Alabama education officials say they'll comply with the Trump Administration's request to prohibit diversity, equity and inclusion programs in public schools, reports AL.com's Rebecca Griesbach.
And it sounds like that has more to do with legal due diligence than big changes to what's already going on in Alabama.
The Department of Education has asked states to sign assurances that they have ended any DEI practices such as race preferences. Here in Alabama we already have a state anti-DEI law that followed a Board of Education policy to end critical race theory in K-12 schools.
Currently the deadline for compliance with the Trump letter is April 24.
Said Alabama State Superintendent Eric Mackey: “We’ve read it every way you can read it, backwards and forwards, and we don’t think it affects any of our schools at all, because we don’t use race-based decisions for admissions.”
And for anyone out there who may be concerned that there are lawyers in the state going hungry, Mackey added: “We want all of our legal team to agree. We want the attorney general’s legal team to agree, and the governor’s legal team to agree, and all of those lawyers are looking at all of these things.”
The superintendent did vow that the board will protect the civil rights of all Alabama schoolchildren.