University of North Carolina committee scraps DEI goals, roles in dramatic policy shift

UNC may follow Florida's lead by eliminating its DEI policies and positions

University of Texas lays off DEI employees to comply with state law

Republican State Sen. Brandon Creighton discusses the law he authored to close DEI departments at public universities.

Another state university system is moving to eliminate diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) requirements and roles from its campuses, as part of a growing backlash to DEI ideology in schools across the country.

The University of North Carolina (UNC) board of governors committee voted in less than four minutes on Wednesday to repeal and replace the system's existing diversity and inclusion policy and replace it with a different policy, The Associated Press reported.

Seventeen college campuses within the UNC system could be affected by the decision.

The proposed policy indicates that DEI roles held by senior administration officials would be eliminated, as they also have been at state universities in Florida and Texas. 

UNC-CHAPEL HILL DELETES FELLOWSHIP CRITERIA EXCLUDING WHITE PEOPLE AFTER CIVIL RIGHTS COMPLAINT

woman sitting in classroom with laptop next to words "diversity equity inclusion"

A UNC university governance committee will vote Wednesday on whether to eliminate and replace its current DEI policy.  (iStock)

Under the old policy, each school must have senior-level officials as its System Office D&I Liaison, Institutional D&I Officer, and an Institutional Inclusion Executive. These roles may go to the same person or be assigned separately. However, these roles are not included under the new policy that was voted on Wednesday.

While maintaining UNC's commitment to nondiscrimination, the new policy emphasizes maintaining "academic freedom," "institutional neutrality," "free speech and expression," and "equality of all persons and viewpoints."

The new proposed policy states each school must give a report by September 1 certifying that it has fully complied "with the University’s commitment to institutional neutrality and nondiscrimination required by law and this policy and shall describe in substance the actions taken to achieve compliance."

"The chancellors’ certifications shall also include a report on reductions in force and spending, along with changes to job titles and position descriptions, undertaken as a result of implementing this policy and how those savings achieved from these actions can be redirected to initiatives related to student success and well-being," it continues.

The new policy will now go before the Republican-majority board of governors in May. If approved, the school's DEI policy could be fully repealed. 

ANOTHER TEXAS UNIVERSITY DROPS DEI OFFICE, ‘APPROXIMATELY 20 ASSOCIATED JOBS ELIMINATED’ DUE STATE LAW

Stock photos of UNC campus

The University of North Carolina took steps to ban DEI statements from its admission and hiring practices in February. (Eros Hoagland/Getty Images)

The university has already taken steps to cut DEI from its campuses.

Fox News Digital previously reported that the school voted to ban DEI statements and compelled speech from admission, hiring, promotion and tenure in February.

If the policy is fully repealed, UNC will follow the lead of Texas and Florida, where DEI positions were slashed from public universities to comply with state laws.

In March, the University of Florida fired all employees and administrative appointments for its DEI offices.

Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who championed eliminating DEI from public institutions in his state, said he hoped others would follow Florida's example.

"DEI is toxic and has no place in our public universities. I’m glad that Florida was the first state to eliminate DEI and I hope more states follow suit," DeSantis said.

The article was updated with the vote the University of North Carolina (UNC) board of governors committee.

Fox News' Kendall Tietz and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Kristine Parks is an associate editor for Fox News Digital. Read more.

Authored by Kristine Parks via FoxNews April 17th 2024