Overview:
The Office for Civil Rights (OCR) in the Education Department dismissed nearly every discrimination complaint it received last year, with over 9,000 complaints received and more than 7,000 being dismissed, according to a new Government Accountability Office report. The report also found that the Trump administration's attempt to lay off about half of the department's OCR staff may have cost taxpayers up to $38 million over the nine months it took to resolve the case. The volume of discrimination cases dismissed and the price tag for gutting the office highlight the dramatic effects of the Trump administration's twin goals for public education: dismantling the Education Department and waging a so-called "war on woke" that would end federal enforcement of civil rights law.
The Education Department office responsible for protecting the rights of marginalized and minority students in the nationโs K-12 public schools dismissed nearly every discrimination complaint it received last year, due to the Trump administrationโs massive reduction in force, according to a new government watchdog report.
At the same time, the Government Accountability Office found that the administrationโs attempt to lay off about half of the departmentโs Office for Civil Rights โ a move that was challenged in court โ may have cost taxpayers as much as $38 million over the nine months it took to resolve the case.
The volume of discrimination cases the civil rights office dismissed and the price tag for gutting the office highlight the dramatic effects of the Trump administrationโs twin goals for public education: dismantling the Education Department and waging a so-called โwar on wokeโ that would end federal enforcement of civil rights law.
The Office of Civil Rights Is In โTurmoilโ
Katy Neas, CEO of The Arc of the United States, said in a statement that the GAO report shows how the civil rights office has been โthrown into turmoilโ even as discrimination complaints compound and vanish from the public eye.
โFamilies have a right to turn to OCR when a child is denied accommodations, pushed out of class, harassed, or disciplined unfairly because of disability,โ said Neas, whose organization protects disability rights. โWhen those complaints arenโt addressed, schools lose clear direction, families lose answers, and students live with the consequences for years.โ
โRights are only meaningful when enforcement exists,โ she said.
On the campaign trail, President Donald Trump promised to shutter the Education Department. In March, Trump laid off nearly half of the OCR staff and shuttered seven of the departmentโs 12 regional offices. But a federal judge blocked the move last summer.
While the case was ongoing, the Trump administration put the employees on administrative leave and told them not to report to work. That meant taxpayers were still paying their salaries, even though they were not actually working.

Between March 11 and September 23, 2025, the departmentโs Office of Civil Rights received over 9,000 complaints alleging discrimination, according to a report from the Government Accountability Office. More than 7,000 of those complaints โ around 90% โ were dismissed.
In 2025, OCR, under the Trump administration, only reached a resolution agreement in just two out of 14 racial harassment cases, according to the OCR.
What Is The Office of Civil Rights?
The Education Departmentโs OCR is the sector that handles cases of discrimination against race, sex, disability, religion and age in schools and colleges. The office investigates these complaints and sends out guidelines to the respective institution to comply with civil rights law.
Complaints can be dismissed for a variety of reasons, the report says. In the GAOโs 2021 report on school bullying, for example, changes to OCRโs guidance led to a sharp uptick in dismissals of bullying complaints. The dismissal rate also jumped from 49% of resolved complaints in the 2010-2011 school year to 81% in the 2019-2020 school year.
But compared to prior years and administrations, the department, under Trumpโs second term, is dismissing far more complaints and issuing fewer resolutions. Experts say this could lead to more civil rights abuses going unnoticed.
Even with its workforce slashed by half, the OCR is still receiving discrimination complaints.
Discrimination Complaints Are Worsening
Beth Gellman-Beer, who led the OCRโs regional office in Philadelphia before being laid off in March, says her office had 1,000 cases on the docket when her team received notice that it would be cut. Under the Trump administration, the bigoted behavior her office investigated had become more egregious.
She cited a case from 2024 concerning students at a Pennsylvania high school who wore Confederate flag attire during the schoolโs homecoming week.
The students posted on social media that anyone who had a problem with the Confederate flag should โgo down south and call a white person racist and see what happens.โ
Parents, teachers and community leaders alerted school officials, according to the complaint. Although school administrators forced students to remove their attire, they also insisted they didnโt believe the behavior amounted to racial harassment.
Gellman-Beer says she often thinks about that case and similar cases. Without a robust OCR workforce, thereโs virtually no one available to ensure schools comply with civil rights laws.
โNo oneโs following up on those cases. Thatโs what keeps me up at night,โ she says.
Millions of Dollars Spent on Mass Layoffs
The GAO report found that the mass layoffs Trump called for may have cost up to $38 million in salaries and benefits for OCR workers who werenโt working between March and December.
The Education Department also failed to account for all possible costs and savings associated with its mass layoffs and reorganization, according to the report. Furthermore, the department didnโt detail its analyses despite direction from the Office of Management and Budget and the Office of Personnel Management.
โWithout fully accounting for costs and savings and documenting its analyses, [the Education Department] lacks reasonable assurance that its actions achieved the stated goal of reforming its federal workforce to maximize efficiency and productivity, including whether such actions improved service to the American people, increased productivity, or saved taxpayer dollars.โ
This story was originally published on Word In Black on February 5th, 2026
