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What you need to know about vaccines (Plain Language)
Every student deserves access to an education that meets their needs, respects their rights, and allows them to succeed. However, the Trump administration has taken extreme and dangerous steps that threaten the education and rights of disabled students.
On March 20, President Trump released an executive order directing the Secretary of Education to take steps to close the Department of Education and withhold federal funding from schools that support diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts. This is an incredibly disturbing attack on students’ rights, particularly disabled students, students of color, LGBT+ students, and other marginalized groups.
On October 10th, the Trump administration announced that over 400 people at the US Department of Education would lose their jobs. These layoffs gutted the Office of Special Education Programs (OSEP), the Rehabilitation Services Administration (RSA), the Office for Civil Rights (OCR), and the Office of Elementary and Secondary Education (OESE). These layoffs practically eliminate all federal workers who oversee special education programs in the country. That means there is no one working to enforce federal laws that ensure disabled students get the services and supports they need and have a right to.
The Department of Education (ED) is responsible for enforcing laws passed by Congress that protect students and ensure they receive the support they need. These laws require the government to provide special education services for disabled students, ensure schools follow civil rights protections, and enforce federal anti-discrimination laws. Eliminating the ED would not erase these laws — but it would make them much harder to enforce. The Office for Civil Rights (OCR) within the ED is responsible for enforcing civil rights protections in school. However, under the Trump administration, half of OCR’s staff was eliminated after massive layoffs in the ED. Without the experts at ED and especially OCR, enforcement of anti-discrimination laws and investigation of violations would become much weaker. In many cases, schools and states might stop following the law completely, even though disabled students still have these rights.
The cuts to ED have already severely weakened federal civil rights enforcement, leaving millions of students without crucial protections. When OCR is gutted, students lose access to justice when their rights are violated. Schools are less likely to follow anti-discrimination laws if they know there are no consequences for breaking them. OCR not only investigates complaints of discrimination in schools that receive federal funding, they also ensure schools comply with major civil rights laws.
One of the laws the Department of Education enforces requires the government to provide special education services for disabled students. The Trump administration has recently suggested that, instead of protecting special education through ED, it could be moved to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), under Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. This is not a real solution. At the same time that the administration claims to care about the future of special education, Trump and Elon Musk has slashed funding for HHS and allow it to be led by anti-vax quack Robert F. Kennedy Jr. A department that is being actively gutted cannot properly oversee special education, let alone enforce students’ rights.
Education is not just about academics — it is about ensuring that all students, including disabled students, have the tools they need to succeed. Without strong civil rights protections, special education services, and federal oversight, disabled students will face more discrimination, fewer resources, and greater barriers to accessing education. The Trump administration’s efforts to defund education and civil rights protections harm all students, but disabled students will be among the hardest hit. Every student deserves a high quality education in a safe, accessible, and equitable environment. Our community fought hard for these rights, and we will not allow this administration to strip them away. We must stand against these attacks and demand an education system that protects and supports all students.
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Vaccines do not cause autism. This has been thoroughly debunked over and over again by scientists and medical experts. Continuing to spread this myth is harmful and dangerous.
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Disabled people deserve real jobs for real pay. Section 14(c) of the Fair Labor Standards Act allows employers to pay disabled people less than minimum wage — this is wrong and must end. Autistic and other disabled people deserve to be paid fairly for our work.
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Disabled people deserve to live in the community, not in institutions. Some people push for “intentional communities” that claim to be better than institutions — but no matter how nice they look, they are still institutions. Disabled people have the right to live safely in our communities, with access to home and community-based services (HCBS) and other necessary supports.