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Monday, March 31, 2025

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Elon Musk holds Town Hall event in downtown Green Bay Sunday supporting judge candidate; Rural advocates urge CA lawmakers to safeguard banking protections; Federal and state job cuts threaten FL workers' rights and services; Alabama counties lack high-speed internet and health access.

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President Trump says there are ways for him to take a third term. New tariffs are scheduled for this week, but economists say they'll hurt buying power. And advocates say the Trans Day of Visibility is made more important by state legislation.

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Rural folks face significant clean air and water risks due to EPA cutbacks, a group of policymakers is working to expand rural health care via mobile clinics, and a new study maps Montana's news landscape.

MI expert analyzes Trump's Department of Education executive order

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Friday, March 21, 2025   

With the stroke of a pen Thursday, President Donald Trump's executive order officially fired 1,300 U.S. Department of Education employees.

The move threatens funding for special education, low-income student support and college grants in Michigan and beyond. Michigan's schools serve more than a million students, with more than half economically disadvantaged, one in 14 learning English, and one in seven with special education needs.

Josh Cowen, professor of education policy at Michigan State University, predicted President Trump's actions will face challenges.

"We're going to run into some pretty quick trouble, pretty quickly, if congressionally required payments to schools, states, districts -- but ultimately, serving kids and families in Michigan and elsewhere -- aren't met because of staff shortages," Cowen explained.

Supporters of the president's decision believe closing the Cabinet-level department would give more control to parents and local communities, leading to better education and accountability, as well as promoting new ideas in education. The Department of Government Efficiency estimated the move could save $105 billion through asset sales and job cuts.

While a U.S. president can issue executive orders to restructure or reduce a department's operations, completely eliminating it requires legislative action. Cowen pointed out the executive order signals Trump's commitment to such a move but he needs congressional approval to make it happen.

"They could go to Congress, which is controlled by Republicans -- who haven't voted for the Department of Ed dismantling in the past -- and say, 'Listen, sorry, mostly done, guys. Can't vote against the boss; let's just do it.' But it is a little vague as to what his legal authority is to go out there today and claim that he's moving forward on this," Cowen added.

The Education Department now has just over 2,100 employees, down from more than 4,000. Despite the downsizing, student loans and Pell Grants are expected to continue but may eventually be handled by other federal agencies.


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