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Friday, March 2, 2018

Elizabeth Warren, Katherine Clark release report criticizing Betsy DeVos' work at Education Department | masslive.com

Elizabeth Warren, Katherine Clark release report criticizing Betsy DeVos' work at Education Department | masslive.com:

Elizabeth Warren, Katherine Clark release report criticizing Betsy DeVos' work at Education Department


Image result for DeVos Watch, Year One: Failing America's Students


Members of Massachusetts' congressional delegation who have previously raised concerns about Betsy DeVos leading the Department of Education, released a new report Thursday suggesting that the secretary's tenure has "been a boon for shady for-profit colleges, student loan companies and school privatization advocates."
U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Massachusetts, and U.S. Rep. Katherine Clark, D-Melrose, unveiled their first "DeVos Watch" annual review, a 17-page report that examines the education secretary's work since being confirmed to President Donald Trump's cabinet in February 2017. 
The Massachusetts Democrats, in announcing their review, said the report reveals that DeVos' actions "have raised serious ethical questions, prioritized for-profit colleges over student borrowers, weakened traditional public education in favor of non-public schools and reversed civil rights protections for students."
The report accuses DeVos of: having "damaging conflicts of interest;" working to limit, delay and revoke regulations that seek to hold colleges accountable; rolling back relief for students ripped off by for-profit colleges; and undermining key protections for public school students contained in the Every Student Succeeds Act. 
It also suggests that she "has spent her time in office meeting with school choice and privatization advocates, while largely ignoring the needs of public school students and teachers."
Further, the report alleges that the education secretary has "curtailed protections for victims of sexual harassment and sexual violence; eliminated protections for transgender students; weakened protections for students of color; and weakened enforcement of civil rights protections by the department's Office for Civil Rights."