logo
A Native University Is Losing a Quarter of Its Staff to Federal Cuts

A Native University Is Losing a Quarter of Its Staff to Federal Cuts

New York Times05-03-2025
The women's basketball coach stood atop a ladder on Sunday night, carefully cutting down the last of the net after Haskell Indian Nations University won the league championship.
The scene is a familiar one at this time of year in college basketball. But the celebration in Lawrence, Kan., where the man who invented the sport worked for decades, was nevertheless astonishing: Officially, Haskell's coach, Adam Strom, was only a volunteer.
He had been fired 16 days earlier, swept up in an executive order that led Haskell to oust about a quarter of its workers on a Friday in February.
The only other federally run college for Native people, Southwestern Indian Polytechnic Institute in Albuquerque, also laid off a similar share of workers that day.
More than 140 years after the United States first used the grounds in Lawrence as a boarding school to assimilate Native children, Haskell students feel that the federal government, which controls the university, has once again become a malevolent force upending lives.
The student government association president said three of her five instructors had been dismissed. Rumors had swirled over whether enough dining hall workers were left to serve meals. A senior had wondered whether the university, a sanctum for Native American students shaped by tradition and tragedy, would remain open long enough for him to receive his degree.
As other potential policy changes loom, students, leaders and experts fear that the federal system for educating Native Americans — which serves tens of thousands of students at Haskell and beyond, and which already has some of the worst outcomes in the United States — is lurching into a new phase of crisis.
In President Trump's Washington, firings across the federal government have been billed as an 'optimization' of the bureaucracy. But on Haskell's campus, where at least 103 people are buried, the seemingly indiscriminate budget cuts represent another breach of the government's vows to Native Americans.
'We're not necessarily repeating the history of the school; it's just continuing in our own modern way,' said J'Den Nichols, a member of the Northern Cheyenne Tribe of Montana who is majoring in American Indian studies.
As she spoke, less than a week before the conference championship game, a tepee stood near the student union in response to the cuts.
'We only bring that up in times of ceremony, or in times like now, where we are either mourning or attacked by others,' Tyler Moore, the senior and a citizen of the Cherokee Nation, said of the tepee.
Haskell's president, Francis Arpan, referred an interview request to the Bureau of Indian Education, which declined to make any federal officials available. A spokesperson for the Interior Department, which includes the bureau, said in a one-sentence statement that the department 'reaffirms its unwavering commitment to the American public while practicing diligent fiscal responsibility.'
Although the administration's quest to reduce federal spending has led campus officials across the country to weigh layoffs, hiring freezes and other steps, schools like Haskell are particularly vulnerable to disruptions since they are directly run by the government. And perhaps no education system in the United States is as familiar with upheaval and shattered promises than the one that provides federal schools for Native students.
Almost a century after a major federal report about conditions for Native Americans warned that 'cheapness in education is expensive' because thriftiness in schools could deepen future societal problems, witnesses repeatedly told Congress in written testimony last week that the federal system for teaching Native people suffered from 'chronic underfunding.'
About 45,000 children are enrolled in bureau-funded schools in 23 states, their options fashioned by court cases, laws and treaties. In addition to operating Haskell and SIPI — as the small college of about 200 in Albuquerque is known — the government financially supports tribal colleges and universities that are run independently.
Although some measures of student success are improving, the high school graduation rate for Bureau of Indian Education schools regularly lags the nation's. In the 2020-21 school year, standardized tests showed that roughly one in 10 assessed students were proficient in math, and about 17 percent were proficient in language arts, according to the bureau.
The system's colleges are also troubled. The most recently reported six-year graduation rate at Haskell was 43 percent; the national rate is usually around 62 percent. Dr. Arpan, congressional aides noted before a hearing last summer, was Haskell's eighth president in six years.
And a 2023 Interior Department report, which emerged last year after the watchdog group Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility sued to obtain a redacted copy, depicted Haskell as 'severely dysfunctional.' The report concluded, in part, that the university had been insufficiently attentive to accusations of sexual assault, housed an athletic department 'in disarray' and used adjunct instructors 'inappropriately" while federal employees worked beyond their job descriptions.
Last December, some congressional Republicans floated a new governance structure for Haskell that has drawn mixed reviews on campus and not yet cleared Capitol Hill.
Despite their university's problems, one student after another said that Haskell was one of the few places in academia where they felt their culture was honored. Shrinking the university, they argued, was more than a violation of the government's promises; it was an assault on their heritages and futures.
Angel Ahtone Elizarraras, the student government president, talked of how the library offered spiritual medicine and every dorm had a smudge room. ('If you ask anyone on campus, English isn't the coolest language we know,' Marina DeCora, a student who is a member of the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska, said wryly.)
Students frequently used the word 'family' to describe the community at Haskell, where they pay some fees but no tuition. This semester, the university reported an enrollment of 918 students representing 153 tribal nations.
Shiannah Horned Eagle, a member of the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe of South Dakota who is a social work student, said she started out at another college, but found it 'isolating.' She found solace at Haskell — and then learned of the cuts when an instructor told the class.
'Basically, they just told us they got fired and that they don't know what's going to happen to the classes,' she said.
Ms. Ahtone Elizarraras was preparing for a Valentine's Day dance when she heard.
'As a Native, as you're at this school, you kind of read through the books, and it prepares you for moments like this,' said Ms. Ahtone Elizarraras, a citizen of the Wichita and Affiliated Tribes of Oklahoma, adding, 'It makes it to where you realize, 'Hey, my ancestors stepped so that I could walk.''
But there is also fury.
'How much more can you take?' Ms. DeCora fumed.
Haskell's board of regents has appealed to Washington. In letters to federal officials, the advisory board's interim president, Dalton Henry, argued that the ousted employees should be reinstated because they were fulfilling duties that were mandatory under treaties. Last week, students protested outside the Kansas Capitol.
Later in the week, Dr. Arpan told student government leaders about a reprieve that would allow ousted instructors to finish this semester as adjuncts. But that fix is, for now, only temporary.
Among the university workers who have lost jobs are a photography instructor and custodians. On the morning of Feb. 14, there were rumors among some employees about coming cuts.
Then Mr. Strom, who was in his fourth season as the women's basketball coach, was summoned to the athletic director's office.
He figured he was in for a talking-to about sharing gym time with other teams. Instead, the athletic director told him he was out of a job.
Mr. Strom, a member of the Yakama Nation, said he had been a contractor for his first three seasons. He was only recently hired full time as a federal employee, which meant he was still in his probationary period.
'I felt safe. I really did,' he said, adding, 'I thought being an educator was important in America.'
Ahniwake Rose, a Cherokee Nation citizen who is the president of the American Indian Higher Education Consortium, said that the Trump administration should reverse the firings soon. Otherwise, she warned, there could be 'a trickle-down effect on long-term harm to these institutions' if students decided not to enroll because they feared for the universities' health.
Tribe-controlled colleges, she said, were offering to send volunteer faculty and staff members in the meantime.
Mr. Strom decided to stick around for the rest of the season and coach as a volunteer, only miles from where James Naismith, basketball's inventor, founded the University of Kansas' fabled men's team. The current Kansas coach, Bill Self, is the highest-paid college basketball coach in the United States.
'I really could paint that very ugly picture in that that coach is a white male, and I'm a minority, I'm a Native American,' Mr. Strom said in the gym complex, where four Native star quilts flank the American flag.
He paused.
'At the same time, I'd rather be better than bitter.'
On Sunday, the now-volunteer coach and his team won the conference title, securing a spot in the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics national championship tournament.
But instead of recruiting for next season or spending as many hours preparing for games, Mr. Strom has been searching for jobs, hoping he will find a coaching gig someplace else.
Students are also worrying about the way forward for their lives and their campus, even though events like graduation remain on track.
'I know there's going to be a day where this is talked about in history books,' said Mr. Moore, who was chosen as this year's Haskell Brave, one of the university's highest honors, adding, 'I'm just sad that I'm living through it today.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Anti-Trump Protest Held in President's Florida Stronghold
Anti-Trump Protest Held in President's Florida Stronghold

Newsweek

time11 minutes ago

  • Newsweek

Anti-Trump Protest Held in President's Florida Stronghold

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. An anti-President Donald Trump protest is being planned for Thursday in a traditionally Republican stronghold. The protest is being held in The Villages, a sprawling retirement community of more than 150,000 residents across three Central Florida counties with a largely GOP-voting population of retirees, per Gulf Live. It is part of nationwide Good Trouble Lives On protests on Thursday, the anniversary of the death of civil rights leader and former Representative John Lewis, known for his slogan of making "Good Trouble." John Lewis addresses a crowd at a rally protesting the National Rifle Association's annual convention a few blocks away in Atlanta, April 29, 2017. John Lewis addresses a crowd at a rally protesting the National Rifle Association's annual convention a few blocks away in Atlanta, April 29, 2017. David Goldman, file/AP Photo Why It Matters The state of Florida voted 56.1 percent for Trump in 2024, and the three Central Florida counties which hold The Villages, Marion, Sumter and Lake, voted above the state average, at 65.5 percent, 68.3 percent, and 61.8 percent respectively, in favor of Trump. This protest in a pro-Trump stronghold comes as the president is suffering in the polls, over the White House's handling of the Jeffrey Epstein investigation, which is also rattling a segment of his own supporters. What To Know More than 1,600 Good Trouble Lives On protests are being held across the country, including in states that voted for Trump in 2024 such as Arizona, Arkansas, South Carolina and Florida. Katherine Garcia, press officer for Public Citizen, a group involved with Good Trouble Lives On spoke to Newsweek about why protests are being held in The Villages, saying: "The Trump Administration's attacks on the American people's civil rights, Medicaid, SNAP, Social Security and other health programs, reproductive rights, due process, and more impacts all Americans. The bounds of these impacts are not defined by state lines or party affiliations." The organizing site for the protest in The Villages says: "This is more than a protest; it's a moral reckoning. A continuation of the movement Lewis helped lead, and a new front in the struggle for freedom." This is not the first anti-Trump protest in The Villages. Some Villages residents also organized one of the No Kings Day protests held on June 14. The No Kings protests were the largest nationwide demonstration against the president, and coincided with a miltary parade that was held in Washington, D.C, as well as Trump's birthday. This is the fifth-annual Good Trouble Lives On protest following Lewis' death on July 17, 2020. Lewis participated in the first lunch counter sit-ins in the 1960s, was a Freedom Rider in Montgomery, Alabama, and was a speaker at the March on Washington in 1963. In 1987, he became a member of Congress, representing Georgia's 5th district until he passed away. Good Trouble Lives On organizers told Newsweek via a press release: "In memory of John Lewis, we will take to the streets, courthouses and community spaces to carry forward his fight for justice, voting rights and dignity for all." Garcia told Newsweek: "As of this morning, July 17, more than 1,600 events have been confirmed, 184,000 have RSVP'd to attend Good Trouble Lives On, and we expect at least several hundred thousand people will attend across the country." Good Trouble Lives On protest locations across the U.S. Good Trouble Lives On protest locations across the U.S. What People Are Saying Congressman John Lewis: "Get in good trouble, necessary trouble, and help redeem the soul of America." Katherine Garcia, press officer for Public Citizen, a group involved with Good Trouble Lives On, told Newsweek: "Good Trouble" is the act of coming together to take peaceful, non-violent action to challenge injustice and create meaningful change. We're encouraging communities to come together to march, protest and engage in service work – any action where we can take a stand against wrongdoings, and speak truth to power. Though Good Trouble has been hosted every year since Congressman Lewis' passing in 2020, this year's event is especially important as it comes at a critical time to protect civil rights across the nation." Liz Huston, White House spokesperson told Newsweek: "Nearly 80 million Americans gave President Trump a historic mandate to Make America Great Again and he is delivering on that promise in record time." What Happens Next Garcia told Newsweek: "Many of our organizers are also partnering upcoming actions on Labor Day, which will continue the mobilization of the American people and propel the demands of Good Trouble further to stop the billionaire takeover and rampant corruption of the Trump administration, protect social programs for working people, and stop attacks on immigrants, Black, indigenous, trans people and all our communities."

Months after widespread cuts, some AmeriCorps programs receive sudden notice of reinstatement
Months after widespread cuts, some AmeriCorps programs receive sudden notice of reinstatement

Boston Globe

time13 minutes ago

  • Boston Globe

Months after widespread cuts, some AmeriCorps programs receive sudden notice of reinstatement

Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up A request for comment to the AmeriCorps press office was not returned. Much of the national program office staff was also put on indefinite leave in April. The Office of Management and Budget also did not respond to a request for comment on the reversal or future funding. The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Advertisement Though court orders previously had already mandated that some programs be restored, those rulings were limited to the group of Democratic-led states and coalition of third-party organizations, including the employee union, that sued. The notifications that came this week extended the possibility of restored funding to programs in Republican-led states that had not joined the litigation. Advertisement It is unclear how the reinstatement, which applies to programs already funded under the fiscal year 2024 federal budget, will proceed. Some programs were able to tap other funding to extend the service members and their projects until the end of their contracts. Others had to make layoffs and shutter activities that could be difficult to reverse. Not all terminated programs had received the reinstatement notice by Thursday. And AmeriCorps organizations and commissions had already been warning that the Trump administration was withholding approved funding for the next fiscal year, as well, imperiling their ability to continue projects into the next term. But one program that did receive word they could reopen their funding was the Lakes Region Conservation Corps, operated by the Squam Lakes Association in Holderness, N.H., and other local conservation partners. The organization had 15 full-time and 12 part-time service members that have provided environmental education to 3,000 people, maintained over 100 acres of trails and has been heavily involved in removing invasive species like Milfoil from the lake to maintain it as an outdoor attraction. In April, they received their notice of termination and then watched as regional peers came back online without them in June after the court granted Democratic states' request to have funding restored. Until now, the Squam Lakes Association had been able to tap into its reserves to maintain its current corps, but the long-term stability of the program and its reach was in doubt, its executive director EB James said in an interview earlier this month. He warned that cuts would affect not just the service-members and his organization, but the health of the lake, regional ecosystem, and entire local economy built on tourism and desirable property. They had not yet received clarity on if they would get their funding under the fiscal year 2025 budget, which in normal years would be resolved by now. Advertisement 'Like everyone, it's thrown us into disarray,' James said earlier this month. 'This was a small program that had a really really large impact, but even though it was small, it meant a lot to us and it meant a lot to our constituents.' The April cuts spurred by the then-Elon Musk led Department of Government Efficiency shut down numerous AmeriCorps programs, immediately ending the small stipends of service members who worked in classrooms, workforce development, and health resources. The terminations did not seem to follow any pattern, and some of the programs who had been cut were then awarded funding for next year. Some The New Hampshire state AmeriCorps office, Volunteer NH, declined to comment about the possibility of restored funding. But executive director Gretchen Stallings said the situation for programs in the state was still tenuous given the confusion about future funding. 'Right now, we're still navigating a lot of uncertainty around FY25 and FY26 funding. While two NH programs were selected for competitive AmeriCorps grants, none of the funds have been released yet—not for those programs, and not for the operational support we rely on to run AmeriCorps effectively in the state," Stallings said in a statement. 'That delay is having a real impact. Programs are having to make tough decisions—scaling back, pausing operations, or bracing for shutdowns—while we wait for clarity." Advertisement Tal Kopan can be reached at

Urban League declares a ‘state of emergency' for civil rights in the U.S. in response to Trump
Urban League declares a ‘state of emergency' for civil rights in the U.S. in response to Trump

Los Angeles Times

time13 minutes ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Urban League declares a ‘state of emergency' for civil rights in the U.S. in response to Trump

WASHINGTON — One of the nation's oldest civil rights organizations on Thursday declared a 'state of emergency' for antidiscrimination policies, personal freedoms and Black economic advancement in response to President Trump 's upending of civil rights precedents and the federal agencies traditionally tasked with enforcing them. The National Urban League's annual State of Black America report accuses the federal government of being 'increasingly determined to sacrifice its founding principles' and 'threatening to impose a uniform education system and a homogenous workforce that sidelines anyone who doesn't fit a narrow, exclusionary mold,' according to a copy obtained by the Associated Press. 'If left unchecked,' the authors write, 'they risk reversing decades of progress that have made America more dynamic, competitive, and just.' The report, to be released Thursday at the group's conference in Cleveland, Ohio, criticizes the administration for downsizing federal agencies and programs that enforce civil rights policies. The authors aimed to highlight what they saw as a multiyear, coordinated effort by conservative legal activists, lawmakers and media personalities to undermine civil rights policy and create a political landscape that would enable a hard-right agenda on a range of social and economic policy. 'It is not random. It is a well-funded, well-organized, well-orchestrated movement of many, many years,' said Marc Morial, president of the Urban League. 'For a long time, people saw white supremacist politics and white nationalism as on the fringe of American politics. It has now become the mainstream of the American right, whose central foundation is within the Republican Party.' The report directly critiques Project 2025, a sweeping blueprint for conservative governance coordinated by The Heritage Foundation think tank. Project 2025 advised approaches to federal worker layoffs, immigration enforcement and the congressional and legislative branches similar to the Trump administration's current strategy. The Urban League report condemns major corporations, universities and top law firms for reversing diversity, equity and inclusion policies. It also criticizes social media companies like Meta and X for purported 'censorship' of Black activists and creatives and content moderation policies that allegedly enabled 'extremists' to spread 'radicalizing' views. The Trump administration has said many policies implemented by both Democratic and Republican administrations are discriminatory and unconstitutional, arguing that acknowledgments of race and federal and corporate policies that seek to address disparities between different demographics are themselves discriminatory. Trump has signed executive orders banning 'illegal discrimination' and promoting 'merit based opportunity.' Harrison Fields, a White House spokesman, said civil rights groups that oppose the administration 'aren't advancing anything but hate and division, while the president is focused on uniting our country.' The report, meanwhile, calls for the creation of a 'new resistance' to counter the administration's agenda. Morial urged other organizations to rally to that cause. The Urban League and other civil rights groups have repeatedly sued the Trump administration since January. Liberal legal groups and Democratic lawmakers similarly sued over parts of the administration's agenda. Veteran civil rights activists, Black civic leaders, former federal officials, Illinois Atty. Gen. Kwame Raoul and seven members of Congress, including House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, contributed to the text. Raoul said that civil rights allies have felt 'on the defense' in recent years but that now 'it's time to act affirmatively.' For instance, if rollbacks of DEI policies result in discrimination against women or people of color legal action could follow, he warned. 'It all depends on how they do it. We're going to be watching,' he said. 'And just because the Trump administration doesn't believe in disparate impact anymore doesn't mean the rest of the universe must believe that.' The report criticizes the Trump administration's efforts to shutter the Education Department, and denounces changes to programs meant to support communities of color at the departments of Commerce, Health and Human Services and Housing and Urban Development, among others. The transformation of the Justice Department's civil rights division was singled out as 'an existential threat to civil rights enforcement.' The Justice Department pointed to its published civil rights policy and a social media post from its civil rights arm that reads the division 'has returned to enforcing the law as written: fairly, equally, and without political agenda.' Nevada Rep. Steve Horsford, a contributor to the report, said Trump 'betrayed the American people' in enacting plans he said were similar to Project 2025. Another contributor, Rep. Yvette Clarke, chair of the Congressional Black Caucus, said civil rights advocates and their Democratic allies must do more to communicate with and educate people. 'When you have an administration that's willing to take civil rights gains and call it reverse racism, then there's a lot of work to be done to unpack that for folks,' the New York Democrat said. 'I think once people understand their connection to civil rights gains, then we will be in a position to build that momentum.' The Urban League originally planned to focus its report on the legacy of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 for the law's 60th anniversary but pivoted after Trump returned to office to focus on 'unpacking the threats to our democracy' and steps civil rights advocates are taking to pull the country back from 'the brink of a dangerous tilt towards authoritarianism.' For many veteran civil rights activists, the administration's changes are condemnable but not surprising. Some lawmakers see it as a duty to continue the long struggle for civil rights. 'I think it's all part of the same struggle,' said Rep. Shomari Figures, an Alabama Democrat who contributed to the report and whose father was successfully brought a wrongful-death suit against a branch of the Ku Klux Klan. 'At the end of the day, that struggle boils down to: Can I be treated like everybody else in this country?' Brown writes for the Associated Press.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store