Good luck finding the smoking gun, Robert Pondiscio says to anyone hunting for waste in the US Education Department:
The agency’s roughly $240 billion annual haul isn’t a slush fund for whimsical bureaucrats — it’s mostly a conveyor belt, dutifully delivering dollars to programs Congress has already blessed.
Title I’s $18 billion for poor kids? Mandated. IDEA’s $15 billion for special education? Same deal. Pell Grants topping $30 billion? That’s the Higher Education Act, not some rogue educrat’s hobbyhorse.
He calls our attention to the Department’s “Dear Colleague” letters to schools and districts:
These missives don’t spend taxpayer dollars directly, but they’re masterful at prying them loose from state and local coffers.
Thinly veiled as “guidance,” they’re closer to a shakedown: Comply with our enlightened vision or risk a civil rights probe that could cost you your federal funding.
And when that vision skews ideological — as it often did during the Obama and Biden years — the result is a cascade of spending and disruption that leaves educators scrambling and taxpayers poorer.
All without a single line-item to point to in the federal ledger, much less any measurable benefit to students.
Take the April 2011 Title IX letter on sexual violence. A noble aim — protecting students from harassment — morphed into a bureaucratic sledgehammer.
Schools and colleges were told to adopt a lower “preponderance of evidence” standard for adjudicating cases of alleged campus rape and sexual assault, and to sidestep legal protections like cross-examination of witnesses and accusers.
The result was an explosion in the number of Title IX coordinators hired, each earning $150,000 a year or more. The cost of compliance rose by at least $2 million per year at some universities.
Multiply that across thousands of institutions, and you’re staring at hundreds of millions yearly — state and local dollars, mind you, not Uncle Sam’s — until the letter’s 2017 rescission.
[…]
The Biden administration similarly sought to warp Title IX to its liking. Its 2021 executive order decreed “gender identity” would come under Title IX’s umbrella.
The Education Department dutifully followed up with a “Notice of Interpretation” a few weeks later, nudging schools to toe the line — and shoulder the cost — or risk their federal funds.
Then there was the January 2014 discipline letter, a joint production with the Justice Department that tackled racial disparities in K-12 school suspensions.
[…]
Districts suddenly wary of “disparate impact” on racial minorities embraced trendy fixes like restorative justice, or simply stopped disciplining unruly kids altogether.
Teachers got implicit bias training costing $2,000 to $10,000 per session, with no guarantee that it works; facilitators were hired or redirected, and new data systems tracked every classroom time-out by race.
A conservative estimate of the cost of compliance would be $100 million to $200 million over several years, mostly in urban school districts desperate to avoid a civil rights investigation.
The Donald must end DOE.
Ah, that dense smoke of a copium den.
With enough drug vapors in the air, «Biden administration» not only can exist, but is to blame for trying to «warp» the little innocent thing, to their personal tastes, which are oddly similar but completely random. Those weirdos, man. Found somewhere by Biden.
The turd in question cannot even be polished, but hey, maybe if it was just a little more blurred… hufffff…
Jim says:
…and then there’s (jarring clang)… Oh, look, a butterfly!
T. Beholder, have you read much Yarvin lately?
Jim says:
Well, see… I tell myself in the morning “today, no dank moldbuggery, okay?” Then click on WattsUpWithThat.com in the feed, read the article, read the comments, facepalm… A few minutes there are two open tabs of UR, search, and some pasted quotes. ;]