public schools.

    It’s unclear why McMahon chose Renaissance High School, which is considered one of the best public schools in Detroit. About 44% of children in Detroit live in poverty, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

    [ad_2]

    Steve Neavling

    Source link

  • Student loan borrowers in default face garnished wages, Education Department says

    [ad_1]

    Washington — The Education Department will soon begin collecting payments for student loans that are in default, including through wage garnishment for potentially millions of borrowers, the department announced Monday.

    Beginning May 5, the Education Department will begin involuntary collections through the Treasury Department’s offset program, which claws back delinquent debts by withholding payments such as tax refunds, federal salaries and Social Security benefits. 

    More than 5 million borrowers are in default and 4 million more could be in the same position in a few months, which would put nearly a quarter of the federal student loan portfolio in default, according to the Education Department. Less than 40% of borrowers are current on their student loan payments. 

    In the next two weeks, those in default will receive emails informing them of the next steps and urging them to look into repayment options. Wage garnishment notices will be sent out later this summer. 

    No federal student loan has been referred to collections since March 2020 when President Trump paused payments and interest accrual during the COVID-19 pandemic. The Biden administration extended that pause, which ended in October 2024. 

    Former President Joe Biden sought to wipe out student loan debt for tens of millions of people during his four years in the White House, but the effort was repeatedly rejected by courts, including a 2023 ruling by the Supreme Court. Still, the Biden administration erased student loan debt for more than 5 million borrowers through other forgiveness programs

    Education Secretary Linda McMahon said the Biden administration “misled” borrowers about its authority to waive debt. 

    “Going forward, the Department of Education, in conjunction with the Department of Treasury, will shepherd the student loan program responsibly and according to the law, which means helping borrowers return to repayment — both for the sake of their own financial health and our nation’s economic outlook,” she said in a statement Monday. 

    The announcement from the department added, “There will not be any mass loan forgiveness.” 

    [ad_2]

    Source link