
The NWLC specifically calls it out in its plea to keep current regulations and guidance in place.
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The Obama administration’s 2011 guidance to colleges on how to handle allegations of sexual harassment and assault has dominated much of the response to the Trump administration’s call for ideas. “We’re extremely concerned that when you look at the list that the department of education has of potential regulations and guidance under review, it is essentially everything.” She said the group is working to “sound the alarm, so people understand this isn’t some technical process, it’s something that everyday parents and students have a real interest and stake in.” Those civil rights laws have “been brought to life through important regulations and guidance documents over the decades,” said Fatima Goss Graves, president and CEO of the NWLC.

A list of regulations included in a June progress report on the department’s regulatory rollback effort included several pieces of guidance on civil rights laws, including Title IX and Title VI, which prohibit discrimination based on sex and race, respectively.

The extension was a response to requests to extend the time period to submit ideas, department spokeswoman Liz Hill said. The department this morning officially pushed back the deadline, which had been later this month, to Sept. The Education Department in June issued a public call for “unduly costly or unnecessarily burdensome” rules that could be rewritten or undone.

More than 2,000 commenters had flooded the posting this week with the same response, which is being pushed by the National Women’s Law Center and calls on the administration to preserve all “current significant guidance” on civil rights issues. With help from Caitlin Emma and Mel LeonorĬIVIL RIGHTS GROUPS COMMANDEER ED’S CALL FOR REGULATIONS TO KILL: The Trump administration’s call for ideas from the public on education rules it should roll back has drawn thousands of responses - and a huge chunk of them read the same (literally): “All Department of Education civil rights regulations and guidance documents are important and necessary,” most of the comments begin.
