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The U.S. Supreme Court allowed the Education Department to proceed with mass layoffs. But not all the firings were reversed.
Homebuilders are slashing prices at the highest rate in 3 years The Hidden Downsides of Doorbell Cameras—and What to Do About ...
The U.S. Department of Education has taken further steps to dismantle itself since the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of ...
Many oppose the slashing of current government programs because the result is seen as unfair to government employees. They're wrong.
The reduction-in-forces combined with voluntary and incentivized departures would cause an overall mass dismissal of 50 percent of the workforce.
Twenty-one Democratic attorneys general have filed a lawsuit challenging the Trump administration's dismissal of over 1,300 Education Department employees. The coalition claims these firings violate ...
Still pending before the Supreme Court this week is an appeal from Trump's lawyers that seeks the firing of three Democratic ...
Who needs the U.S. Department of Education to stay just the way it is? Not Education Secretary Linda McMahon, who sees it as ...
Trump has made it a priority to target Democratic-leaning states with education funding cuts — but the ones controlled by the GOP won’t be spared.
The roles of some of the State Department employees fired last week overlap with priorities that President Donald Trump has ...
Legislative disbursement changes have diverted $45.7 million from the district, and Trump's freeze on education funds puts ...
The Department of Education (DOE) will initiate widespread layoffs following the U.S. Supreme Court’s July 14 ruling.