Byย Alvin Buyinza

(WIB) – A federal judge in New Hampshire officially put an end to a Trump administration directive that public K-12 schools and colleges end diversity, equity and inclusion programs, or risk losing millions in federal funding.

The ruling from District Judge Landya McCafferty this week is in response to a lawsuit filed against the Trump administration last year over its โ€œDear Colleague Letter.โ€ 

But it also comes weeks after the Trump administrationdropped its appeal in a separate federal court ruling regarding the letter.  In that ruling โ€” which stemmed from a lawsuit filed by the American Federation of Teachers and other groups โ€” a Maryland federal judge found that the letter violated educatorsโ€™ First Amendment rights.

Now that the federal government has lost both cases, the looming anxiety educators feel across the country over what they can or cannot teach is somewhat alleviated. 

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โ€˜Diversity is our uniqueness and our strengthโ€™

Becky Pringle, president of the National Education Association teachersโ€™ union, hailed the decision, slamming Education Secretary Linda McMahon and the White House for trying to meddle with โ€œcurriculum and instruction.โ€ 

โ€œDiversity is our uniqueness and our strength,โ€ Pringle, president of the nationโ€™s largest teachersโ€™ union, said in a statement. โ€œEquity means every student gets what they need, when they need it, and in the way that serves them best. And inclusion means all students are seen, valued, respected, and have access to opportunities and support.โ€ t. 

Though the case has ended, โ€œEducators, parents, and community leaders will continue to organize, mobilize, and take action to protect our students and their futures.โ€ she said. 

The Department of Education did not respond to Word In Blackโ€™s request for comment. 

RELATED: Trump Drops Court Appeal Stopping Schools From Teaching About DEI

What Was The โ€œDear Colleague Letterโ€?

The letter, signed by Craig Trainor, then the acting assistant secretary for Civil Rights at the Department of Education, told schools they had 14 days to comply with the directive or face consequences, including the loss of funding.

Shortly after the letter was posted last February, the American Civil Liberties Union, its branches in Massachusetts and New Hampshire, as well as  NEAโ€™s attorneys, sued the federal government. The Center for Black Educator Development, a nonprofit that supports Black teachers, also joined the lawsuit as a plaintiff. 

In April 2025, McCafferty temporarily blocked the directive, finding that it โ€œisolated characterizations of unlawful DEIโ€ and clashed with the termโ€™s actual meaning.

RELATED: Judge Blocks Trump Move to Defund Head Start Over DEI Language

Citing Websterโ€™s dictionary, the judge wrote that the phrase โ€œdiversity, equity, and inclusionโ€ commonly denotes โ€œa set of values and related policies and practices focused on establishing a group culture of equitable and inclusive treatmentโ€ as well as aiding people โ€œwho have historically been excluded or discriminated against.โ€

She later said that the ACLU and its fellow plaintiffs likely would prevail because the directive was vague, restricted speech the administration disagrees with, and illegally imposed new legal obligations on teachers and schools.  

After the case ended Wednesday, Sharif El-Mekki, CEO of the Center for Black Educator Development, said in a statement that the federal ruling protects teachersโ€™ livelihoods and their responsibility to teach truthfully โ€œat a time when many communities are facing severe teacher shortages.โ€ 

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Teachers are free to bring โ€œtheir full selves to the classroom,โ€ El-Mekki said. Now, he said, educators are free to create โ€œinclusive environments that prepare students for the future.โ€