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Cornell evaluating Trump’s DEI executive order, NYU has no comment | National

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www.thecentersquare.com – Tate Miller – (The Center Square – ) 2025-02-16 09:13:00

(The Center Square) – Cornell University is evaluating President Donald Trump’s executive order concerning the termination of diversity, equity and inclusion, while New York University provided no comment; both universities train and educate future medical professionals.

“University leadership continues to evaluate how new executive orders affect our community,” a Cornell spokesman told The Center Square when asked what the school’s response to Trump’s executive order ending federal funding to universities with DEI and DEIA programs and if it or its medical school will be ending its DEI and transgender initiatives.

“As more concrete information becomes available, we will provide guidance on how the executive orders and other directives may impact our programs and community members,” the Cornell spokesman said.

When reached for comment, New York University Grossman School of Medicine media contact Arielle Sklar told The Center Square, “we appreciate you reaching out. We have no comment.”

Trump’s Jan. 20 order entitled “Ending Radical and Wasteful Government DEI Programs and Preferencing” states that “all discriminatory programs, including illegal DEI and ‘diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility’ (DEIA) mandates, policies, programs, preferences, and activities in the Federal Government, under whatever name they appear,” must be terminated.

Weill Cornell Medicine Medical College states its commitment to diversity and inclusion on its website, while also stating that Cornell is an “affirmative action/equal opportunity employer.”

Listed on NYU Grossman School of Medicine’s website is the Institute for Excellence in Health Equity and a DEI in Research division, the latter of which possess a guiding pillar of “recruiting and retaining a diverse cadre of students, faculty, and staff empowered to further our DEI mission.”

Across the states, universities with schools of medicine are evaluating Trump’s executive order and how it will affect them, as The Center Square previously reported.

University of Michigan spokeswoman Kay Jarvis previously told The Center Square that U-M “is carefully reviewing all of the executive orders to understand their implications on the institution and students.”

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill media relations previously told TCS “we are monitoring all new executive orders and directives to determine the impact on our work and our community.”

Stett Holbrook of the University of California Office of the President strategic communications previously told The Center Square that the only information UC has is that the school “is evaluating recent executive orders issued by President Trump and the subsequent agency guidance to understand their potential impact on our communities.”

University of Washington spokesman Victor Balta previously told The Center Square that UW is “reviewing the executive order to determine what direct impact it may have on the UW.”

However, speaking on behalf of UW School of Medicine, health sciences director of media relations Susan Gregg said that UW Medicine is “continuing to provide [its] full spectrum of services” – which evidently includes the Office of Healthcare Equity – and is “in compliance” with state and federal law.

Johns Hopkins University and Case Western Reserve previously declined to comment on the subject of Trump’s executive order, while Harvard, Stanford, Columbia, Duke, Yale, Penn, Northwestern University, the University of Chicago, Boston University, Emory University, and Mayo Clinic School of Medicine have not yet responded to repeated requests for comment.

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CA gained 76% fewer jobs in 2024 than estimated, grew just 0.3% | California

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www.thecentersquare.com – Kenneth Schrupp – (The Center Square – ) 2025-03-21 17:00:00

(The Center Square) — Updated federal data shows California gained 76% fewer jobs in 2024 than initially estimated, gaining only 60,000 jobs, instead of the earlier announced 250,000 jobs. 

A 2024 state-funded report found that California private sector employment went into a downturn in 2022, with jobs growth only coming from the public sector and related employment. If this trend has continued, the state’s 0.3% jobs growth could have entirely come from taxpayer-financed government and government-adjacent hiring.

“The corrected data show that the state added just 60,000 jobs between September 2023 and September 2024. The monthly jobs report, which the administration and the Legislature relied on to gauge the economy during that period, showed the labor market growing steadily, appearing to add more than 250,000 jobs over that period,” wrote the state-funded Legislative Analyst’s Office. “Actual job growth for the year was 0.3 percent, compared to the 1.5 percent growth initially reported via the preliminary survey.”

The state-funded Legislative Analyst’s Office reported that between September 2022 and April 2024, the private sector lost 154,000 jobs, while the public and publicly-supported sector, which includes the healthcare sector — which is majority-funded by taxes via Medicare, Medicaid, and Affordable Care Act premium subsidies — gained 361,000 jobs.

The governor has proposed withdrawing $7 billion from reserves this year, while increasing spending to $322 billion. Amid stock market volatility and uncertainty about federal funding, it’s unclear how much the state may have to cut from its projected revenue.

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Trump order to close Education Department sparks congressional action, lawsuits | National

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www.thecentersquare.com – By Thérèse Boudreaux | The Center Square – (The Center Square – ) 2025-03-21 14:22:00

(The Center Square) – Lawmakers, school advocates and teachers’ unions are taking swift action after President Donald Trump’s executive order to begin dismantling the Department of Education, one of his most controversial moves yet.

Opponents of Trump’s action responded with promises of legal retaliation. But supportive lawmakers may beat them to the chase, with U.S. Sens. Bill Cassidy, R-La., and Mike Rounds, R-S.D., each planning to introduce legislation to completely eliminate the department.

“I agree with President Trump that the Department of Education has failed its mission,” Cassidy said. “Since the Department can only be shut down with Congressional approval, I will support the President’s goals by submitting legislation to accomplish this as soon as possible.”

Rounds said he is already discussing legislation with Secretary of Education Linda McMahon “that would return education decisions to states and local school districts while maintaining important programs like special education and Title I.”

Trump already shrunk the department’s workforce to half its size last week. His executive order Thursday directs McMahon to “take all necessary steps to facilitate the closure of the Department of Education and return authority over education to the States and local communities while ensuring the effective and uninterrupted delivery of services, programs, and benefits on which Americans rely,” as far as legally possible.

For now, that means the department will still continue critical functions like enforcing Title IX and civil rights laws, funding special education and disability programs, and overseeing student loans and Pell grants, Trump said. On Friday, Trump said the Small Business Administration would take over the nation’s student loans.

But the ultimate goal is to redistribute these programs among other federal departments and agencies, which would require congressional approval.

School choice organizations are praising Trump’s plan to eventually eliminate the Education Department as a necessary development that will save taxpayers’ money and return power to states, local governments, and parents. 

“These are the first steps towards reforming an American education system that should have always been a state and local proposition,” Parents Defending Education Vice President Sarah Parshall Perry said. “We are looking forward to continuing our mission to empower parents and students in educational environments that are once again value-neutral, and devoid of radical ideologies”

Supporters also point to how the department has spent $3 trillion taxpayer dollars since its creation by congressional legislation in 1979. Meanwhile, U.S. students rank 28 out of 37 member countries in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, and standardized test scores have remained flat for decades.

ACE Scholarships, which provides aid to lower-income K-12 students, said in a statement that the Department of Education’s efforts have been “a wasteful distraction” and that the president’s “new approach” to education “puts children first by increasing choice and empowering parents instead of Washington bureaucrats.”

But public school advocacy organizations and teachers unions are already preparing lawsuits against what they say is an unconstitutional move.

Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, which represents 1.8 million pre-K through 12th-grade teachers, had a simple message for Trump after the executive order: “See you in court.”

The New York-based United Federation of Teachers stated that “we are working with our partners to file lawsuits to stop this executive overreach.”

Democracy Forward, a legal services nonprofit, is also planning to join the fight.

“We will be filing litigation against this action and will use every legal tool to ensure that the rights of students, teachers, and families are fully protected,” President and CEO Skye Perryman stated. “Since Inauguration Day, the Trump-Vance administration has been taken to court more than 100 times, and we will do it again this time.”

Trump opponents argue that dismantling the department will cause property taxes to spike nationwide, strain public school resources and could cause struggling schools to close, expanding class sizes in the remaining schools.

“Beyond the obvious issue that the Education Department can’t be eliminated without an act of Congress, Trump’s order is yet another wild and illicit power grab,” Co-President of Public Citizen Lisa Gilbert said. “Attempting to destroy the cabinet agencies tasked with promoting and improving education isn’t just irresponsible, it is immoral, and will hurt the very fabric of our nation, as we keep generations of students from achieving their full potential.”

The Education department provides roughly 10% of funding for public education, with the vast majority of funding coming from state and local taxes.

The majority of Americans also appear opposed to ending the department, with a Marist poll in early March showing 63% of U.S. residents either oppose or strongly oppose getting rid of the U.S. Department of Education, while 37% of residents either strongly support or support abolishing the department.

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Revised Census data: Texas counties reported massive growth over the year | Texas

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www.thecentersquare.com – Bethany Blankley – (The Center Square – ) 2025-03-21 13:11:00

(The Center Square) – Texas counties saw a massive influx of residents from July 2023 to 2024, according to newly released data from the U.S. Census Bureau. Four of the top 10 counties reporting the greatest numeric growth and the greatest percentage growth were in Texas, according to the data.

Texas’ Harris County reported the greatest population growth last year in the U.S. While it reported gains, the top two most populous counties, Los Angeles and Cook, reported losses.

Top counties reporting the greatest numeric growth were Harris (105,852), Miami-Dade, FL (64,211), Maricopa, AZ (57,471), Collin, TX (46,694), Clark, NV (44,586), King, WA (43,398), Cook, IL (40,095), Broward, FL (34,686), Montgomery, TX (34,268) and Tarrant, TX (32,793).

Of the top 10 counties reporting the greatest growth by percentage, four also were in Texas.

The top 10 were Dawson, GA (6.4%), Kaufman, TX (6%), Jasper, SC (5.9%), Jackson, GA (5.8%), Pinal, AZ (5.6%), Liberty, TX (5.4%), Montgomery, TX (4.8%), Osceola, FL (4.7%), Caldwell, TX (4.6%) and Hendry, FL (4.6%).

Overall, the 10 most populous counties as of July 1, 2024, were Los Angeles, Cook, Harris, Maricopa, San Diego, Orange, Miami-Dade, Dallas, Kings and Riverside. Even though Los Angeles and Cook counties had the top two population totals, they both reported losses, as did Democratic-controlled Dallas County in Texas.

While Harris remains the third most populous county in the country and most populous in Texas, its neighboring counties to the north and east, Liberty and Montgomery, reported significant growth, making the top ten nationwide. Kaufman County in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex reported the greatest percentage growth in Texas. Caldwell County, south of Austin, also made the top 10 as one of the fastest growing counties in the country by percentage, according to the data.

When it comes to metro areas by numeric growth, Houston-Pasadena-The Woodlands and Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington ranked second and third in the country adding 213,403 and 198,171 people, respectively, over the year, according to the data.

Among the top 10 metro areas reporting the most growth by percentage, Midland and Odessa ranked 8th and 9th in the country, each reporting 2.8% growth. Located in the Permian Basin in west Texas, the oil and natural gas industry based there continues to break production records in Texas and the U.S., The Center Square reported.

Over the same time period, Texas continued to lead the U.S. in oil and natural gas production, emissions reductions and employing the most workers in the industry, The Center Square reported. Texas also continues to break its own employment records every month, leading the U.S. in job creation every month and every year over the last few years, The Center Square reported.

Overall, between 2023 and 2024, the number of people living in a U.S. metro area increased by nearly 3.2 million to 293.9 million, or 1.1% growth, according to the Census data.

All 387 metro areas in the U.S. reported a positive net international migration between 2023 and 2024, which “accounted for nearly 2.7 million of the total population gain in metro areas – up from 2.2 million between 2022 and 2023,” the Census report states.

“While births continue to contribute to overall growth, rising net international migration is offsetting the ongoing net domestic outmigration we see in many of these areas,” Kristie Wilder, a Census Bureau Population Division demographer, said.

The revised Census report used current data on births, deaths and migration to calculate population changes since the 2020 Census to “produce an annual time series of estimates of population,” it says. The revised data includes population totals that changed in counties, metropolitan and micropolitan statistical areas, it says.

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