Special education staff decimated after government shutdown firings: Sources
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Source: abcnews
By Arthur Jones II Sunday, October 12, 2025 6:18PM
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"Do people realize that this is happening to this population of vulnerable students?" one education department leader told ABC News.
"If there's no staff, who the heck is going to administer this program? That's the absurdity of this," the source, who asked not to be identified for fear of retribution, added.
............The department leader stressed that several employees within the offices of Special Education Programs and the Rehabilitative Services Administration -- the two divisions that make up the Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services (OSERS) -- were cut over the weekend.
The agency enforces the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), the law creating a free and appropriate education for children with disabilities, and funds special education services to the tune of around $15 billion.
Read more: https://abc7news.com/post/us-department-education-special-staff-decimated-government-shutdown-firings-sources/17993643/

Lovie777
(20,699 posts)I guess GQP thirst for perfect specimen is the current goal.
Although the GQP master is truly and extremely flawed.
Duncanpup
(15,254 posts)littlemissmartypants
(30,129 posts)All over the world regardless of the political affiliation of the people who are supposed to care for and about them.
They exist at the mercy of lots of ignorance with miniscule (if any) say-so in the matter.
They are the future and of course, this speaks volumes about how the regime feels about that.
The next Albert Einstein or another Heddy Lamar may have just lost their rights to a free and fair shot at their future. It's a lose-lose situation for all of us.
This book opened my eyes:

https://yalebooks.yale.edu/book/9780300192407/childism/
A seminal volume on prejudice against children for parents, teachers, psychologists, social workers, policy-makersanyone concerned with the crucial subject of child welfare.
In this groundbreaking volume on the human rights of children, acclaimed analyst, political theorist, and biographer Elisabeth Young-Bruehl argues that prejudice exists against children as a group and that it is comparable to racism, sexism, and homophobia. This prejudicechildismlegitimates and rationalizes a broad continuum of acts that are not in the best interests of children, including the often violent extreme of child abuse and neglect. According to Young-Bruehl, reform is possible only if we acknowledge this prejudice in its basic forms and address the motives and cultural forces that drive it, rather than dwell on the various categories of abuse and punishment.
There will always be individuals and societies that turn on their children," writes Young-Bruehl, breaking the natural order Aristotle described two and a half millennia ago in his Nichomachean Ethics." In Childism, Young-Bruehl focuses especially on the ways in which Americans have departed from the child-supportive trends of the Great Society and of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child.
Many years in the making, Childism draws upon a wide range of sources, from the literary and philosophical to the legal and psychoanalytic. Woven into this extraordinary volume are case studies that illuminate the profound importance of listening to the victims who have so much to tell us about the visible and invisible ways in which childism is expressed.
Thanks so much for being a great dad.
❤️
Trueblue Texan
(3,867 posts)Coldwater
(394 posts)Now that pregnant women are no longer taking Tylenol, autism will soon become a thing of the past.
It only makes sense to reduce staff and funding to special needs education for children and their parents who also receive training on how to meet the needs of their child.

Delarage
(2,493 posts)This will leave school districts even more vulnerable to lawsuits, which are like an industry these days. If the feds cut the funding, the locals will be the ones getting sued for not providing X, Y, or Z to students with disabilities. No one ever sues the federal government (I don't think). Some lawsuits are justified, many are not. All cost a fortune to litigate---so districts most often cave. But there's not a bottomless pit of money.
littlemissmartypants
(30,129 posts)Another government will have sense enough to re-evaluate the risk-reward of such and make a change for the better. ❤️
Omaha Steve
(107,357 posts)DUPE of https://www.democraticunderground.com/10143546117
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