Reed Smith Client Alerts

Key takeaways

  • Department of Education’s Dear Colleague letter interprets unlawful race-based discrimination under Title VI, Equal Protection Clause, and SFFA v. Harvard
  • The letter indicates the Department will begin enforcing its interpretation against educational institutions by February 28, 2025
  • Department interprets institutions’ obligations “more broadly” than Supreme Court, and alludes to certain institutional practices it interprets as unlawful

On February 14, 2025, the Acting Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights at the Department of Education, Craig Trainor, published a Dear Colleague letter that “explains and reiterates existing legal requirements” that apply to educational institutions regarding unlawful race-based discrimination. The letter also notes the Department’s intent to “take appropriate measures to assess compliance ... based on the understanding embodied in this letter beginning no later than 14 days from today’s date” – i.e., by February 28, 2025. The letter appears to apply to “all educational institutions,” expanding the scope of enforcement beyond the typical guidance for institutions receiving “federal funding” to all institutions receiving “financial assistance” from the Department, which may be read to include institutions whose students receive student aid.

While the letter does not legally require any action by institutions and, by its own terms, only “provides notice of the Department’s existing interpretation of federal law,” it does advise that institutions take the following actions: “(1) ensure that their policies and actions comply with existing civil rights law; (2) cease all efforts to circumvent prohibitions on the use of race by relying on proxies or other indirect means to accomplish such ends; and (3) cease all reliance on third-party contractors, clearinghouses, or aggregators that are being used by institutions in an effort to circumvent prohibited uses of race.”

As to the first action item, the letter reveals the Department’s interpretation of what is required to comply with existing civil rights law, particularly Title VI, the Equal Protection Clause, and the Supreme Court’s decision in Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard, 600 U.S. 181 (2023) (the SFFA decision). Notably, and as the letter explicitly states, the Department interprets Title VI and the Equal Protection Clause “more broadly” than the Supreme Court. Indeed, while the Supreme Court limited its SFFA decision to admissions programs, the Department’s letter discusses “using race in decisions pertaining to admissions, hiring, promotion, compensation, financial aid, scholarships, prizes, administrative support, discipline, housing graduation ceremonies, and all other aspects of student, academic, and campus life.” Particularly by expanding to hiring, promotion, and compensation, the Department’s interpretation breaks from Supreme Court precedent, which outlines an entirely different legal test for lawful affirmative action programs in employment. Additionally, the Supreme Court’s SFFA decision recognized that, per long-standing Supreme Court precedent not overruled by the SFFA decision, institutions have a compelling interest in achieving the educational benefits of diversity. The Department’s letter, on the other hand, states that “nebulous concepts like race balancing and diversity are not compelling interests,” seemingly taking the position that achieving diversity is not a compelling interest in any context.