Education Department Layoffs Impact Special Education, Civil Rights Functions

It’s unclear when school districts may experience delayed funding due to the lack of federal workers to process entitlements, experts say.
Education Department Layoffs Impact Special Education, Civil Rights Functions
LASOS summer campers hold up an art project at Bel Air High School in Bel Air, Md., on July 24, 2025. AP Photo/KT Kanazawich
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The 466 employees recently laid off in the already shrinking Department of Education were responsible for processing grants for special needs students and investigating discrimination and harassment complaints in schools.

The School Superintendents Association, an advocacy group, stated that most staffers in the Office of Special Education and the Office of Elementary and Secondary Education were terminated. Those two offices oversee $44 billion in discretionary funding that schools use for staff, services, and equipment to serve millions of students with disabilities.

Aaron Gifford
Aaron Gifford
Author
Aaron Gifford has written for several daily newspapers, magazines, and specialty publications and also served as a federal background investigator and Medicare fraud analyst. He graduated from the University at Buffalo and is based in Upstate New York.